Tool Talk
What's-It Forum => What's-It Forum => Topic started by: 1930 on August 30, 2014, 12:00:41 PM
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:grin:
I should know the 2 things farthest left, I have see them before but maybe when I did see them before I didnt have a clue what they were.
Middle thing same as above
Farthest right is a Kent Moore tool 33081 B Google says its a cam tool but the picture given does not match my item.
Thanks
(http://i675.photobucket.com/albums/vv117/jhason2/Picture319_zps3847ac78.jpg) (http://s675.photobucket.com/user/jhason2/media/Picture319_zps3847ac78.jpg.html)
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you know the stud remover?
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Two items on the left are the center section of a two jaw puller.
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The two leftmost look like parts of pullers to me (but I've been correctly so much of late I'm fully expecting someone will come along and protest they're a hamburger press instead :cheesy:)
The tool to the right has a mate on Ebay. The auction description states it is a "Advanced Cam Plug Seal Installer"
http://www.ebay.com/itm/KENT-MOORE-TOOL-J-33081-ADVANCE-CAM-PLUG-SEAL-INSTALLER-A95-/301062632279
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Two items on the left are the center section of a two jaw puller.
Are you sure they are not tuning forks, they do make a very nice ring.
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The two leftmost look like parts of pullers to me (but I've been correctly so much of late I'm fully expecting someone will come along and protest they're a hamburger press instead :cheesy:)
The tool to the right has a mate on Ebay. The auction description states it is a "Advanced Cam Plug Seal Installer"
http://www.ebay.com/itm/KENT-MOORE-TOOL-J-33081-ADVANCE-CAM-PLUG-SEAL-INSTALLER-A95-/301062632279
Drats, I prob. threw out the other piece not knowing what it was
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I would say the two items on the left are the center sections of two different two jaw pullers, but maybe I've never seen a puller design that uses both of those parts together. The second from left looks like a variation of a steering wheel puller - bolts go through the slots into a threaded bit on the wheel; these are useful for far more than just steering wheels.
Third from the left is, as International3414 indicates, a stud remover, clamping down on the stud to pull it and destroying the exposed stud threads in the process.
The one at the right's a mystery to me.
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Can anyone provide a picture of the pullers assembled, maybe then I can pinpoint the missing pieces.
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I would say the two items on the left are the center sections of two different two jaw pullers, but maybe I've never seen a puller design that uses both of those parts together. The second from left looks like a variation of a steering wheel puller - bolts go through the slots into a threaded bit on the wheel; these are useful for far more than just steering wheels.
Third from the left is, as International3414 indicates, a stud remover, clamping down on the stud to pull it and destroying the exposed stud threads in the process.
The one at the right's a mystery to me.
Quote: Third from the left is, as International3414 indicates, a stud remover, clamping down on the stud to pull it and destroying the exposed stud threads in the process.
Really, I would never had guessed that, would like to see it in action to get a clearer idea
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Lower left, could this be a valve tool?
Right side patent number 3, 807,530 I get nothing using google
Top: Not sure why he collected these ( what I call ) thumbscrews. There may be more out there.
(http://i675.photobucket.com/albums/vv117/jhason2/Picture321_zps08d979b1.jpg) (http://s675.photobucket.com/user/jhason2/media/Picture321_zps08d979b1.jpg.html)
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Quote: Third from the left is, as International3414 indicates, a stud remover, clamping down on the stud to pull it and destroying the exposed stud threads in the process.
Really, I would never had guessed that, would like to see it in action to get a clearer idea
Take a bolt - 3/8" would be about right, from the photo - and insert it in one of the holes, from the bottom (the bottom being the side visible in your photo). Then use the female drive on top to move the knurled wheel into the bolt. With a little experimentation, you'll see which way it would need to be set up to clamp onto a stud. You then just exert pressure with a square drive handle of some kind until the stud comes out (or breaks off below the surface, always fun).
There's another design that uses a wedge. This design's easier to use, when you have the (not inconsiderable) room needed to make it work.
