-B-
Well-known member
LOC-RITE is from Kesley Hays Bonney bought them out.
LOC-RITE is from Kesley Hays Bonney bought them out.

SO owns the Blackhawk name too, which is weird because those tools used to be associated with Stanley-Mac
I don't know what all this talk about Snap-On owning Blackhawk is about, but it's not true. It was passed around a few times and was at times owned by New Briton, Litton, and National Hand Tool. Stanley bought National Hand Tool in 1986 and the Blackhawk brand came with it. I can't swear SO never owned Blackhawk, but if they did it was only briefly and a long time ago.


yup. i believe everything i read on the net. looked pretty good til it said it was in the yarns and thread category.
yup, that's it snap-on is in the yarn and thread business.
ps. if you just type blackhawk in to your search engine it will send you right to the stanley-proto website. that may give you a hint on who owns blackhawk.
The confusion is because there's more than one Blackhawk brand.
Blackhawk (the hand tools brand) is owned by Stanley. Well, now it's technically Stanley Black & Decker. At the bottom of the Blackhawk Tools website you'll see this:
http://www.protoindustrial.com/en/industrial-tools/BrandPage/BlackhawkByProto/
Blackhawk collision repair is a brand that sells equipment for measuring/straightening frames. This company is owned by Snap-on.
http://www.blackhawkcr.com/
I mean like what the hell? Why not buy up the patent from whoever is still holding the patent and start making them again?
Out here in Clovis/Fresno CA, there was a company called California Trimmer that had been building reel type mowers since 1938 right close by in Fresno. Recently, within the last 2 years or so, a company from Eastman Industries bought the company along with all the patents and starting building the mowers in Portland, Maine.
You see where I'm going with this?
What about South Bend lathes, name now owned by Grizzly and made you know where.Too many famous old names have been reborn as offshore trash (remember FISHER audio?).
Better to let Bonney R.I.P.
Steve

To answer your original question: Because few people like flushing money down a toilet.
Well I'm sure they would love to start a company from all 100 of you who even remember the name and have a nostalgic sentiment towards them. 99.9 percent of tool buyers probably wouldn't even recognize the name of a relic tool company sorry to say.

Who heard of Gearwrench before the 90s ?
Just a tidbit...
Technically, some Bonney tools are still produced.
Granco acquired some of Bonneys wrench tooling.
Granco was bought by WTA Tool and they are still manufacturing in the USA using Bonney tooling.
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Well said. I was sorry to see Apex close down Armstrong. When I was a kid, Arnstrong was an industrial brand and they were not made to be pretty. Later came their full polish chrome stuff. I used 10 mm a lot on the job and had an an Armstrong combo that was a work of art. It was a replacement for a lost wrench. That was as nice as any wrench I have ever seen. I also had a set of black Bonneys that I really liked. I see a set of Armstrong black metric combos for sale for 60 bucks. I don't need them but I am tempted.It would be a very small market.
Most of the market is homeowners and hobbyists that want as cheap as possible.
Then you have pros that want the best AND the convenience of truck service - that's already being handled, and truck service isn't happening in any resurrection!
Then you have maybe 10% of tool buyers that want something in the middle. In that market you already have Taiwan tools at the lower $ end, and Proto, Williams, etc on the higher $ USA made end. How much market would be left for Bonney (or any other similar company)?
If there was enough market to go around Craftsman would still be carrying USA made tools and Armstrong wouldn't be out of business - there's your answer.
I do not think I have ever seen a Granco wrench and I think that they even might be no longer producing tools. I have seen Bonney and I have a basic set of SAE and Metric Bonney wrenches.Just a tidbit...
Technically, some Bonney tools are still produced.
Granco acquired some of Bonneys wrench tooling.
Granco was bought by WTA Tool and they are still manufacturing in the USA using Bonney tooling.
![]()
They might have bought some of the equipment/dies/tooling, but Snap On owns the Bonney name and trademark. It was also renewed by Snappy in 2008
http://tsdr.uspto.gov/#caseNumber=71031399&caseType=SERIAL_NO&searchType=statusSearch
https://trademarks.justia.com/owners/snap-on-incorporated-2294/

I do not think I have ever seen a Granco wrench and I think that they even might be no longer producing tools. I have seen Bonney and I have a basic set of SAE and Metric Bonney wrenches.
After doing a search for Granco and WTA. Granco has no website and does not show anywhere except on Harry Epsteins and all they had were Crowfoot wrenches. WTA has a website and they also do not make basic hand wrenches but they had B nut flare wrenches and crowfoots. I found nothing like my attached pictures of basic hand wrenches.

Well said. I was sorry to see Apex close down Armstrong. When I was a kid, Arnstrong was an industrial brand and they were not made to be pretty. Later came their full polish chrome stuff. I used 10 mm a lot on the job and had an an Armstrong combo that was a work of art. It was a replacement for a lost wrench. That was as nice as any wrench I have ever seen. I also had a set of black Bonneys that I really liked. I see a set of Armstrong black metric combos for sale for 60 bucks. I don't need them but I am tempted.
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