Douglas - there is clearly a gap in the market here - I don't think anyone has ever collected one of every type of hand drill ever made!
But maybe you will, if they carry on arriving with as little effort as these three. :wink:
Looking at Chapman drills in the 1935 Buck and Hickman catalogue (from Rose Tools) gives us these three:
Fair enough; choice is a good thing, and the woodworker who spends 8 shillings on a drill may be rarer than the one only willing to part with 5s 6d. And of course there has to be an average, compromise, 7s design.
But yours isn't quite the same as any of these as far as I can tell from your picture - It's a 104 with 2 pinions, or a 105 with a solid gear wheel. Or maybe I'm just underestimating the pace of development of hand drills in the 1930s and these things were the mobile phones of their day, with owners gathering in pubs eager to show off the new features of the latest model.
As for the Fleetway, I haven't a clue, except that they seem to be quite common on eBay so were presumably a common DIY grade tool.
But maybe you will, if they carry on arriving with as little effort as these three. :wink:
Looking at Chapman drills in the 1935 Buck and Hickman catalogue (from Rose Tools) gives us these three:
Fair enough; choice is a good thing, and the woodworker who spends 8 shillings on a drill may be rarer than the one only willing to part with 5s 6d. And of course there has to be an average, compromise, 7s design.
But yours isn't quite the same as any of these as far as I can tell from your picture - It's a 104 with 2 pinions, or a 105 with a solid gear wheel. Or maybe I'm just underestimating the pace of development of hand drills in the 1930s and these things were the mobile phones of their day, with owners gathering in pubs eager to show off the new features of the latest model.
As for the Fleetway, I haven't a clue, except that they seem to be quite common on eBay so were presumably a common DIY grade tool.