The reason I put that up there was to see if you noticed where the bit was stored, I have only seen about four of those sets that were complete and nobody ever had the bit where it goes in the illustration. It is kind ofThanks, Daniel. I’ll edit the set part number.
-Don




Not if the best item was the cotter pin or prison shank.That’s a popular postwar 3/8” drive set. It probably was introduced is 1946 and used until around 1953.Here's an SK lite pick from this week end:
The SK logo now to date the box.
The only SK items in the box. A breaker bar, universal, a 12" extension & a 15mm 12 pt. socket which seems to be newer. The breaker has what seems to be piece of wood over the knurling.
The rest of the box was a set of 3/8" Proto sockets, a Bonney offset wrench, and 1/2 Snap On 3/8 deep.
Not if the best item was the cotter pin or prison shank.









i hadn’t cleaned the sockets at all. I did a little touch up on the ratchet and removed the sharpie price marking. The 7/16“ socket is the only one spending an overnight in the evaporust.Nice!
Were they that clean when you got them or did you do some spit and polish for the family photos?




About 3 x deeper than R.E.M. (Reasonably Expected Monetary) value.Sorry, I think the seller is dreaming...










Thank you! I was after a Craftsman chest and these were up for grabs too. Couldn’t pass on these.Nice work picking these up cheap !



