Lol. That's what I would do if I was him or if I had a husband who didn't let me buy my antique tools I collect, but im single so that isnt a factor for me right now. Lol.
The pencil things with the layers are what we always called grease pencils. You can write on anything with them. The work in the rain or snow. You can write on glass or steel or anything. Hard to wipe off unless you use a magic eraser. I still see them used at thrift stores and trade meets for price marking. Just noticed how late to the part I am lol
I'm a 76 year old woman seen you going through these tools twice now it's amazing but I'll say it again set your son up with his own tool box with some of these rare tools God bless you all
Old Hickory knives. They still sell them like that now. They are carbon steel and with some sharpening are amazingly sharp. I have a full set as my kitchen knives.
That screwdriver is a screw-starter. The tip clamps inside the slot on the screw to start them in hard to reach areas. Drive the screw with a regular driver to ensure longevity.
I believe the first one is used to hold a screw by sliding the slide, it swedges the tip into the screw head. Then you can set the screw without loosing it. I have a smaller one.
I do absolutely enjoy unboxing videos from my favorite content creators. Especially people like Cody who has such a love for tools as I do. These antique, handmade in the USA tools from ages ago are wonderful! It's kind of like shaking hands with your ancestors who used them to make life easier for everyone.
@14:00 tapestry or mattress needles. @18:00 horse shoe nails @25:05 waxed thread, for sewing tents and tarps All of these things came from a military surplus cache except the "Loctite" van. Those needles can also be used for tents, tarps, and canvass. Use wax on the needles and thread to help pass them through the material.
i always liked those latches on our tractor toolboxes they held the top tight where know days from the vibrating tractor u end the day walkin the field for tools
Geez! What a box full of treasures you received. I felt like it was Christmas watching this video. Those grommet tools and chisel handles are incredible! I can not wait to watch the next video and see what else he sent you.
I believe the bits with your hand drill are called 'points', used to drill wood. Mine only has 3. The heavy needles are 'sailmakers needles' uses to sew heavy canvas and manilla rope. You're fortunate to have acquired the punch, grommets, anvil and grommet setter. Cheers.
7:50 - We used to call them chipping hammers in the merchant navy. Very good for chipping off large portions of paint that have had rust appear underneath. No as good as a needle gun for more sturdy paint, but just as loud and annoying on metal sheets.
I love old tools, the craftsmanship is just so elegant yet functional. Just like traditional woodworking I am just getting into it and just the satisfaction and silky smooth surface you get. Love it!
Yes! I absolutely like these unboxing videos... I echo the praises for David... so glad he has the means and the desire to share his largess with all of us!
I used to use the "China Pens" that you got on a textile spreading table. They are very useful glad that you get to use them in your upcoming projects!
This video was most exciting!!! It's like Christmas in March...I am old enough (67) to recognize a lot of the items but not all. Thanks David for letting us all enjoy what you sent.
Needles are for sails on sailboats. I’ve seen them around rigging shops. That wicked curved point can be driven through many layers of heavy canvas with a “palm”, a leather hand guard that carries a metal cup, similar to a thimble driving a needle. The hammer is a chipping hammer, used for the first, coarse removal of wasted paint off plate steel, or the removal of slag off of a fresh weld, prior to cleaning the weld with a wire brush.
Really enjoy these videos, some of my favorite types you do. Love the whole channel tho, it's my go to channel since I found it, good work!! Cheers Wranglerstar
Raw hide mallets are also used by leather workers for stamping the decorations on leather. The needles are sail needles. The china markers are indeed spiral wrapped and you pull the string to tear the outer layer then just unwind the cover.
I like the tool unboxing. Fun to see the old tools. I have too many tools...but I can’t get enough. This way I can share the excitement and then go about my business without figuring out what to do with all the stuff or how to store it.
Wranglerstar, my wife and I are huge fans. We have adopted your method to get out of debt (you posted a video about it over a year ago) and it’s working really well for us! Thankyou!
