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What is it? BOKER tool

Started by phillie, June 27, 2011, 10:36:23 PM

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phillie

Hello,

Found this in a tool box and could not find information on it through normal channels. The pliers? measure 9" long and the 3 step adjustable jaws open to 4 1/4". It seems like it would be used for gripping different size round objects. It is marked BOKER USA. Thanks for the help.
MANTIQUES
Chandler Arizona

keykeeper

-Aaron C.

My vintage tool Want list:
Wards Master Quality 1/2" drive sockets (Need size 5/8), long extension, & speeder handle.
-Vlchek WB* series double box wrenches.
-Hinsdale double-box end round shank wrenches.

Hm Wrench

Some boker history, and my guess is Vacuum Grip Pliers .   I also have a pair of Boker  battery  pliers

http://www.boker.de/us/index.php?c=2003



Always Looking for Motorcycle, Bicycle tools and related information.

lzenglish

#3
Phillie: They look like Cannon Plug Pliers, usually found with rubber/plastic Jaw protectors on them. As I remember, Cannon is a brand name much like Crescent, and Phillips, and they are screw in captive electrical connectors, used in Military applications.

Wayne

Neals

I don't have the info in front of me but if I remember right Boker was a German family of tool makers. One brother moved to the USA and manufactured there. There was also a Boker who was a tool distributer not a manufacturer. Some of the markings were Henry Boker, H. Boker and Boker

lzenglish

Quote from: Neals on June 28, 2011, 12:16:32 AM
I don't have the info in front of me but if I remember right Boker was a German family of tool makers. One brother moved to the USA and manufactured there. There was also a Boker who was a tool distributer not a manufacturer. Some of the markings were Henry Boker, H. Boker and Boker


Also a well known maker of quality knives Neals, of which I own several.

Wayne

Bus

#6
If your pliers should of had plastic jaw inserts the design patent (of June 19, 1956) for this type of pliers is here:

http://www.google.com/patents?id=PxdyAAAAEBAJ&printsec=abstract&source=gbs_overview_r&cad=0#v=onepage&q&f=false

At the bottom of the page there is this note: "References cited in the file of this patent. Plomb Tool Co. Catalog 4820, 1948, page 36, items 236 and 240."

If anybody has access to this catalog it might have the answer as to what purpose these pliers were mad for.


Branson

Quote from: phillie on June 27, 2011, 10:36:23 PM
Found this in a tool box and could not find information on it through normal channels. The pliers? measure 9" long and the 3 step adjustable jaws open to 4 1/4". It seems like it would be used for gripping different size round objects. It is marked BOKER USA. Thanks for the help.

There was a thread on this tool on the old list, but I still had questions about this style of plier.  I bought two pairs of these about 15 years ago, sold one, kept one.  The one I kept was made by Utica, and it's the handiest tool for unscrewing difficult lids I've ever found -- especially those dratted safety lids!
Neither had ever  been fitted with plastic inserts.

Boker has been around for a long time, like the article pointed out.  The first Boker tool I bought was a Lancaster pattern hacksaw, which I used at Sutter's Fort.   It looks like the attached photo.

lbgradwell

Quote from: Bus on June 28, 2011, 02:09:44 AM
If your pliers should of had plastic jaw inserts the design patent (of June 19, 1956)...

If anybody has access to this catalog it might have the answer as to what purpose these pliers were mad for.

Non-marring pliers for brass/chrome plumbing fittings, probably...:

http://www.leevalley.com/en/wood/page.aspx?p=32197&cat=1,43456,43400

Kijiji King

sumner52000

I saw a pair at the flea market and the old guy told me it was a fuse puller.  That didn't make sense to me being metal.  I just sold my pair a couple weeks ago for $1.

phillie

MANTIQUES
Chandler Arizona

scottg

The Boker name goes back to at least the 1600's in tool/cutlery making.

So, you can be pissed at them for WW11 (and probably should), WW1, the hundred years war, and the fact that they aren't USA made,
     And still have a couple three hundred years of clear toolmaking to admire.

Boker is one of those firms that survive.
   yours Scott 
PHounding PHather of PHARTS
http://www.snowcrest.net/kitty/sgrandstaff/

Bus

I came across these today. They were on my Phtobucket Message Board Page so I must of posted them here before the crash.




wvtools

I have a 1966 Boker catalog.  It reads "A-N Electrical Connector Nut Pliers, USAF DWG. No. 4904591, Adjustable to properly grip Electrical Connector Nuts, sizes 16 to 32.  Forged of special analysis alloy steel."

They came with and without the nylon inserts like the Utica ones.

bonneyman

Cannon plug pliers. Some had hard rubber inserts, some didn't.
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