By continuing to use this site, you agree to our use of cookies. Find out more
Forum sponsored by:
Forum sponsored by Forum House Ad Zone

Tools you Treasure

Inherited, bought or found, what are your's?.

All Topics | Latest Posts

Search for:  in Thread Title in  
Richard S209/03/2017 20:52:02
avatar
237 forum posts
135 photos

I'm sure I'm not alone in having items of tooling that are inherited from family and developed a real affinity with them. For me, my father spent most of his working lifetime in Aviation. From the RAFVR April 39 - finishing with British Caledonian in June 85.

All his Tooling he accumulated from 1945 with Hawkers, Airwork and BUA, much of it was stored that was not used regularly when he/we worked on Cars etc. He gave me the precision stuff when I built my Garage/Workshop which was intended for both our uses. Sadly, he wasn't with us long enough to enjoy it all and have a proper retirement. And so the main item I value the most is this Dial Indicator which he purchased in 1948-

dsc01405.jpg

dsc01407.jpg

He had it tested again before he Retired, and it was still functioning perfectly throughout the range without any adjustment required. Today, it is still behaving pretty well and lives with the fittings/mount he made for it The Aviation grade Mushroom Head Screws are 3/16"unf.

Made for & Marketed by E.H Jones.

I've tried to find some info on the Maker (R,P&S (Lon) Ltd, without success, if anyone has any?.

Also have his M&W 1" micrometer of the same age lives with the D.I in their own storage compartment. Anyone care to share their items?.

Neil Wyatt09/03/2017 21:44:04
avatar
19226 forum posts
749 photos
86 articles

One of my grandfathers was an RAF coppersmith.

dscn2210[1].jpg

The other was a radio/sonar operator the Navy, then taught Radar at Cranwell in the RAF. His tap and die set willbe in the next MEW.

Neil

Ian S C10/03/2017 09:39:49
avatar
7468 forum posts
230 photos

No pics of any tools, but Mum was a Radar instructor at Cranwell as a WAAF Corporal, only tool of hers is a brass bodied screw driver, given to her by her local watch maker when she enlisted in Paisely, the recruiting officer asked her if she was any good with maths (ans yes), right your in Radar, what's Radar, don't know, but you'll find out before I do. Mum loved it. The screw driver got use on her sewing machine.

Ian S C

David George 119/03/2017 14:23:29
avatar
2110 forum posts
565 photos

My most treasured tool is a small 1/4 inch socket set which my father gave me. He used it at work in a colliery as a chock fitter and gave me it some 35 years ago before he died. It has a set of Allen keys, BA sockets 0 to 8 and has a flexible drive, T bar 2 extensions, and screw driver handle.

David

socket set etc.jpg

Harry Wilkes19/03/2017 14:40:24
avatar
1613 forum posts
72 photos

I have buried away a inside, outside callipers and a engineers hand clamp which I made when at Tech back in 1960 ! Not my finest work but at least I didn't get them trew at me unlike some of my class mate's wink

H

Brian H19/03/2017 15:50:58
avatar
2312 forum posts
112 photos

My prized tool is a 0-1" micrometer by Browne & Sharpe, sold to me by my foreman shortly after I started as an apprentice.

It is the larger of the two in the picture which has a normal sized B&S 0-1" for comparison. I've never seen another one of the same size!p1140758.jpg

Stuart Bridger19/03/2017 15:58:47
566 forum posts
31 photos

A couple of submissions. The first very much not engineering related. A Sussex pattern billhook inherited from my Grandfather, still in regular use in the garden and for its original purpose, hedgelaying. A bit of research identified the makers mark, to be a Walter Wadey who was a blacksmith in Billingshurst in the 2nd half of the 19th Century.

Billhook

Slightly more recent, a pair of toolmakers clamps both made by myself. The one on the left was an apprentice piece mad at the BAe Weybridge (Brooklands) training workshop in 1980. The one of the right was made in a school workshop (George Abbot, Guildford) a few years earlier. A got a very high mark for that one. The teacher was so impressed I was allowed to finish them on a surface grinder. The one an only time I have ever used one. A word on finish. The left hand one was phosphated and the right hand one had a traditional dunk in waste in oil after heating. Of course both are still in regular use.

Clamps

Nick_G23/03/2017 10:27:55
avatar
1808 forum posts
744 photos

.

I don't have any tools that I 'treasure' so to speak. But I have a few that's construction and standards of precision and design I admire.

But being practical and realistic I would be totally stuffed without my DRO's and loctite 638. blush so perhaps those. frown

Nick

Boiler Bri23/03/2017 10:42:17
avatar
856 forum posts
212 photos

My glasses because without them I could not model anything. 🤓

richardandtracy23/03/2017 11:23:17
avatar
943 forum posts
10 photos

I have a few I'd not part with ever. Unfortunately I have no photos, but here's a description:

  1. Great grandfather was a ship's engineer in the 1880's/90's & made his own taps & die plates as required on board. Unfortunately he made them using whatever gears were on the lathe at the time, so it's rare for any of the bolts I've inherited to fit anything 'normal'. Nonetheless I have a pot of bolts he made.
  2. My grandfather was MIA in France in 1940, and my grandmother got a 'Presumed Dead' telegram. What he was actually doing was taking his artillery troop at night to Cherberg with night time only movements because he though Dunkirk was a death trap and refused to go there when ordered. When doing stellar navigation to Cherberg he used a set of compasses & dividers I still have. These were then also used to plot firing angles & ranges in N. Africa & up Italy later on in the war.
  3. My 4" bench vice was given to me by my father. In regular use & is treasured.

Regards,

Richard.