No certain idea on the new stuff you posted, but the puller looking thingie is for some light-duty pull. Not sure exactly, although given the tie rod adjuster that you've posted on another thread, I'd wonder if this is some kind of puller-remover for tie rod ends or similar parts. But I'm speculating like a Dutch tulip buyer here.
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A guess...the puller on bottom left - a battery terminal puller?
Al
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The guy has alot of these things, this one is marked Mac E6. Doing a search on-line is no help.
They all have that end that looks like as if it was twisted off.
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The guy has alot of these things, this one is marked Mac E6. Doing a search on-line is no help.
They all have that end that looks like as if it was twisted off.
I'd say that is an extractor.
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OOPS looks like the tapered shoulder screws are solid head not socket head as I first thought. Still could be used with puller. The puller X pieces shown have vertical pieces that are used to pull with and a screw goes in ctr and bears against the ctr of what ever you are trying to pull the other thing from. The vertical pieces can have a hook on end that goes behind the pullee or some special end that takes the pictured screws that .are screwed into the pullee. pulee is my concoction cause I don't know what other word to use- could be a hub or pulley. Chuck Garrett
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The two deals on the right are I am guessing impact gun heads? Ive had alot of guns but never broken a head to the point of no use so not sure why he would have these spares ( assuming my guess is right )
Lower left and upper left I have no clue
Lower left has a removable pin from the center
I can post more/better pictures if need be
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No clue on this one, upper half slides against the lower half
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on the 5 threaded studs, I do not know what size they are, but I have a couple sets
that look sort of like yours.
mine screws into the side post batteries to attach my battery charger clamps to.
each set has two sizes to represent positive & negative.
are the threads on yours the size of a side post screw ?
Frank
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on the 5 threaded studs, I do not know what size they are, but I have a couple sets
that look sort of like yours.
mine screws into the side post batteries to attach my battery charger clamps to.
each set has two sizes to represent positive & negative.
are the threads on yours the size of a side post screw ?
Frank
I found some more, now I have 3 different sizes, they are heavy/bulky items but they are all the same thread size/pitch. Largest head dim measures 1 inch and the smallest 5/8
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Im guessing that these bits all fit some sort of socket just like the bit on the farthest right fit into that particular Mac socket.
I have a few of the ones that I show farthest right and they all have the same end that goes down into the socket where as the row farthest left have just a little notch cut out of the bottoms and the two in the middle have nothing more than a dimple in the end.
But again I am assuming they are all the same tools?
Does that sound right?
(http://i675.photobucket.com/albums/vv117/jhason2/Picture325_zps6b942daf.jpg) (http://s675.photobucket.com/user/jhason2/media/Picture325_zps6b942daf.jpg.html)
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Apparently one wasnt enough for this guy, all 3 marked Mac SC 105 Google and E-bay are not helping identify. 3/8 drive and impact sockets of some sort?
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Last 3 are like the sockets for removing the float valve from a carburator, it goes in the slotted ring, but these look bigger, so for something with the same setup but bigger...
Edit float valve/valve seat, bigger ones may fit the long needle valve seat on updraft...?
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Last 3 are like the sockets for removing the float valve from a carburator, it goes in the slotted ring, but these look bigger, so for something with the same setup but bigger...
Edit float valve/valve seat, bigger ones may fit the long needle valve seat on updraft...?
These look like impact sockets, about 2 inches long and maybe 3/4 across, does that still qualify?
Maybe this will help
(http://i675.photobucket.com/albums/vv117/jhason2/Picture330_zps31c249ba.jpg) (http://s675.photobucket.com/user/jhason2/media/Picture330_zps31c249ba.jpg.html)
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No clue on this one, upper half slides against the lower half
That's to hold a bolt or nut, usually to put it in hard place where your hand won't fit
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Heres another, cant remember but seen it here before
(http://i675.photobucket.com/albums/vv117/jhason2/Picture328_zps12e096a7.jpg) (http://s675.photobucket.com/user/jhason2/media/Picture328_zps12e096a7.jpg.html)
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Heres another, cant remember but seen it here before
(http://i675.photobucket.com/albums/vv117/jhason2/Picture328_zps12e096a7.jpg) (http://s675.photobucket.com/user/jhason2/media/Picture328_zps12e096a7.jpg.html)
Fireman's tool -- hook spanner for "outside lug" type fire hose connectors - rectangular slot may fit gas service shutoff valve, and tapered end would punch through window glass, and also work as a pry. Resting on a couple of head gaskets for ???
