OP
Private Lugnutz
Well-known member
Thanks, 4.c.fabulous find there, Lugz.
Thanks, 4.c.fabulous find there, Lugz.
I don't know, and I probably would, but I have a different quandary. I actually found a No. 77 gouge set from the same era last April (see post #148 on page 4) and it has a few of the missing gouges in it. Do I rob Peter to pay Paul and pay Peter back later, when I find the gouges? I am leaning that way. My chances of running into the missing Balsa Stripper in the wild aren't so good, though, so completing this kit might be a good example of a rare foray on eBait to complete it. Some day. My patience is pretty long, though.Does XActo still make the missing gouges, etc? Would you put modern parts in, to complete the set, if they do?
Thanks.Very awesome case on that set.
Ironically, I have! Last April I found one, used, missing the handle and one of the blades. Posted here. EDIT: Different decal on the lid.I have not seen one of those before.
That boxed set looks like the one I got in 1963-64, not sure of the year. It was a prize for selling magazine subscriptions.
My original set, received as a gift Christmas 1966, is the one in the background and looks quite similar to yours, but I think your decal has faded from UV light. Mine's always been stored inside a cabinet out of direct sunlight.
The set in the foreground belonged to my late step-father, and I believe it's reasonable to assume it's most likely 1970's vintage. The box is just a bit different, and the latch is different. It also contains the large red plastic handle as opposed to the large aluminum handle in the earlier set.
The small blue-and-white paper wrappers those extra blades are packed inside of in your photos above causes me to believe your set pre-dates my early set. When I was buying spare blades from J.K. Gill Co. in the mid-1960s they were packaged in a printed paper sleeve similar to yours, but with completely different graphics, and the sleeve was inside a molded plastic sleeve.
Searching for the word Script in this thread might give you clues.Does anyone know what decade this knife was made? The original head is below. I just put a fresh head on it bc I still use it. It was gifted to me in an old tool box with a bunch of other old tools. Haven't been able to find another one with that type of logo stamped into the aluminum like that. Thanks!
Maybe he made a 3D model of the new plans. Those were big in the 80s. We burnt thru more than a few XActo knives and blades in making one pair of models. Didn't have all them other goodies to play with.I picked this complete set today. I assume it’s from the 80’s based on the plaque. Seems like kind of an odd appreciation gift.
Looks like a No. 87, one of their largest and finest sets.I picked this complete set today.
That era makes sense in comparison to my No. 87, too, which is from 1971. Everything about yours looks a tad newer.I assume it’s from the 80’s based on the plaque.
Seems like kind of an odd appreciation gift.

The slip covers are more modern, I first saw them in the 1980s when I started working a real job.Two with slip over covers, have not experienced those previously.
Interesting. These were a first for me, but I can see where it would be a good addition in industrial settings where the caps would always go missing. I know that happens where I work all the time.The slip covers are more modern, I first saw them in the 1980s when I started working a real job.


Yup, that's right.guess when you go through them all, apparently you throw the whole thing away, because there is no way to retrieve anything from the disposal compartment.