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Tony[_19_] May 21st 10 05:12 PM

Another tool of Dads
 
A K&E (Keuffel & Esser) Wyteface 10 foot tape measure. Looks like they
made some high quality stuff. Unfortunately it probably came home by
"mistake" in his coveralls from his boiler welding job. As a kid we
always had a few of these around. I also have the same brand 50' tape
measure, it's in very rough cosmetic condition but it works well.

keith May 21st 10 05:24 PM

Another tool of Dads
 
On May 21, 11:12*am, Tony wrote:
A K&E (Keuffel & Esser) Wyteface 10 foot tape measure. *Looks like they
made some high quality stuff. *Unfortunately it probably came home by
"mistake" in his coveralls from his boiler welding job. *As a kid we
always had a few of these around. *I also have the same brand 50' tape
measure, it's in very rough cosmetic condition but it works well.


K&E was known for making high quality aluminum slide rules.

Tony[_19_] May 21st 10 06:22 PM

Another tool of Dads
 
keith wrote:
On May 21, 11:12 am, Tony wrote:
A K&E (Keuffel & Esser) Wyteface 10 foot tape measure. Looks like they
made some high quality stuff. Unfortunately it probably came home by
"mistake" in his coveralls from his boiler welding job. As a kid we
always had a few of these around. I also have the same brand 50' tape
measure, it's in very rough cosmetic condition but it works well.


K&E was known for making high quality aluminum slide rules.


Yes, I saw that. They also made one about 5 or 6 feet long to hang in
the front of the classroom.

aemeijers May 22nd 10 01:00 AM

Another tool of Dads
 
keith wrote:
On May 21, 11:12 am, Tony wrote:
A K&E (Keuffel & Esser) Wyteface 10 foot tape measure. Looks like they
made some high quality stuff. Unfortunately it probably came home by
"mistake" in his coveralls from his boiler welding job. As a kid we
always had a few of these around. I also have the same brand 50' tape
measure, it's in very rough cosmetic condition but it works well.


K&E was known for making high quality aluminum slide rules.


I remember the K&E logo well from my youth, not so much from slide
rules, but from drafting/surveying work my father did. That logo was on
damn near every precision tool he had, including the long tape, transit
and pole I spent much of my youth lugging for him as he laid out the
houses he designed and built for people. He still has the transit, but
never uses it any more- a laser level and retro-reflective target on the
pole is SO much quicker and easier. Looks like the 'real' K&E went
chapter 11 back in 82, and most of the product lines (the names, really)
got sold off to pay the creditors, like so many 'quality' companies I
remember from my youth. You can still buy drafting supplies labeled K&E,
but who knows who makes them now.

Here is a link to a capsule history timeline:
http://www.antiquesurveying.com/K&E%20History.htm

--
aem sends....


The Daring Dufas[_6_] May 22nd 10 04:52 AM

Another tool of Dads
 
aemeijers wrote:
keith wrote:
On May 21, 11:12 am, Tony wrote:
A K&E (Keuffel & Esser) Wyteface 10 foot tape measure. Looks like they
made some high quality stuff. Unfortunately it probably came home by
"mistake" in his coveralls from his boiler welding job. As a kid we
always had a few of these around. I also have the same brand 50' tape
measure, it's in very rough cosmetic condition but it works well.


K&E was known for making high quality aluminum slide rules.


I remember the K&E logo well from my youth, not so much from slide
rules, but from drafting/surveying work my father did. That logo was on
damn near every precision tool he had, including the long tape, transit
and pole I spent much of my youth lugging for him as he laid out the
houses he designed and built for people. He still has the transit, but
never uses it any more- a laser level and retro-reflective target on the
pole is SO much quicker and easier. Looks like the 'real' K&E went
chapter 11 back in 82, and most of the product lines (the names, really)
got sold off to pay the creditors, like so many 'quality' companies I
remember from my youth. You can still buy drafting supplies labeled K&E,
but who knows who makes them now.

