canuckian
Well-known member
I have a 1/4 ratchet like that. Haven't used it in years but if memory serves me right, it wasn't a very good ratchet. I'll snap a pic of it the next time I'm out in the garage .
I bought a 1/4'' socket set,has the same mastercraft logo that PCO6 has on his wrench.
mine says Coast To Coast Stores. driver is marked P-49, sockets are all P-marked.
Driver looks like plomb or proto,logo is a man forging a swoard.

Does anyone here (possibly Caper) have a picture of the Mastercraft ratchet with the ctc symbol on the forward/reverse lever? I had one in a 3/8dr years ago but warrantied it. Kinda wish I had of kept it cause I thought it looked cool. I cant find a picture anywhere so I hope you understand what I mean.
Does anyone here (possibly Caper) have a picture of the Mastercraft ratchet with the ctc symbol on the forward/reverse lever? .
Does anyone recognize this CTC socket set case? I wanted a case to hold my grandfathers 3/4 stuff and I saw this at a pawn shop and thought it was pretty neat.
Any idea of a time?
Here is a 3/8" flex head angled ratchet with the entire fwd/rev as the CTC symbol. It was part of a spark plug socket set that was purchased for a few bucks back in the early 90's.
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Mastercraft has really gone downhill in the last 30 yrs.The new wrenches are nowhere near the strength of the old Gray manufactured ones.I spread the open ends on the Maximum series fairly easily on hydraulic fittings but the old style is still as tight as when they were new.Still,for about a buck a wrench when they're on sale,the Maximum series is a great buy.
I hope your wrong with respect to the quality of the newer maximum tools. About two months ago I bought 30 standard length wrenches and two sets of short wrenches for $60 to use as "beaters". My purchase decision was based on the two sets of both metric and standard "Professional" wrenches bought back in the early 90's and was very impressed with their quality.
Didn't Husky used to be one of their suppliers?I seem to remember something about taking back broken Husky tools and getting Mastercraft as replacements.
Here are some of my Gray unpolished wrenches that I bought from Canadian Tire in the 70's. The large wrench at the top is a Mastercraft and I'm sure they were from the same supplier. They are good wrenches and I wish I had sprung for the polished ones way back when.
I had no idea mastercraft were good. I see them occasionally and will start buying them.
You stole that from me! I was going to buy it from him, but I PMed on GJ instead of through the kijiji ad haha.![]()
He told me someone on GJ had also wanted it. I didn't know it was in the Classifieds here as I never look anymore...
I'm no expert but the font on this wrench from PC06 looks very distinct and vintage. How do newer ones compare?

