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What is it? Wrench

Jordanj

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 8, 2014
Messages
51
I guess I should have asked “who made it?”.

My friend was going through some old tool boxes and found this.
Any idea who made it or what size it is?
He hasn’t gotten back with me on the actual size of each end.
 

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Sevenhills1952

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Aug 30, 2018
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1,750
Location
Virginia
The odd curve looks like this old International Harvestor wrench.
6e19ffbe856c3dbc3963b0883dc1cec3.jpg


Sent from my SM-S320VL using Tapatalk
 

dscheidt

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Apr 26, 2017
Messages
2,888
It does. Odd that it’s different sizes on either end.

That's not unusual in old equipment tool kit. Solves the "I need two 21/64 wrenches" problem without increasing tool count. (I've never needed a 21/64 wrench!).
 
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VocaTexas

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Jun 20, 2014
Messages
808
If you work on old farm equipment you will run into 17/64, 19/64, 21/64, and 25/64 fairly often. Those sizes are also common on some aircraft parts made before 1950. That I DO know, but not the why.
 

dscheidt

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Joined
Apr 26, 2017
Messages
2,888
If you work on old farm equipment you will run into 17/64, 19/64, 21/64, and 25/64 fairly often. Those sizes are also common on some aircraft parts made before 1950. That I DO know, but not the why.

They're USS sizes. This was the first standardized thread system used in the US. During the second world war, production efficiency drove it out of use. It
hung on for some existing uses (if you have the tooling, why change?). some electrical stuff used the smaller sizes, and Ford used it for some suspension stuff until the late 60s or so.
 
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