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>These look like impact sockets, about 2 inches long and maybe 3/4 across, does that still qualify?
And with one way tapered teeth, very weird, no , not what I was thinking of. Some sort of sensor tool? Very strange....
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Heres another, cant remember but seen it here before
(http://i675.photobucket.com/albums/vv117/jhason2/Picture328_zps12e096a7.jpg) (http://s675.photobucket.com/user/jhason2/media/Picture328_zps12e096a7.jpg.html)
Fireman's tool -- hook spanner for "outside lug" type fire hose connectors - rectangular slot may fit gas service shutoff valve, and tapered end would punch through window glass, and also work as a pry. Resting on a couple of head gaskets for ???
You want it? Let me know, no charge just cover the sending.
Head Gasket = early slanty
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>These look like impact sockets, about 2 inches long and maybe 3/4 across, does that still qualify?
And with one way tapered teeth, very weird, no , not what I was thinking of. Some sort of sensor tool? Very strange....
You better get crackin :)
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The guy has alot of these things, this one is marked Mac E6. Doing a search on-line is no help.
They all have that end that looks like as if it was twisted off.
I'd say that is an extractor.
You are correct, I found a few Proto 9525 and google told me screw extractor, so I added screw extractor to the Mac E-6 and I found the same tools as screw extractors. This guy must have broken alot of screws, I do not believe the ends were twisted when new.
Thanks
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I would say the two items on the left are the center sections of two different two jaw pullers, but maybe I've never seen a puller design that uses both of those parts together. The second from left looks like a variation of a steering wheel puller - bolts go through the slots into a threaded bit on the wheel; these are useful for far more than just steering wheels.
Third from the left is, as International3414 indicates, a stud remover, clamping down on the stud to pull it and destroying the exposed stud threads in the process.
The one at the right's a mystery to me.
Thanks for the info Bill
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A guess...the puller on bottom left - a battery terminal puller?
Al
Might be, good guess
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OOPS looks like the tapered shoulder screws are solid head not socket head as I first thought. Still could be used with puller. The puller X pieces shown have vertical pieces that are used to pull with and a screw goes in ctr and bears against the ctr of what ever you are trying to pull the other thing from. The vertical pieces can have a hook on end that goes behind the pullee or some special end that takes the pictured screws that .are screwed into the pullee. pulee is my concoction cause I don't know what other word to use- could be a hub or pulley. Chuck Garrett
Sounds like Im missing way more than I thought. Oh well, good tuning forks anyway so Ill keep them cause I like the ring
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on the 5 threaded studs, I do not know what size they are, but I have a couple sets
that look sort of like yours.
mine screws into the side post batteries to attach my battery charger clamps to.
each set has two sizes to represent positive & negative.
are the threads on yours the size of a side post screw ?
Frank
Thanks Frank, these might be a lost cause. I think Ill keep them anyway, you never know when I might need this sort of thing.
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Im guessing that these bits all fit some sort of socket just like the bit on the farthest right fit into that particular Mac socket.
I have a few of the ones that I show farthest right and they all have the same end that goes down into the socket where as the row farthest left have just a little notch cut out of the bottoms and the two in the middle have nothing more than a dimple in the end.
But again I am assuming they are all the same tools?
Does that sound right?
(http://i675.photobucket.com/albums/vv117/jhason2/Picture325_zps6b942daf.jpg) (http://s675.photobucket.com/user/jhason2/media/Picture325_zps6b942daf.jpg.html)
BTT
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The two deals on the right are I am guessing impact gun heads? Ive had alot of guns but never broken a head to the point of no use so not sure why he would have these spares ( assuming my guess is right )
Lower left and upper left I have no clue
Lower left has a removable pin from the center
I can post more/better pictures if need be
BTT
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No clue on this one, upper half slides against the lower half
That's to hold a bolt or nut, usually to put it in hard place where your hand won't fit
Something I will prob. never need, Ill keep it anyway, thanks
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>These look like impact sockets, about 2 inches long and maybe 3/4 across, does that still qualify?