Don't buy those HK Porter vintage bolt cutters on that site as well, I want those!
I considered those, but they looked a bit rough to me & I'm holding out for a pair with those cool HKP handles.![]()
Here is a picture of the one I previously posted along with 2 newer ones.http://www.garagejournal.com/forum/attachment.php?attachmentid=84221&d=1289353857
I'm no expert but the font on this wrench from PC06 looks very distinct and vintage. How do newer ones compare?
I live in Canada, across the border from Michigan. This brings up one of my questions. I've been aquiring at pawn shops a lot of U.S. made Craftsman tools. Not sure how old they all are, but was there a point where all of Sears Canada tools were the same as sold in the U.S. (i.e. made in USA)?
I'm not sure if I'm finding these because I live across the border and the previous owners shopped in the U.S. or because we actually sold U.S. made ratchets and sockets here at some point.
Now, except maybe 1 or 2 items, all of Sears Canada Craftsman tools are overseas made.
BUMP!
It may surprise some that the brand was not always used exclusively for tools. In fact, the earliest use I am certain of is in 1945-46 and it was then used for sporting goods like cross-country skis. It may very well have also been used for tools in that catalogue, but I don't have access to the relevant pages...
At some time after 1945-46, CTC must have ceased marketing sports equipment as Mastercraft, but I don't know when. I'm 47 years old and I can just remember sporting goods being sold under the Playmaker name in the early 1970s.
..
Don't know if this will help any, but it appears to be an early sixties page (from the look and the $$). It is from CTC's (1997) book celebrating 75 years in business, no year was specified for this catalogue page.
Cool.
I just finished reading the new book for this year's 90th Anniversary titled "Living the Canadian Dream: How Canadian Tire became Canada's store".
It was interesting, but didn't include any info on the tools or suppliers over the years as I'd hoped for...
A.J.'s obit claims that he was the older brother. That's not correct; J.W. was older and was called Bill, not John! Damned Toronto Star.
At the Vancouver and Cloverdale (even the aldergrove) flea market sellers usually will have a lot of vintage mastercraft tools...
I would not expect to find many vintage Mastercraft tools in BC as Canadian Tire only expanded to the province in 1980!
BUMP!
So, years after I started this thread, I finally have a vintage Mastercraft item in my possession for study!
I acquired this set last week from the same fellow who sold me the old handbox in this thread.
It's a 1/2" set and it came with a short Gray extension and a Gray 3/8" socket the seller thought was missing from the set. It turns out, it was an 11/16" socket that was really missing...
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It has a very old Mastercraft logo that is still in very good condition:
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Now, I have no old Canadian Tire catalogues in print or PDF form and this is an impediment to studying the brand. I don't even know for sure when the Mastercraft brand was introduced!
It may surprise some that the brand was not always used exclusively for tools. In fact, the earliest use I am certain of is in 1945-46 and it was then used for sporting goods like cross-country skis. It may very well have also been used for tools in that catalogue, but I don't have access to the relevant pages...
At some time after 1945-46, CTC must have ceased marketing sports equipment as Mastercraft, but I don't know when. I'm 47 years old and I can just remember sporting goods being sold under the Playmaker name in the early 1970s.
Now, I do have photos of the odd tool-related pages from various catalogues from grabbing them from eBay sales over time. This is from the 1956 catalogue:
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Obviously, "Mastercraft" was being used for tools by this time. I submit the set above is very similar to the set pictured half-way down the right-hand page above.
The very observant & knowledgeable among you will also have noticed the tools are the products of New Britain. Specifically, the ratchets depicted are unmistakeably NB.
In the second post in this thread, caper said:
Indeed, Husky was a NB brand and I have seen the ratchets shown sold as New Britain, None Better and Husky. Here's a Husky:
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Surprisingly, though, the tools in my set are actually stamped Husky, not Mastercraft! Here's the set with the Gray items removed, but joined by a Husky ratchet of slightly later vintage:
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And the sockets included are all Husky, but from different vintages as evidenced by the differing logos:
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So... Were the "Mastercraft" sets actually really Husky marked as Husky or has someone filled this Mastercraft box with Husky products later?
I don't think that is the case and believe the set is as it was sold. It's too much of a coincidence for me to accept that some previous owner knew (or by sheer chance) filled the box with appropriate Husky tools of the correct vintage given that NB was the clear maker shown in the catalogue!
But that means we still don't know when "Mastercraft" actually started appearing re-badged on the tools themselves.
So this is an appeal to anyone out there with old catalogues and a scanner to get to work and provide us with some data! I would be pleased to compile & host the information that anyone can provide...

The 7/8 socket was one I replaced... I never noticed the 11/16 was missing lol.

Interersting research you are conducting. I get paid for them, then you do the research. That's a sweet deal for me!![]()
I was curious if this "Gray-like" Mastercraft that PC06 (his photos not mine!, thanks) has is actually made by Gray? I have a 9/16 "Mastercraft Canada" wrench that I'm sure is made by Gray. But I'm curious, if the "Mastercraft" is also made by Gray why wouldn't it say Canada on it? All my wrenches, even the ones from the 1920's are always marked with a coo if they are U.S. or Canadian made. I find it odd in an era when Japanese tools were becoming fairly common why it wouldn't say "Canada" on them if they were Grays. If both types were made by Gray, which type of labelling came first? IMO the "Mastercraft Canada" are much more rare than the "Mastercraft" I've only seen "Mastercraft Canada" wrenches twice in my life, once in a Kijiji ad, then the one I own.
Yes, I'm confident PCO6's Mastercraft was made by Gray despite the lack of a "CANADA" stamp. Check out this old thread for more details...
I don't know which labelling came first & I'm not sure I've seen one of the Gray-made "Mastercraft Canada" wrenches you speak of. Can you post a nice photo of both sides Gregg?