Last week, I picked up these two 1/4" Craftsman sets from the early '60's. One is missing a ratchet. The other has a long-lever style included. I have enough pieces and parts to make a complete 16 pc. set. The problem is, there are differences in the way each set was made. The boxes have different latching mechanisms, (the one on the right is older) and the extender bars (both long and short) have different finishes. One pair has a satin finish, the other a full polish. How do I match these up to the right box?
I did my homework on these before posting this. Seems the long-lever style was only made from 1957-58, but was offered in sets into the early '60's, before the butterflies.
The ratchet question aside, I'll address the question about matching the different sets with the different boxes. The short answer is, there's no wrong answer.
Sears sold millions upon millions upon millions of socket sets. Moore Drop Forge (MDF), EASCO, then Danaher had multiple factories pumping out Craftsman wrenches, sockets, ratchets, etc for decades. No one knows exactly how sets were put together but the theory I follow is that all were sent to one or more central locations to be placed in sets or labeled for individual sale. Sets were OFTEN mismatched (letter codes, finishes, even manufacturers), dating back to WWII.
The boxes were made by a different manufacturer than the tools that went into them. If you look back to 1945-48, one can find tools from 4 different manufacturers in the same style box (Plomb/Proto, New Britain/Husky, MDF, and SK), or one manufacturer in 3 different style boxes, and it was common to have mixed manufacturers in sets.
Back to your question. You can put those sets together in any way, shape, or form, and you would have a configuration that was correct.
My advice - do what makes the most sense to you!
Nice finds, btw!
Brian