And with one way tapered teeth, very weird, no , not what I was thinking of. Some sort of sensor tool? Very strange....
Rustys getting old! :undecided:
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Made by Industro. Spring loaded lever pushes out what looks like a feeler gauge which comes out of a socket end. The other end has two little tangs with a hole in the center.
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In photo #323, four items, the two on the right are as you thought, repair heads/anvils for an impact wrench. If those are 1/2 in. they look just like the ones used in Chicago Pneumatic model 734 impacts, replaced many of them. The two on the left, I can't tell from the angle.
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In photo #323, four items, the two on the right are as you thought, repair heads/anvils for an impact wrench. If those are 1/2 in. they look just like the ones used in Chicago Pneumatic model 734 impacts, replaced many of them. The two on the left, I can't tell from the angle.
Yes they are 1/2 inch, thanks for the confirmation. Never had the impacts apart.
Better pictures below, may not even be tools and after 13 hrs yesterday of sorting thru this stuff at this point Im just about over these little guys anyway.
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Lower left looks like a bearing press. I have attachments on puller sets that look exactly the same.
Chilly
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I would say the two items on the left are the center sections of two different two jaw pullers, but maybe I've never seen a puller design that uses both of those parts together. The second from left looks like a variation of a steering wheel puller - bolts go through the slots into a threaded bit on the wheel; these are useful for far more than just steering wheels.
Third from the left is, as International3414 indicates, a stud remover, clamping down on the stud to pull it and destroying the exposed stud threads in the process.
The one at the right's a mystery to me.
I picked up this KD 2291 today at the flea for 3 dollars. I can say for sure that I did not see the missing parts within the pieces I had picked thru.
This 2291 is listed on E-bay as a steering wheel/dampener puller.
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Lower left, could this be a valve tool?
Right side patent number 3, 807,530 I get nothing using google
Top: Not sure why he collected these ( what I call ) thumbscrews. There may be more out there.
(http://i675.photobucket.com/albums/vv117/jhason2/Picture321_zps08d979b1.jpg) (http://s675.photobucket.com/user/jhason2/media/Picture321_zps08d979b1.jpg.html)
Can someone confirm that the lower left tool is indeed a battery tool?
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Im guessing that these bits all fit some sort of socket just like the bit on the farthest right fit into that particular Mac socket.
I have a few of the ones that I show farthest right and they all have the same end that goes down into the socket where as the row farthest left have just a little notch cut out of the bottoms and the two in the middle have nothing more than a dimple in the end.
But again I am assuming they are all the same tools?
Does that sound right?
(http://i675.photobucket.com/albums/vv117/jhason2/Picture325_zps6b942daf.jpg) (http://s675.photobucket.com/user/jhason2/media/Picture325_zps6b942daf.jpg.html)
Also looking for confirmation these are indeed bits, anyone have any like these, maybe someone here could use them?
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Apparently one wasnt enough for this guy, all 3 marked Mac SC 105 Google and E-bay are not helping identify. 3/8 drive and impact sockets of some sort?
How about these, I did add better pictures later in this thread.
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Made by Industro. Spring loaded lever pushes out what looks like a feeler gauge which comes out of a socket end. The other end has two little tangs with a hole in the center.
Any ideas on this one?
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Your five threaded "thumb screws" look an awful lot like adapters for a clutch alignment tool.
Do you have another piece with a threaded hole that these fit?
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Lower left, could this be a valve tool?
Right side patent number 3, 807,530 I get nothing using google
Top: Not sure why he collected these ( what I call ) thumbscrews. There may be more out there.
(http://i675.photobucket.com/albums/vv117/jhason2/Picture321_zps08d979b1.jpg) (http://s675.photobucket.com/user/jhason2/media/Picture321_zps08d979b1.jpg.html)
Can someone confirm that the lower left tool is indeed a battery tool?
