Thanks for the tip and link, Cruzer. Because the content is usually more current/modern, I don't routinely scan the General Tools discussion forum for new threads.
I just read it.
Based on his comment in that post about '
not wanting to pay collector prices', it looks like
@YoshiMoshi3, to his credit, was already aware that the sizes were more typical in bygone eras, and he was wise to ask down here despite the collectible sticker shock awareness.
I was surprised to see someone up there suggest that Wright and Proto "have" 19/32, 21/32, 25/32, 29/32, and 31/32. Perhaps they meant "had", meaning vintage production, not current production.
If only for my own edification, I checked the catalogs on IA/ITCL.
Here is a 1969 Proto cat cut. Still has the 19/, 21/, 25/, 29/, and 31/.
Here is a Proto 1982 cat cut. All the 32nds are gone. (Maybe I looked in the wrong place?)
Having said all that, I hope my little evolutionary treatise on the entire industry - with random examples from my collection representative of that evolution, as well as those additionally supplied by others (e.g., Don's Indestro set), helped establish that not even in the heyday of the Roaring 20s will you find a set with ALL those 32nds sizes, and even though you can find a few with MANY or even MOST, the sockets will be heavy in profile and primitive by modern standards.
Having said that, as you alluded to here...
...and in some degree of disagreement with
@mike93lx 's sentiment (he's right that it is a miniscule segment of even the ********* mechanics community)...
I
do see the merit in wanting to have them for "just in case" scenarios, as they say.
As you know, many of us down here in Vintageland don't collect antique and vintage tools due to a direct and immediate need or use. Mostly it's for admiration, and their historical value as artifacts of the golden era of automobiles and wrenching, the thrill of the hunt, and the full-circle novelty. But some of us do use some of them some of the time, even the obsolete sizes
did have an application at one time, and it's not always out of the question one might run into it, especially if one is also dabbling in antique and vintage automobiles, machinery, equipment, and radios, etc.
I certainly don't keep my collectibles in my truck kit. I don't even keep them in the garage stack. But I do need two hands to count the times I have run down the Bilco steps into the Lugzsonian to fetch one because it was either the only or the best tool for the job.
And I am going to go through my orphans and extras and partial sets to see if I can string a "set" together for him.