Please help me figure out what these “tools” are. Thanks in advance, Dave
[IMG]http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v674/kimiejo76/thingies_2.jpg[/IMG]
[IMG]http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v674/kimiejo76/thingies.jpg[/IMG]
Please help me figure out what these “tools” are. Thanks in advance, Dave
[IMG]http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v674/kimiejo76/thingies_2.jpg[/IMG]
[IMG]http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v674/kimiejo76/thingies.jpg[/IMG]
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Replies
Tried looking at image and computer said they dont exist.
Try the links like this:
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v674/kimiejo76/thingies_2.jpg
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v674/kimiejo76/thingies.jpg
I'll go what I think is not too far out on a limb and say that they look like doorstops.
It''s hard to tell without something else in the picture to give me some scale, but my guess would be sash weights for windows.
Jeff
Are they habdles for crosscut saws ?
C.
Interesting !! Could we get a close up of the business ends ?? Suspect the saw handle may be right.Work Safe, Count to 10 when your done for the day !!
Bruce S. Counter Sales, Tech Rep. http://WWW.EAGLEAMERICA.COM
The one in the middle is a thingamajig and the two on ends are whachamacallits.
Handles for the blades of two man saws. The metal loop slips over the blade and then is drawn up tight by the threaded shaft in the handle.
John W.
This is a picture of the handle off of the two man saw that hangs right behind my computer. Needless to say I was clueless about what they were when I first saw them. Duh.-Jerry
That is also a saw handle of a slightly different type in that the shank was attached by a pin through the blade rather than looping around the full width of the blade. These were also used on large one man log saws to give a second handle right in front of the regular D handle or, moved to the toe of the saw, the handle would make the one man into a short two man.
John White, Shop Manager, Fine Woodworking Magazine
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