I don't think it is - what do you think it can do to a battery?
It is a bearing press. I have a similar one that attaches to one of my pullers.
Chilly
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Weird, the design is like a pitman puller, but that wimpy handle isn't gonna work for that.
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Your five threaded "thumb screws" look an awful lot like adapters for a clutch alignment tool.
Do you have another piece with a threaded hole that these fit?
I do not think I did, other people raided the tool box that I own now before I got to it so who knows.
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Lower left, could this be a valve tool?
Right side patent number 3, 807,530 I get nothing using google
Top: Not sure why he collected these ( what I call ) thumbscrews. There may be more out there.
(http://i675.photobucket.com/albums/vv117/jhason2/Picture321_zps08d979b1.jpg) (http://s675.photobucket.com/user/jhason2/media/Picture321_zps08d979b1.jpg.html)
Can someone confirm that the lower left tool is indeed a battery tool?
I don't think it is - what do you think it can do to a battery?
It is a bearing press. I have a similar one that attaches to one of my pullers.
Chilly
Heres a couple more shots, maybe these will help. The forks are beveled so maybe they are made to slip under something like a battery terminal and screw down the screw to pull the terminal free.
I do not think press cause as Rusty said the handle is pretty wimpy. Length of handle is 4 inches if that helps size it up.
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I also think it is a battery cable lifter, they do not need much pressur at all,
somewhere I have one that is sorta like that, I have a few of the old long handle type
that works the same way.
the screw will not move the battery post, the cable will lift 1st.
Frank
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I also think it is a battery cable lifter, they do not need much pressur at all,
somewhere I have one that is sorta like that, I have a few of the old long handle type
that works the same way.
the screw will not move the battery post, the cable will lift 1st.
Frank
Amecks is the originator of this theory. I never would have guessed myself.
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Made by Industro. Spring loaded lever pushes out what looks like a feeler gauge which comes out of a socket end. The other end has two little tangs with a hole in the center.
This has been identified by someone on garage journal as a .......... joel63
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Join Date: Oct 2012
Posts: 364
Default Re: Can someone identify this
Quote:
Originally Posted by hippie2cams View Post
I think that is an old distributor tool the end with the feeler gauge is for the points, the end with the tabs is actually a screw driver for the screws in the distributor holding the points and condenser. I have not seen one in a long time so its possible I'm wrong.
A Delco distributor tool for early model Chevy 6 cylinder engines.
Maybe a little different?
http://www.ebay.com/itm/Snap-On-MD17...-/121298921364
Google Snap On MD17.
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I also think it is a battery cable lifter, they do not need much pressur at all,
somewhere I have one that is sorta like that, I have a few of the old long handle type
that works the same way.
the screw will not move the battery post, the cable will lift 1st.
Frank
Amecks is the originator of this theory. I never would have guessed myself.
I think Frank is right also, your newer pictures totally changed how I saw the tool. I was imagining it bigger.
Chilly
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I also think it is a battery cable lifter, they do not need much pressur at all,
somewhere I have one that is sorta like that, I have a few of the old long handle type
that works the same way.
the screw will not move the battery post, the cable will lift 1st.
Frank
Amecks is the originator of this theory. I never would have guessed myself.
I think Frank is right also, your newer pictures totally changed how I saw the tool. I was imagining it bigger.
Chilly
I should use a scale of some sort
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the tool that 1930 posted and we thought that it was a top post battery cable lifter.
that is correct.
Rose tool catalogs. Craftsman 1968 shows the exact one, it was called battery terminal lifter $2.19
Frank
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Can anyone provide a picture of the pullers assembled, maybe then I can pinpoint the missing pieces.
Hope this helps for a couple of the Items you have, see link below
http://www.grainger.com/product/OTC-Puller-Set-4HA44
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If the "thumbscrews" are lug nut sized, they may be for pulling/pushing brake drums.
(screw them into the hub flange so you have something to push/hammer on)
Three would be the right number sometimes...