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Bob La Londe[_7_] Bob La Londe[_7_] is offline
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Default Interesting Christmas Present

"Pete C." wrote in message
...

Bob La Londe wrote:

Its pretty common for us to give each other new gimicky tools for
Christmas.
Round knob sockets, quick grip wrenches... whatever new and interesting
tool
that basically does the same old thing catches our eye. My dad did not
disappoint this year. He gave me an open thru bolt socket set. The
ratchet
engages the outside of the socket instead of the inside so it can go over
studs of any length. That was interesting, and I am sure there are times
when it will come in handy, but after the festivities of the morning were
over we wandered out to his truck and he gave me a truly good Christmas
present. One that can't be beat by any new gimicky tool.

My grandfather (my mom's dad) had given him a bunch of machinists tools
some
time in the past. He (my grandfather) was a job setup machinist. My mom
told me for every hour of hour of overtime he worked over the years (way
back when) he would put away 10¢ to be used to buy tools for himself.
Many
he bought new. Others he got from other machinists. There were a number
of
right angle blocks, some gages and standards for certain things. Double
angle bars for measuring hole diameters with a regular micrometer,
micrometers, dial indicators, dial test indicators, v-blocks, and sine
bars.
At today's prices it would take thousands of dollars to replace, but in
the
prices of the day they were thousands of hours of overtime worked. Maybe
tens of thousands. Many of the wooden boxes are falling apart, and
because
they were stored in a building that lost a roof at one time some things
are
made nearly worthless from rust. (Both sine bars are rust damaged
sadly.)
Not a single thing is a cheap tool. They all carry names like Starrett
and
Brown & Sharp. It might seem like a small thing to some folks but it is
something to me. At the time I refused to carry the tools into the shop
(would have been a couple huge armloads). I went and got a tool cart to
carry them. Two days later I am still thinking about it. Many of these
tools were used during WWII. Some may have been used during WWI. A
couple
have patent dates from before the turn of the last century.

I am torn on some of them. The wooden boxes are falling apart, and I
want
to make new boxes for them, but I hate to throw away the old boxes that
may
be 80 years old or more. Many of them I plan to check and use in my own
shop.

Thanks Dad, and thank you Grampa John Klements. (1899 - 1986 (I think))

I'll post a picture or picture link of some of them later.



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Zep makes a good rust remover product that I've found at 'Depot. Worth a
shot to use carefully to see how bad the rust really is. I believe
Starrett, B&S and the like will refurbish old tools as well.


I may go that route. The micrometers all seem to be ok, and measure to
within a line width of zero (0) with their included standards. Those that
have standards anyway. The test indicators also seem to be ok, but I have
no way to check them. I suppose I could stack some gage blocks on the mill
table and then measure the difference with the indicators. A couple of them
have quite small ranges, but very high claimed precision.






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