Tool Talk
General Category => General Discussion => Topic started by: Northwoods on October 28, 2015, 03:08:56 PM
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Picked up a pair of 8" nippers this am. Marked:
CRESCENT
B.F. CO N.Y.
Anyone have a guess as to the period? What does the B.F. stand for?
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There is a Bronx County and a Broome County in the state of New York. Bronx is in the Bronx and Broome is around Binghamton.
There is also a Franklin County that was named after Benjamin Franklin.
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I just assumed that the CO stood for Company. Crescent was located in Jamestown, Chautauqua Co., in SW New York.
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If you have old MVWC Newsletters, on pg. 10 of the March 2000 newsletter there's a 1930 catalog illustration of the Crescent Rivet Extractor -- for belt splices made by the Crescent Belt Fastener Co. of New York City. It is a nipper type tool. "Length 8 inches. Weight 13 ounces."
( https://books.google.com/books?id=-SBHAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA1173&img=1&zoom=3&hl=en&sig=ACfU3U0sQKq4oZJ-XrvJ3Uf9N-CKBoHPyg&ci=25%2C12%2C947%2C1285&edge=0 ) is a Crescent Belt Fastener Co. page from 1921 Sweets Catalog. It shows the fasteners but not the rivet extractor.
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So, B.F. = belt fastener. Should havè known!
Seriously, though, you people are fantastic!
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So, B.F. = belt fastener. ...
Hearkens back to the days of line shafts & flat drive belts in machine shops, etc. Not farm equipment belts. Rough & Tumble at Kinzers, PA has a machinist shop of old machine tools all run off an overhead line shaft. All restored & in working order.
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"Northwoods" shared photos of the nippers; overall and closeup of the jaws. 1930 catalog listing for CRESCENT BELT FASTENER RIVET EXTRACTOR -- the rest of that catalog page shows the belt fasteners, the selection of special rivets, etc.