condeesteso":1ckzje5c said:They look rather nice Henning - no prices I note, and what is Maine hardwood, is it different to Kent hardwood at all
.......... So the arrow means military, learn something new everyday, so guess its a WMD as issued to the Home Guard ..........
.......... It means to a military contract/specification, often accompanied by the numbered spec. against which it was made ..........
I discuss this here -- a caveat, many of my notes are based on long ago remembrances. Here is an example of a WD marked chisel (broad arrow) from the WWII years:.......... It's easy to understand the demise of many tool making firms at that point - they would have been in full-on wartime production, to cover losses from enemy activities, etc., then, when peace was restored, many of the military tools were re-used in civilian life, so sales would have collapsed. The late 1940s and 1950s must have been tough for them, despite the need to rebuild infrastructure, etc. ...........
Shrubby":1fthijnb said:Strange that it took 5 pages before the subject of parallel tips came up
Most slotted screwdrivers have a tapered blade which is a poor fit and tends to damage slotted brass screws by camming out of the slot.
better designs are the hollow ground gunsmith type or the parallel Swiss VSM standard - these also have docked corners so they don't ride up out of the slot as the screw goes into the countersink
Matt
Cheshirechappie":3c20hfhh said:(Additional tip - find one manky old screwdriver with a ragged-out tip, and designate it solely for opening tins, poking crud out of corners and such like jobs. Doesn't half save your decent screwdrivers!)
condeesteso":2qy1lwch said:I expect they'll look a lot like mine Jim? btw, is there actually anything left in the WH catalogue you have missed :lol: :lol:
Just wondering... why the adoption of the perfect pattern for these? They are not for striking or opening tins or removing rusty sods. I do like them and they feel quite nice, but technically intruiged a bit. Must say I do like the size and lower mass of the trad wooden handle. I'll get along with these fine, but any thoughts?
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