Super cool machine tool wrench

Janderso

Jeff Anderson
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I say, machine tool wrench because I am making an assumption.
1 7/16 and 1 13/16” on the same wrench seems purpose driven.
Anybody know what this was for?
Armstrong makes good stuff.
I can see this in a K&T or Cincinnati horizontal mill tool kit.

I love these old tools!
 

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Those look really similar to some Armstrong wrenches my dad had. The lettering looks exactly the same. No idea if they were specific to a machine but he did work around heavy road building machinery which all had massive fasteners. Or at least they seemed massive when I was ten years old. :)
 
I have a Williams 1 5/8 on one end, and 1 7/16 on the other.
you think the 1 13/16 seems to far out from the other end?
 
Got a bucket full of them . :grin: Some left with Jason the other week .
 
Early and late split window VW bus rear-axle nuts, 36mm & 46 mm.
Are you one of those VW enthusiasts?
I'm pretty mechanically inclined but the Beatle engine had me stumped.
I know, simplicity at it's core, but with all that sheet metal, split case, air cooled, it was just too foreign for my linear brain.
 
I have a Williams 1 5/8 on one end, and 1 7/16 on the other.
you think the 1 13/16 seems to far out from the other end?
I'm not sure I understand your question.
My point was the wide range of the two sizes.
That's why I think it's from a specific machine or application.
 
Are you one of those VW enthusiasts?
I'm pretty mechanically inclined but the Beatle engine had me stumped.
I know, simplicity at it's core, but with all that sheet metal, split case, air cooled, it was just too foreign for my linear brain.
Enough so that I didn't have to look up the sizes of the axle nuts.
I've been a VW bus owner for longer than I can remember, though for the last 30 years it's been my toy not my transportation.
I built one engine back in the 70s. Since I cut my teeth on them, they make perfect sense to me. A Chevy V8 stumps me.
My doublecab is currently being freshened up in preparation for selling it. I don't drive it much anymore and, being worth more than all 6 of my other vehicles combined, it just doesn't make sense to have it sitting in the garage waiting to burn.
P1010289.JPG
A friend calls them "boltswagens" because that's what holds them together.
 
I have rebuilt several VW air cooled engines. Their design is very similar to many smaller aircraft engines, where VW likely got the idea. They are relatively quite easy to remove, take apart, repair as needed, and put back together with very few and simple tools, a pry bar, the factory jack, and some 2X lumber. That is why they were so popular with teens and others with few assets for getting their VW bug or bus running again. With a small box of tools, the jack to lift and lower the vehicle, and not very much money, it was quite possible to remove, repair, and put it back together on the side of a road (been there, young, poor, and needing to get back home!)
 
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