Oldtuleguy
Well-known member
- Joined
- Nov 4, 2017
- Messages
- 10,457
I had to buy, it's soooo cool
I had to buy, it's soooo coolYes bought the lot for the speedball. Could not help myself. It was funny because listed as 3/8 drive. Made an offer on the "make offer" option and the seller accepted, so no getting out of it! Curse my tool addiction....
Blackhawk speed ball handle
I thought I saw one in the bottom of an old messy toolbox once at a flea market and just about had a heart attack. It turned out to be some kind of stick shift from a 70's era Opel or something like that. Dropped it in disgust!One on my "sought after" list...........nice snag.

Is it a bullet/torpedo box?Now the guy listed the toolbox the set came in so my ocd tool disorder made me buy it....
Blackhawk is one of the more addictive brands.
Some nice sets. I only have 1 7/8 piece and it's a Blackhawk step down ratchet plug.7/8 qd set, no plug for ratchet. This thing is heavy. Largest socket is 2 3/8. Amazingly still has decal. I have some 7/8 square stock to make a plug with.
I just bought this Blackhawk Vintage Floor Jack.
It’s definitely a candidate for a restoration or a
resto-mod. if parts can’t be found.
It currently does NOT work. It has a couple
of breaks in a couple of the cast pieces from
just glancing at it, and the cylinder needs
work also.
Oops, here they are
7/8 qd set, no plug for ratchet. This thing is heavy. Largest socket is 2 3/8. Amazingly still has decal. I have some 7/8 square stock to make a plug with.

I have had those for a while and now they have a box. I particularly like those anti knuckle buster wrenches. Only have 2 so far. They are scarce. The 7/16 stuff is very early, no date codes. Never saw a whole set pre date code before so had to have it. The hexo wrenches are an oddity, but fit the time frame. As alloy artifacts describes them, they were first thought to be husky made, but later found to be a blackhawk economy brand.
I have a 3/4 and a 25/32. 25/32 is stamped closeout and the shank is flattened a bit, which makes me think it's the newer of the two. 3/4 has seen some hard use , one end showing some hammer marks and evidence of grinding... has remains of cad finish where as the other is plain steel.
I'm pretty sure it is. I don't have a record of them making a single offset after 1935, and even if they did but they weren't in the catalogs, the model number would almost certainly be 156XX. They went to that series by 1937 for all their DBE (Long double offset, Short double offset, and Long "Angl-Head") wrenches and their "Half and Half" (their name for combination) wrenches.Check that: The lower one could be older...........
I'm pretty sure it is. I don't have a record of them making a single offset after 1935, and even if they did but they weren't in the catalogs, the model number would almost certainly be 156XX. They went to that series by 1937 for all their DBE (Long double offset, Short double offset, and Long "Angl-Head") wrenches and their "Half and Half" (their name for combination) wrenches.