I was hoping that, guess I have to get an ebay store going for all the odd stuff I’ve been finding lately. That was in the junk bin in a pawn shop, paid a dollar for it. Thanks for the replies folks.Stillgottimefor1 -
^ what he said. could be Duro-Chrome, Indestro or Walden - all three made very similar models with nothing stamped on them.
That occurred to me later, and you’re right. Would much rather be dealing with you folks. For some reason I was distrustful of that part of this site, just not seeing it. Thanks for the reminder.^ or list it in the "Classified" forum here. way less hassle and you don't have to deal with Ebay that way.









It is.It appears to be very well made
I don't know. It looks like first half of 20th century to me, but that's just me. Too bad the guy didn't show the flip side.I came across a rather odd unit yesterday while perusing ebay listings. While not nearly as intriguing as yours, I thought it rather interesting.
The stampings, the slotted-head screws, and the whole "look" scream 19th century. You think it's possible it may have been intended as a wheel nut wrench?




I’m pretty sure that was made in Japan.Hello All,
Just picked up this Herbrand, 3/8-drive flex-head ratchet model J2SP.
Overall in decent shape, some of the chrome has flaked off, otherwise it's dandy.
I haven't been able to find any reference to this model number.
Any ideas as to age or where this fits in the Herbrand line-up?
Thanks!
Matthew
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A few of my older 1/2 ratchets. A mix of brands. Craftsman, SK, Williams,
Funny, I was in a pawn shop once where they had a set without the ratchet. I brought the guy a ratchet and gave it to him so he could have a good set.I was hoping that, guess I have to get an ebay store going for all the odd stuff I’ve been finding lately. That was in the junk bin in a pawn shop, paid a dollar for it. Thanks for the replies folks.![]()
Looks similar, but not exactly, to Blackhawk ratchets from the late 80s and 90s.
I’m pretty sure that was made in Japan.
Isaiah6113 said:"...I thought perhaps it might have been offshore; having no "USA". I don't have any Herbrand,..."
It’s a shame Indestro is no longer in business. I always liked their tools. If I remember correctly you could buy them at Kmart in the 60s also at my local mom and pop hardware store. Sadly they are gone as well. Times have changednice 6471 female ratchet
I'm assuming you are talking about my Herbrand ratchet humber? If so, that's interesting, thanks for the observation.I’m sure that is a spark plug ratchet for OHV V8’s.
Someone more knowledgeable might have compiled a history of these?
Alas, no little triangle.I don't suppose that ratchet has a little triangle stamped on it somewhere?
It's difficult to determine exactly where late production Herbrand came from. GJ member twertsy (ToolArchives.com) and I went back and forth about Herbrand several times - he insisted that a good portion of their latter-day production was produced in Asia.
Lacking eyewitness accounts, it's rather difficult to say with any certainty.
They apparently were producing product in Canada well into the 21st century, depending upon whose anecdotal account you choose to believe.
The jury's still out on this one.
I bought it from the original owner, who bought it in Toronto and lives in Toronto. He couldn't remember when he bought it, but said over 30 years ago.^ That is a tough one. Several years back, in the middle of the night (of course), I was way down into a "Herbrand" rabbit hole and found something in which the author claimed to have lived in Toronto in close proximity to a manufacturing facility that was producing Herbrand, and said something to the effect that "they were in business until about 2002 or 2004."
(Is that ambiguous enough for you?)
I didn't bookmark it. I didn't copy and paste it. It was just another anecdotal snippet that got committed to memory, but not given a lot of credence. (Because all the anecdotes in the galaxy do not make for empirical evidence.)
Having said that, I will myself dismiss it out of hand, because there's nothing to support it. Take it for what it's worth. BK
This is interesting. The rights ended in 2004, which aligns with the 2002-2004 date mentioned by four.cycle above.I found this at the USPTO database. It looks like a Canadian company bought the rights to the name, and then canceled it. And in 2012 a company in Chicago tried to use the brand but it didn't last long.
Okay, I get that, thank you for digging out your comparative. Being Canadian I too like to think that we would stamp our stuff as being made here, and to your point we do! I certainly I have enough examples of that, as does OTG and his spinner above attest!Sorry but I have to disagree. The date has nothing to do with where it was made because ownership was importing tools and not placing a coo on them, I'm assuming for a reason. Well known American brand name, now with offshore suppliers. I like to think if that was made in Canada, it would have been stamped Canada.
The ratchet head says Asian import to me. I have proof in another form of ratchet. I'll dig out what I have.




