That's a very nice British tool display there!






Leon B. Miller thread with examples of other sets, company information, the patent, etc, and links to other threads with L.B. Miller sets, if you're interested, linked here.Leon B. (L.B.) Miller
Another possibility is cadmium-plating. While typically and unfortunately sometimes exclusively associated with WWII as an alternative to chrome-plating, it was a common, much less expensive finish for 'economy' or 'price line' tools before and well after WWII, and very popular with outfits like Oxwall and G.M. Co.The steel finish on this set is chalky possibly due to oxidation.










I had a versatool in my shop before the flood...perhaps I shall find it one day!^ Your "Socketeer" is Shelton:
Shelton / Shelton Products Inc., Shelton, CT / patent 2989881 Jun 27 1961 & 3799226 Mar 26 1974 Raymond P. Lavietes / Shelton "Socketool" / http://progress-is-fine.blogspot.com/2012/11/socketool-me.html / https://www.garagejournal.com/forum/threads/the-amazing-shelton-socketool-c-1961.464026/ /
Nice find. That's a Penens (Plomb Tool Company subsidiary) product.Found today at a garage sale...1/4 hex drive Socketeer No. 9150. Double tire track knurling with Made in the U.S.A
Excellent! I found this catalog on ITCL Challenger by Pendelton Industries but don't see the 1950s catalogs mentioned in your post (or @Oldtuleguy OP). Thanks for sharing and getting me a brand to attach this too!Nice find. That's a Penens (Plomb Tool Company subsidiary) product.
Socketeer
I occasionally run across these "socketeer" sets and have not given them much thought. My interest was recently peaked when I found them in a 1955 challenger catalog. I suppose this means they were a penens product...www.garagejournal.com

errrr.... got my wires crossed in my head again.... nothing out of the ordinary.But how do you connect the relation of socketeer with socketool?
I didn't mention any catalogs, just the TM (first use 1954). As for the 1955 catalog OTG has excerpted, I suspect he has not scanned or uploaded the whole thing to IA/ITCL.I found this catalog on ITCL Challenger by Pendelton Industries but don't see the 1950s catalogs mentioned in your post (or @Oldtuleguy OP).
You're welcome.Thanks for sharing and getting me a brand to attach this too!
Yes, very G.M. in appearance so therein lies the question, what was the relationship between Pendelton Industries and the G.M. Mfg Co. I believe G.M. was definitely churning stuff out in the 1950s...but would Pendelton use a lower grade tool manufacturer? I dunno.I didn't mention any catalogs, just the TM (first use 1954). As for the 1955 catalog OTG has excerpted, I suspect he has not scanned or uploaded the whole thing to IA/ITCL.
You're welcome.
This is just idle conjecture, but I am not convinced the tools were actually made by Penens. The construction features of the sockets, the L handle, and the ratchet do not look like anything else made in the Penens factory. The tools and the packaging are classic G.M. Mfg. Co. or an outfit like them.
If you're having a hard time accepting that as the simplest, easiest, and most logical way for them to offer "lower-grade" tools, consider the alternative....would Pendelton use a lower grade tool manufacturer? I dunno.
Just picked up another NB set #1001. This one looks and feels older than the one in post #48 above. The difference is, not a red enamel finish on the holder and cross hatched knurling versus the tire track style. I'm thinking this set preceded the 1936 set, perhaps 1920s...?@Tom "Python" Aycock -
That Dec 12 1922 patent is the Henry H. Chase patent on the holder (below)
They used the same patent number on a variety of different holders - not all of them shaped anything at all like what is in the drawing in the patent document.
Indestro did the same thing - all kinds of variants on the holders, all using the same patent numbers.
To an extent, Wakefield did the same (see my 8R set posted here in the Wakefield thread - looks nothing at all like the drawing in any of the patent documents.)





I found a likely looking ratchet sitting around in my spares today and tried to see if I could add it to my Tomahawk set. It came with a couple of duplicate sockets. Eliminating the dupes allowed me to add the ratchet and plug.Those sets contained a ratchet, Don, and it looks like they used the same box as yours. I pulled these all off ebay when I was trying to differentiate the "Tomahawk" from the Dunlap and G.M. in a now-long-forgotten "hex drive socket" thread none of us could find.
BK
Why one of these was a "9 piece" and the other an "11 piece" remains a question. I've never seen these in any catalog or advertisement and if you try to search "Walden tomahawk", you get referred back to one of their early double-ended "socket wrenches".







You should share these pics with AA, they're pictured set has Mossberg stuff mixed in.





