Tool Talk

General Category => General Discussion => Topic started by: PFSchaffner on February 29, 2016, 02:15:30 PM

Title: This week at Kiwanis
Post by: PFSchaffner on February 29, 2016, 02:15:30 PM
These are the items that caught my eye amongst the (few) items that arrived as
donations this week. (As you'll see, I'm not picky.) (1) A Miller wire stripper, utterly
mundane except that its maker has disappeared: K. Miller T. & M. Co. Springfield Mass.
(2) A pair of well made pliers "A.F. & Co. FRANCE". (3) Another mundane item, an offset
screwdriver marked "BMC Mfg Co Binghamton NY", a company that apparently started out
as a car dealership ("Botnick Motor Corp") and ended up making wheeled toys, but
in between made a visegrip-type plier and offset screwdrivers. (4) A rethreading tool
marked Lyndee 3 / Seidel Co / Berkeley Calif / US Pat 1382841 (pat. 1921). (5) A small
Goodell-Pratt chuck which I thought at first was a 4-jaw pin vise but is more properly a
2-jaw chuck (with each jaw split) designed to hold the proprietary flanged bits that
came with G-P push drills (?). And (6) a nice "bell punch" for marking the center of round
stock.  I'll probably set the chuck aside, since it's pretty useless alone; buy the bell punch
myself; and put everything else up for sale at next week's thrift sale. ... But does anyone
know anything about the French pliers?

(http://)

Title: Re: This week at Kiwanis
Post by: Aunt Phil on February 29, 2016, 02:51:25 PM
The thread restorer is definitely interesting.  What do you want for it?  I really need another tool to pile up.
Title: Re: This week at Kiwanis
Post by: krusty the clown on February 29, 2016, 03:29:13 PM
the thread restorer is interesting. the same tool is listed in 50's-60's MAC catalogs as a "Buckingham" thread restorer.
Title: Re: This week at Kiwanis
Post by: Aunt Phil on February 29, 2016, 08:38:49 PM
the thread restorer is interesting. the same tool is listed in 50's-60's MAC catalogs as a "Buckingham" thread restorer.

Buckingham is a broad line manufacturer of pole line tools, everything from climbing gaffs to line wrenches.