Neat stuff. Your friend David is very generous. Love the hand drill, man. The bent needles remind me of sailmaking needles that penetrate canvas, but they could be for leather as well. The wax crayons or pencils are great for marking things. I used to use them on tires. The nails look to be shoeing nails to shod horses. The roll of nylon strap material is used to make webbing or straps for packs, tie-downs, or whatever. Oh, my....those box latches are very cool. The thread that was in with the chisel handles is most likely for use sewing the nylon webbing together. At least that's what I think. And the Loctite van is the BEST!!
I worked for the Bell System and we had a tool similar to the first one only a little shorter with no handle that fit in our side tool pouch. - It is to hold slotted screws so they don't fall when starting them. We use to deal with small slotted machined screw in electronics.
When I was in the Navy, we used those double peen hammers to chip paint off of the ship. That thread looks like it will fit one of those hand leather stitchers.
I really enjoy watching your unboxing videos, they are fun and educational. It is always a delight to see an old tool that was made to last and possibly hand down to the next generation unlike some of the disposable tools of today. Gotta love the Loctite Van just gotta. lol
Love these vids Cody! I write on my mixing board with China/grease pencils to indicate what's being recorded on each channel...easy to read and remove. That drill is an amazingly beautiful machine!
David does a lot of Military surplus shopping. That first screwdriver is used to hold the screw so you can reach into tight spots. Put the screw on the tip then turn the handle to lock the screw on to the screwdriver tip.
China markers...brings back some very good memories...my dad used them in his black and white darkroom in the 50’s, 60’s and 70’s to mark up his proof sheets - e.g., for 35mm film a sheet of 24 to 36 pictures created by laying the negatives directly on the photo paper. He would choose which shots he wanted out of a roll and then, after enlarging them, would mark them up with the china markers again to indicate how much to crop.
Another use for the wax pencils is on the fire engine. As an engineer I would use one to write dispatch info on the glass windows. Also, on the pump panel you can mark static pressures and where each discharge is going i.e., interior attack, RIC, or floor 1/ floor 2, etc..Then wipe away with a rag when done.
@Wranglerstar the bag you open at 05:54. The first two things you pulled out are part of a PLD (personal lowering device) they are used in the United States Air Force with parachutes. The small one is a clasp that you wrap around the risers of your parachute and hook into a ring. The bigger one hooks into the front clip on your parachute harness and has a piece of nylon that runs through it and you use friction to help lower you down to the ground. The nylon is 150 feet long and the system is designed to help the wearer of the parachute lower themselves down to the ground in case they get caught up in trees or something similar.
March 15th. The new Christmas !! Cody acts like a kid under a spruce tree. David is the new Santa. David you are a special person. Yes Cody, I too love opening pkgs, though I have to get mine from Amazon. Cheers to Cody and all his fans. No, we aren't jealous.
Rawhide mallets are also used by percussion musicians with concert chimes--precision tuned instruments that need a serious force delivered but are delicate as well. Woodworking is music, so it makes sense to use the same mallet.
Used those china markers a lot in the Navy. Used them make on acrylic boards. We would have to write on the board backwards so the officers could read them on the front side. The boards where light from the side illuminating the marks on the board. The string is pulled down to then next indent in the pencil and then the paper is pealed of giving access to more of the marker as you wear it down.
