rrrr
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- Dec 19, 2007
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That's a stilson wrench
Get a helper with those wrenches. An old friend had a Douglas MC, he didn't have a monkey. You need a monkey with old british motorcycles.I may have a few...the smooth jaw, old school ones are useful for weird stuff, bending steel without marking it up, same with brass fittings, when a wrench may have too narrow a face. Old tools always have a purpose...I'm kind of like a retirement home for that stuff.
I have the same wrench in metric...
I have the same wrench in metric...
I have the hammer addition.I have the same wrench in metric...
I have two of these. Lazy ass plumbers and maintenance men routinely use Channelocks on chrome plated devices like flush valves, causing deep gouges in the union nuts and shutoff valves of the device.View attachment 1457552 New version. the smooth jaws are nice for not scaring up unions. Used this more than any pipe wrench working on smaller boilers
I have some Model T tools from my grampa and have a smooth jaw monkey wrench with the Ford name cast in the handle. My Dad told me what it was for but I forgot what he said. Someday I will take pictures of all the tools and show them to the Model T club in town to identify what the tools were for and document the information.
You are probably right! I have a manual tire pump with a brass tube with the Ford logo cast into foot base. They were built to last!View attachment 1457664
The model T hubcap was a threaded grease cap. Ford used a stamped steel one with outside threads late into the 30's for the front drums. I think this was the most common use for those wrenches in the tool bag, those and then tightening axle and spindle nuts.
Is it broken too?I have a Ford wrench in my tool box.
Comes with a spare 10mm socket though.Under priced he is worth much more than $10.