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YepSacking Tool Bag for Carpenters by any chance?
Discuss For old time House Bashers only in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net
YepSacking Tool Bag for Carpenters by any chance?
Nice bt old case, the subs apps boys got them an installation, I was on external. (81's god yes long nose pliers)Not sure which one you are talking about...
As an apprentice, you were issued a small leather wallet not much bigger than a pencil case to hold three screwdrivers, cutters, wire strippers and 81's (long nose pliers)...
Later you were issued the larger leather No3 wallet which was actually a very useful size..
The photo above includes the small hand auger, but I recall a larger one which had a metal eye instead of a tee handle and was turned using a screw driver as a lever...
I still have a No3 wallet somewhere, I shall have to dig it out...
Yes and hand painted, mine was.And.......a battered old Commer van held together with bits of string.
And the farm building?It was two tone , maroon and rust.
The hand brake didn't work and one day it slipped out of gear and crashed into a farm building, but after a bit of hammering out and a new head light it still soldiered on.
I bet a modern building and van would not have survived.The farm building , the dairy was unscathed, built of proper stone.
remember these?
Reminds me of Ron who I was an apprentice to at Hammersmith Hospital telling me a story about (the photos of his naked middle aged wife he used to show me and it seems everyone else I save that one for later) how this electrician used to tear up in to work in his, wait for it Reliant Robin, pull the handbrake do a 180 and screech to a halt, until one day the handbrake cable snapped and he imbeded the car in through the door of the works shed where everyone was sat inside having a chat and a cup of tea. Once they had managed to extract the car they had to tape it all up as the body work had cracked from front to back...............It was two tone , maroon and rust.
The hand brake didn't work and one day it slipped out of gear and crashed into a farm building, but after a bit of hammering out and a new head light it still soldiered on.
some members would have a seizure looking at that. the screw slots aren't in line.This is my favourite, beautiful brass-work to the ends and the "window" surround
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I think I still have one of those saws somewhere! lol
I also recall a guy having some sort of foot operated "circular saw" for floor boards although I never saw it in use.
IIRC, you started the cut with a handsaw and then put this small circular saw into it and pumped a "pedal" like lever with your foot causing the blade to spin...
It was one of those bits of kit that was relegated to a dark corner of the van by the arrival of power tools by the time I was an apprentice...
i have daddy bear, and also granddaddy bear:OMG, you are right Tel...screw slots not in line!
I will try to rectify that, but I think the ones on the top are machine screws so might be tricky.
I know I have a carpenter's brace somewhere, but rooting about in the garage was to no avail. However I came across these, Daddy Bear, Mummy Bear and Baby Bear...
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Your just bosting now Tel.mine has more of a patina, commensurate with being 70 years old.
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