raiderhillbilly
Well-known member
3baygarage, you are too quick. i was looking up the patents and you already posted.
Didn't realize how long this thread got.I'm so depressed! Ever since this tool box was posted here, I've been dying to get my hands on one. Never seen one like it before. I'm even considering painting my crinkle painted Kennedy green just to have something close.
I'm so depressed! Ever since this tool box was posted here, I've been dying to get my hands on one. Never seen one like it before. I'm even considering painting my crinkle painted Kennedy green just to have something close.
Must be a repaint? I have never seen that shade of green and the tool boxes with that logo style I have seen are usually black. Very nice shape box for the age.This one's mine but I want (need) something bigger!
Must be a repaint? I have never seen that shade of green and the tool boxes with that logo style I have seen are usually black. Very nice shape box for the age.
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Looks good. Nice work.Yes, Rustoleum Hammered Green
Interesting theory. I never dug into at all just took it for face value. It would make sense logically for SK to Branch out to this market. I wish I could see the link but it isn't letting me. It says I am not allowed to access the page.I recently posted up what I believe is a 1931 Hinsdale catalog, which can be found here. The only thing I have to go on in dating it is what appears to be a dated note on the cover, written in pencil.
In browsing through it this morning, something caught my eye and introduced a question. AA talks about S-K getting into the tool business as a result of Hinsdale going out of business, and leveraging their old stock to get started. Take a look at the male-male drive extension. Take a look at the sockets, and even the ratchet. All of those tools look like early S-K to me. The thing is, why would a company like Sherman-Klove, with a factory full of screw machines, need anything from Hinsdale?
I'm proposing another theory. I'm thinking S-K was making Hinsdale's tools for quite some time before they started on their own in '32. I find Hinsdale advertisements all the way through the 1930's and 40's so I don't think they ever went out of business. I'm betting S-K simply said hey, why are we selling this stuff to Hinsdale for wholesale when we could do it ourselves for retail?
Take a look and see what y'all think...........
You have to be logged in to my site.Interesting theory. I never dug into at all just took it for face value. It would make sense logically for SK to Branch out to this market. I wish I could see the link but it isn't letting me. It says I am not allowed to access the page.
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Yes, or vice-versa.....Here is an early Hex drive Hinsdale ratchet I picked up this morning. Do you think it was made by S-K?
-Don
SK started in 1913. They made tools for Hinsdale starting in 1927. They became S-K Tools in 1929 when they bought the inventory for Hinsdale when Hinsdale went out of buisness during the Great Depression.
source: http://berlandstools.com/history/

Cool. That patent pending mark gives you a time frame your ratchet was made in .
1939 to 1941.
Thank you!
Today I cleaned up another S-K 42470 1/2" ratchet that I purchased recently. I posted a picture of it when it was covered in dirt and paint splatter and even then I thought it was finished in matte black or black oxide. After cleaning it up, I am now convinced of it.
Was this the finish used by S-K during WWII because of the military ban on chrome, et al? If so, this is the first one I have encountered.
Brian


I think I have an SK Artisan thats black finnish like that.... are they that old ?
Brian,
<snip>
It seems that both prewar and postwar S-K tools mostly all are chrome plated.
-Don