I just got a lower denture implant with 3 sockets to hold a metal bar that the new denture snaps into. The cost was $10K. Not cheap, but I can eat again.I was getting a tooth implant to replace a lost tooth the other day. The dentist tightened the implant socket into my mouth using probably the tiniest torque wrench I've ever seen. It's about 3" long. As a contrast, I saw the next torque wrench at a garage sale the following Saturday. That one is at least 3 FEET long. (I thought the picture was better than it turned out...)
The first quote I got from another surgeon was around $10,000 just for the one tooth!
I waited a few months until I got dental insurance and it's still going to be about $3,000.
We are in the wrong business.
Don't leave out ophthalmologists, either. The one who fixed my cataracts has his own jet aircraft. Some have small buses and pick up 5 or 6 people from elder care facilities at a time for cataract surgery, then deliver them home.I recently read "If you want to help people, become a doctor. If you want to make real money, become a dentist."
Tempering was a fairly common and popular rust-inhibiting technique. I have a bunch of vintage tools that have a flame tempered finish, typically on dark steel, including some very old sockets (including the Bog Dandy set), a Craftsman gasket cutter, the steel bits in a few of my hollow handle multi-bits tools, and Chapman regularly did it to their bits and the ratchet. Since that is tiny, I will post that as a good example.Lugz the finish is interesting, kinda like the hytone.



I couldn’t quite read it, but it does look like it has that A with the little tail off it’s right leg that goes under the other letters. ANCO did have that logo at some point in the past. I’ll use my lighted magnifying lens to take a closer look tomorrow.^ does that upper one say "Anco" on it? As in "The Anderson Company" ? The windshield wiper manufacturers?
the lower one looks like a wrench for a stove - camping or backpacking stove.
Here's a Chapman set
Um, yeah. You may not recall that we have a thread where I have discussed this at length, OTG. The WWII set in the display case in Chapman's office was the first example I found and sent to them, which I have dated to 1942, as I just mentioned in my first reply. A couple years later I got lucky and found another one! But I have never seen a set in a leatherette pouch before. You may not recall that you and I discussed an even more interesting Chapman-supplied Snap-on set that I still kick myself for not going deep pockets on - also in an eyeglass case, on the Snap-on thread, linked here. In the ensuing discussion we determined through catalogs that Chapman was supplying them to Snap-on in the 60's in vinyl pouches, plastic cases and metal cases. No mention of leatherette. All of which is to elaborate on my curiosity about the date of production of the sets in leatherette pouches! It's a really cool and interesting find. In fact, I am going to cross-link it to the Chapman thread so I don't forget about it over here in Tiny Tools.According to Chapman website, the eyeglass cases are ww2 era.