Here is a link to a capsule history timeline:
http://www.antiquesurveying.com/K&E%20History.htm

--


My father was a mechanical engineer at a steel mill and taught drafting
at a local college. I remember all the K&E stuff he had and I carried a
K&E slide rule when I was in college. It's amazing when you think about
all the magnificent machines and civil engineering projects that were
designed with a drawing board, some big sheets of paper, a pencil and a
slide rule. My father had a mechanical calculator on his desk at the
steel mill engineering department and I remember watching the marvelous
contraption shift the button laden carriage shift back and forth while
making happy clicking and clunking sounds. 30 years later, I picked one
up out of a junk pile and adopted it, promising I would protect it from
harm. I couldn't keep my promise, I lost it in a move 10 years ago. Poor
thing, probably thinks I abandoned it,.......sniff.

TDD

Smitty Two May 22nd 10 08:16 PM

Another tool of Dads
 
In article ,
The Daring Dufas wrote:

It's amazing when you think about
all the magnificent machines and civil engineering projects that were
designed with a drawing board, some big sheets of paper, a pencil and a
slide rule.


One of my favorite quotes, which I've posted here before, is from
Seymour Cray, designer of the Cray supercomputer. He was once asked what
kind of computer he used to design the beast. His reply: "I used a #2
pencil and a quadrille pad."

Tony Hwang May 22nd 10 08:26 PM

Another tool of Dads
 
keith wrote:
On May 21, 11:12 am, wrote:
A K&E (Keuffel& Esser) Wyteface 10 foot tape measure. Looks like they
made some high quality stuff. Unfortunately it probably came home by
"mistake" in his coveralls from his boiler welding job. As a kid we
always had a few of these around. I also have the same brand 50' tape
measure, it's in very rough cosmetic condition but it works well.


K&E was known for making high quality aluminum slide rules.

Hi,
You make feel old. I still have one in leather case. My son civil
engineer often look at it with awe. In his HS math course he used to
look at it and played with it. I also have a Japanese pocket slide rule
made from bamboo.

Stormin Mormon May 22nd 10 08:29 PM

Another tool of Dads
 
I think your post is missing some context. Why do you mention your
Dad's tools on a usenet list? Are you executor of his estate? Are
these offered for sale? Listed on Ebay?

--
Christopher A. Young
Learn more about Jesus
www.lds.org
..


"Tony" wrote in message
...
A K&E (Keuffel & Esser) Wyteface 10 foot tape measure. Looks like
they
made some high quality stuff. Unfortunately it probably came home by
"mistake" in his coveralls from his boiler welding job. As a kid we
always had a few of these around. I also have the same brand 50' tape
measure, it's in very rough cosmetic condition but it works well.



[email protected] May 22nd 10 08:38 PM

Another tool of Dads
 
On Fri, 21 May 2010 20:00:13 -0400, aemeijers wrote:

keith wrote:
On May 21, 11:12 am, Tony wrote:
A K&E (Keuffel & Esser) Wyteface 10 foot tape measure. Looks like they
made some high quality stuff. Unfortunately it probably came home by
"mistake" in his coveralls from his boiler welding job. As a kid we
always had a few of these around. I also have the same brand 50' tape
measure, it's in very rough cosmetic condition but it works well.


K&E was known for making high quality aluminum slide rules.


I remember the K&E logo well from my youth, not so much from slide
rules, but from drafting/surveying work my father did. That logo was on
damn near every precision tool he had, including the long tape, transit
and pole I spent much of my youth lugging for him as he laid out the
houses he designed and built for people. He still has the transit, but
never uses it any more- a laser level and retro-reflective target on the
pole is SO much quicker and easier.


My father was an EE, so the slipstick was what stuck. ;-)

Looks like the 'real' K&E went
chapter 11 back in 82, and most of the product lines (the names, really)
got sold off to pay the creditors, like so many 'quality' companies I
remember from my youth. You can still buy drafting supplies labeled K&E,
but who knows who makes them now.


Most of these companies couldn't make the transition from slipsticks to
calculators. There aren't many buggy whip manufacturers left, either.


Here is a link to a capsule history timeline:
http://www.antiquesurveying.com/K&E%20History.htm


Tony[_19_] May 22nd 10 10:48 PM

Another tool of Dads
 
Stormin Mormon wrote:
I think your post is missing some context. Why do you mention your
Dad's tools on a usenet list? Are you executor of his estate? Are
these offered for sale? Listed on Ebay?


Talk about missing content...


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