Perko727/03/2017 13:00:25
452 forum posts
35 photos

I have a few hand tools that were my fathers, mainly some lovely timber-handled hand-saws (both rip and cross-cut) and a Stanley plane, all from the 50's, but the main item is my lathe inherited from my grandfather. It is a 1920's Willimott Ideal, and i have memories of fiddling with the controls whenever visiting my grandparents as a young lad of 7 or 8. My grandfather apparently used it to make parts for the various cars and motor-mowers he owned and maintained/rebuilt over the years, but i never saw him actually using it. When he passed away it became mine, and now some 45 years later it is finally set up in my workshop and operated regularly. It's not particularly powerful, fast, strong or accurate, but i just love using it.

lathe set up 001-rc.jpg

Neil Wyatt27/03/2017 13:18:26
avatar
19226 forum posts
749 photos
86 articles

> but i just love using it.

That's what its about

clogs27/03/2017 14:46:45
630 forum posts
12 photos

What upsets me is that all my dads old tools got snaffeled up by a close family member including his hand made tool box......

AND what ever he got for them (pence) would have been peed up the wall.........

A dear old friend said, "nobody can take the memories" which after all are pricless......so I guess they'll have to do.....

be nice to have something to pass-on tool wise......

will post some photo's of a couple of thing for the family.......in a while.......

Clogs

peter blair27/03/2017 15:23:12
34 forum posts
25 photos

Not on really the same topic but I have quite a bunch of tools I picked up at garage sales. I don't use any of them and for the most part I have about 20 that I don't even know what their original purpose was!!! I could post some photos or if there is any interest I could start a new thread?

Speedy Builder527/03/2017 16:36:37
2878 forum posts
248 photos

Peter. You could try "Mystery Tools" on this site. It normally sparks off quite a few replies.
BobH

peter blair27/03/2017 18:43:36
34 forum posts
25 photos

Thanks Bob. I will do just that. I am as you know new too this site and didn't see the Mystery Tools Forum.

Jelly30/03/2017 19:46:20
avatar
474 forum posts
103 photos
I'm fortunate to have a great many...

To the great displeasure of my parents, my paternal grandfather gave me a small ball pein hammer at the age of 3, it remains in regular use and reminds me fondly of him every time i go to pick it up, the first among equals of a treasured bunch of tools.

He subsequently gave me a small set of joinery tools, including a small "footprint" fine toothed dovetail saw, which is my go-to saw for fine work of all kinds.

My maternal grandfather gifted me my great grandfather's carving tools and moulding planes when i was in my teens, and later after I left university, also gave me the bulk of his engineering tools, micrometers and inspection equipment; he still enquires after it from time to time, and seems particularly happy that I'm able to keep utilising them to their full potential.

There is also an unusual looking King Dick adjustable spanner which has no story to it, but simply happens to be better made than any other adjustable I've ever seen, almost as if some previous owner had taken the time to closely fit the parts.

Nathan Sharpe30/03/2017 20:49:19
175 forum posts
3 photos

Clogs , I know what that feels like. My old man left it all to my half sisters father (house included) to look after his daughter after my Dad died. My old man raised her as his own after mother died . Her father put her in "care" and sold it all , went on the p--s and forgot about her. We , all three children, knew nothing about varying parentage until 1996 when we met up for the first time in 25 years when she noted a difference. When our mother died my (full) sister and I went into"care" because of fathers age , youngest (half) sister remained with her father (living with us) and my father. When she found out she went on the "p--s" also , on his grave. Nathan.

mechman4808/04/2017 08:39:04
avatar
2947 forum posts
468 photos

I still have the very first micrometer I bought when I was an apprentice Fitter / Turner back in '64; iirc it cost me about a weeks wages...£3 10s 6d ( £3-52p ) paid for on 'tick' on a weekly basis, 1s ( 5p ) a week, can't for the life of me remember who the dealer was, through the 'works tool club' iirc. It was one of the first models that had a dual scale, metric & imperial, made by Shardlow of Sheffield. It has resided in the back of my tool chest for years now & only saw the light of day when I recently had a sort out...& it still zero's up accurately.​..

53 yr old shardlow dual scale mic (7).jpg

53 yr old shardlow dual scale mic (8).jpg

53 yr old shardlow dual scale mic (2).jpg

​Still in good nick for a 53 year old micrometer!

George.

Speedy Builder508/04/2017 10:25:35
2878 forum posts
248 photos

Re Mechman48's micrometer.
I was trying to work out how a dual scale could work until I rolled the screen up a bit more and saw the diagonal Mm scale. Its a neat idea.
BobH

All Topics | Latest Posts

Please login to post a reply.

Magazine Locator

Want the latest issue of Model Engineer or Model Engineers' Workshop? Use our magazine locator links to find your nearest stockist!

Find Model Engineer & Model Engineers' Workshop

Sign up to our Newsletter

Sign up to our newsletter and get a free digital issue.

You can unsubscribe at anytime. View our privacy policy at www.mortons.co.uk/privacy

Latest Forum Posts
Support Our Partners
cowells
Sarik
MERIDIENNE EXHIBITIONS LTD
Subscription Offer

Latest "For Sale" Ads
Latest "Wanted" Ads
Get In Touch!

Do you want to contact the Model Engineer and Model Engineers' Workshop team?

You can contact us by phone, mail or email about the magazines including becoming a contributor, submitting reader's letters or making queries about articles. You can also get in touch about this website, advertising or other general issues.

Click THIS LINK for full contact details.

For subscription issues please see THIS LINK.

Digital Back Issues

Social Media online

'Like' us on Facebook
Follow us on Facebook

Follow us on Twitter
 Twitter Logo

Pin us on Pinterest

 

Donate

donate