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Old combination pliers, genuine or no?

Started by Plyerman, March 28, 2016, 07:35:52 PM

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Plyerman

I bought these because they reminded me of the old "Washington" combination pliers (patent #871,585) with the hammer pol along the edge. These pliers are similar, but are slightly smaller, and stamped "Red Devil 1225". But when I started researching, I found that Crescent Tool Company acquired the Red Devil line back in the late 1920's, and the only old advertisements and photos I found of the "1225" were of pliers with no hammer.

So my question is, are these the genuine article, or has someone done a very good job of fabricating?

















My friends call me Bob. My wife calls me a lot worse.

Northwoods

The ORIGINAL Northwoods.

mikeswrenches

It sure looks like the hammer is forged as one piece with the plier jaw.

Mike
Check out my ETSY store at: OldeTymeTools

wvtools

The EAIA Directory of American Toolmaker's says Smith and Hemenway changed their name to Red Devil in 1944.  I have a 1960 Red Devil catalog.  Are you sure about the Crescent date?  Maybe they took it over later?

Those look factory made.  Either someone did a really good job of modifying them or they were a special order.  Companies would make just about anything anyone wanted for a price.  I have see some odd tools that looked factory made.  I have a pair of pliers listed on Ebay that is just the wire cutters of a slip joint pliers.  It looks factory made with the jaws of the pliers cut off

wvtools

My catalog is 1951 and the only pliers in it are glass and tile pliers.

john k

With the hammer on it, am thinking was an early tool for installing auto wheel weights.   Before our specialty weight tools, pliers were used to wrench the old weights off.
Member of PHARTS - Perfect Handle Admiration, Restoration and Torturing Society

Plyerman

Quote from: wvtools on March 28, 2016, 08:50:15 PM
The EAIA Directory of American Toolmaker's says Smith and Hemenway changed their name to Red Devil in 1944.  I have a 1960 Red Devil catalog.  Are you sure about the Crescent date?  Maybe they took it over later?

.........


Hmmmm, I know nothing for certain, just what I read on Alloy Artifacts here: http://alloy-artifacts.org/crescent-tool.html

It says that Crescent Tool bought out Smith & Hemenway, makers of the Red Devil line of pliers, in 1926. Then later on Mr. Smith (formerly of Smith & Heminway) resurrected the Red Devil name for his line of glass cutters and such. But the old line of Red Devil plier tools all became Crescent branded items.

So I dunno..?
My friends call me Bob. My wife calls me a lot worse.

bonneyman

If it's a fake some welder did one heck of a job!
Ratchet Guru

mvwcnews

I'd vote for "special order" with the hammer poll & the "v" shaped jaw instead of two "flat" jaws with the wire gripping notch running the length of one jaw.   They certainly wanted that "v" jaw hard & got it so hard it was brittle & chipped.
Don't know why they'd go to the trouble of putting the RED DEVIL # on a special order piece -- maybe just a bit of subtle advertising in case someone asked, "where'd you get that made?"

Aunt Phil

TIG weldor with a kid like Nola on a 7" grinder for 10 minutes.

You guys have no idea of the things weldors do to pliers, screwdrivers and wrenches. 

Usual tipoff will be the enhancement won't be centered.

You can see the weld in the one pic, at the jaw end of the pliers.
Kid on the grinder was awake that day too.
Timing has a lot to do with the outcome of a rain dance!

Yadda

Great find regardless.  I want it to be manufactured, but I vote homemade.
You might say I have a tool collecting problem....

gibsontool

Looks too good to have been done by a welder with a grinder, I'd have to go with a forging.

wvtools

Quote from: Plyerman on March 28, 2016, 09:29:08 PM
Quote from: wvtools on March 28, 2016, 08:50:15 PM
The EAIA Directory of American Toolmaker's says Smith and Hemenway changed their name to Red Devil in 1944.  I have a 1960 Red Devil catalog.  Are you sure about the Crescent date?  Maybe they took it over later?

.........


Hmmmm, I know nothing for certain, just what I read on Alloy Artifacts here: http://alloy-artifacts.org/crescent-tool.html

It says that Crescent Tool bought out Smith & Hemenway, makers of the Red Devil line of pliers, in 1926. Then later on Mr. Smith (formerly of Smith & Heminway) resurrected the Red Devil name for his line of glass cutters and such. But the old line of Red Devil plier tools all became Crescent branded items.

So I dunno..?

That makes sense given the shift in gears of types of tools with the Red Devil name around that time.  Thanks for the information; I did not know that.

Aunt Phil

Quote from: gibsontool on March 28, 2016, 10:45:43 PM
Looks too good to have been done by a welder with a grinder, I'd have to go with a forging.

Blow up the picture of the jaw and you see the weld along with the crater full of dirt.  Looks like a TIG job to me.
Acid test would probably display the weld even at this point in time.
Timing has a lot to do with the outcome of a rain dance!

Plyerman

Thanks for all the comments guys. I think Stan may be on to something with his observation that the special v-jaws AND the hammer pol suggest a special factory order of some sort. But there's probably no way to be 100% sure. :-/
My friends call me Bob. My wife calls me a lot worse.