four.cycle
Well-known member
nice to be able to finally put a face on the name. thank you! 
Amen.Great story Lugz. The best things in life are not always just the 'things'!
nice to be able to finally put a face on the name. thank you!
Kinda funny. I'm fairly cautious about that, but between this photo and the group shot of me, LesserSon and Chris on the Garage Sale thread, I'm apparently gettin' all selfie-portraity lately.Lugz! That is a great picture of both of you!

I'm a little disappointed I haven't heard back from them yet. I may try writing a physical letter and sending it snail mail.Hope you hear back from the Museo Toma de la Zacatecas.
























Me too, and yes, even rebuilt not matching numbers.I've been hankering for a K98 of that vintage. I'm afraid they might be out of my budget at this point....
did however pick up a M1 years ago to honor my dad, as he served under George Patton in a CIC unit during WWII.

A dream car!Now you're going to have to get a Tatra so you have the right car to work on with those tools
Yes. They're terrific.I am assuming the "pebbly" black handles are hard plastic, correct
I'm glad someone else reviewed those maps. Dude is hilarious, but again, spot on. I was kind of hoping my family would fall within the "illiterate murderous peasant" or the "illiterate untrustworthy rebels" groups, but my blood pressure would probably be higher than it already is!No doubt part of that "stupid peasant" ethnic group.

Snerk. There's always gotta be one joker in every crowd. How are you doing, Billiams? The answer is no. Tona made 8, 9, and 10mm sockets, but I think they were special order - I didn't see them come standard in any of the sets in the catalog Tomas sent me. Both sets are the same, just different cases, and they start at 12mm. You can see the layout in the sticker.But does either one have a 10mm socket?
I don't know if anyone caught my sly metaphorical reference to "empire" in this description, but the irony should not be lost an anyone....Tona, now part of the same STANLEY BLACK & DECKER European empire as FACOM...

But leave it to my 95-year old mother, who has just the barest bearings on mental life remaining, to gently and yet firmly remind me on the phone last night that no matter how small or how melancholy, it will always be Blessed!
And just to remind me that all the stars are still shining, here is my old 'O Little Town of Bethlehem Spark Plug Company' wrenches display!
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Are you sure you mean post #239? The only screwdriver in that post is a Craftsman Model Number 9C4117, with the bits stored inside the hollow plastic handle, which they marketed as the "Add-A-Bit". You can read a little more about it in the third blurb in post #240, which has a link to even more in a post in the Long C thread.Lugz, post #239 here. What is the brand of that driver? I just picked up a Bonney with a wood handle. I bet its the same patent # and maker?
Like watching paint dry!Oh and I'm reading g up on your cadmium experiment too!!!!
Yes in #239 that Craftsman looks like it has the same or similar bits to the Bonney. From looking at the shaft where the bits get inserted looks similar. I gotta find my Bonney in a catalog.Are you sure you mean post #239? The only screwdriver in that post is a Craftsman Model Number 9C4117, with the bits stored inside the hollow plastic handle, which they marketed as the "Add-A-Bit". You can read a little more about it in the third blurb in post #240, which has a link to even more in a post in the Long C thread.
Like watching paint dry!![]()
...I thought you had actually verified by seeing the Sowell patent number on it. It does look like a similar design (with the simple crimping in the shank to retain them), could in fact be the same Sowell/Stanley design, and probably is, but will require a little looking into....same patent...
Those are the 1936 Phillips patents. I'd know them in my sleep - it's what wartime collectors look for on driver shanks. 250xxxx is 1950.
When you said...
...I thought you had actually verified by seeing the Sowell patent number on it. It does look like a similar design (with the simple crimping in the shank to retain them), could in fact be the same Sowell/Stanley design, and probably is, but will require a little looking into.
No apologies necessary. I was just pointing out that we have some research to do to confirm that your Bonney is actually an earlier version of the later Craftsman Add-a-Bit. Physically, it sure seems like it.