It looks to me like David got a hold of some old Dept of Defense surplus. The welded rings and grommet sets at one time were issued to units in a wooden locker kit for textile repair from WW2, all the way into the early 90's. They also issued units carpentry kits and barber kits. In the Army, each company or detachment were issued these kits. I'll wager the nails and unused hand crank drill came from a DoD carpentry kit. The rawhide mallet and hickory handle may have come from either kit textile/tent repair or carpentry. The Welded rings and D-rings are for textile repair or tent repair. The same pouch has some parachute and aerial delivery items. The locking gate hook is a very old "Static Line Snap Hook" still with a portion of the "Static Line" (yellow Type VIII nylon webbing), sewn in long tri-fold. A paratrooper would attach the static line of their parachute to an overhead anchorline cable inside the aircraft by means of snap hook, the hook gate locked in place to ensure it was secure. The snap hook slides on the cable as the paratrooper walks from the front of the aircraft to the paratroop door to exit at the rear of the aircraft. Once the paratrooper jumped from the aircraft door, about 16' of Static Line would play out from their parachute. Upon reaching the end of that line, the Static Line would pull the main parachute open. The paratrooper was responsible for deploying their own reserve parachute in the event their main parachute had a malfunction. The dual "L-Bar Connector Link" is still used today on modern military parachutes, as is your "Quick-Fit V-Ring" belt buckle. The Quick-Fit V-Ring is used on the parachute harness leg-straps. All three of those items are used on personnel parachute harnesses. The buckle with the floating fat bar is used on canvas components for aerial delivery containers used to parachute supplies and equipment during combat operations. I am guessing most of these items I mentioned, even the files and china markers (wax) came from an Airborne or Aerial Delivery/Parachute Rigger unit. Riggers use the china markers to mark parachute materials while measuring and marking textile repairs on parachutes and other aerial delivery items. The markers were originally developed for marking on porcelain and tile, things that pencils and pens could not mark well, before we had Sharpies and modern markers. The china markers work great on textiles.The screw driver looking irem is a "screw starter". Holds a screw on the tip. For wood screws, slide the handle like a slide hammer to start the screw. The curved flat needles are "Sail Maker's" needles, used in textile repair for canvas and leather items for both tents and aerial delivery equipment and containers. Upholsterers also use those needles. The chisel handkes also look the same as the ones we had in the DoD carpentry kits.
Hey Cody, about them lumber pencils, all you do is pull the string about 1/4'' toward you so that it cuts the paper and then peel off the paper around and around down to the tip. They are cool I always like using them on wood or steel.
those 2 needles at the 14:30 mark are used in carpet mills we called them backing needles to sew the backing roll into the machine to tuft the yarn into carpet
What if "David" is actually just a cover for Cody to buy a bunch of cool antique tools without Mrs W finding out?
😂
Lol. That's what I would do if I was him or if I had a husband who didn't let me buy my antique tools I collect, but im single so that isnt a factor for me right now. Lol.
I've got a set of those Craftsman adjustable wrenches. A large and a small. Makes life a heck of a lot easier in a lot of circumstances.
You can't make that stuff up! How fun that the 1985 Corgi Loctite van was the last thing to open!
Those needles are like the ones that were used in a feed and seed store in my hometown, when I was a young fella. Used to sew up burlap feed sacks.
David is very generous and he obviously likes watching these videos as much as I do. Thanks for the entertainment!
The pencil things with the layers are what we always called grease pencils. You can write on anything with them. The work in the rain or snow. You can write on glass or steel or anything. Hard to wipe off unless you use a magic eraser. I still see them used at thrift stores and trade meets for price marking. Just noticed how late to the part I am lol
I'm a 76 year old woman seen you going through these tools twice now it's amazing but I'll say it again set your son up with his own tool box with some of these rare tools God bless you all
Old Hickory knives. They still sell them like that now. They are carbon steel and with some sharpening are amazingly sharp. I have a full set as my kitchen knives.
That screwdriver is a screw-starter. The tip clamps inside the slot on the screw to start them in hard to reach areas. Drive the screw with a regular driver to ensure longevity.
You ask if we like these videos I personally love hearing you get excited over the same things that I would like
The long handled screwdriver is called a screw starter. The end hold a screw until you start to turn it. love the van!
These are some of my favorite videos.
I believe the first one is used to hold a screw by sliding the slide, it swedges the tip into the screw head. Then you can set the screw without loosing it. I have a smaller one.
I also have one I got from my Dad.
Yup! I've two of them, myself.
I love that van. I expect to see it driving by on some of your future videos.
13:24 wow the imperial system is so much simpler to measure things with
Love the unboxing videos, I had a shop class back in the early 70s and all of our mallets were the rawhide ones, brings back alot of memories.
Mmmmm...yes!
It’s nice to see those things go to a good home where they’ll be treasuered.
im pretty sure those needles were used to sow bags of chalf and grain, I remember using them as a kid on the farm
I do absolutely enjoy unboxing videos from my favorite content creators. Especially people like Cody who has such a love for tools as I do. These antique, handmade in the USA tools from ages ago are wonderful! It's kind of like shaking hands with your ancestors who used them to make life easier for everyone.
I Love The Loctite at the end. I have seen the needles used to repair nets.
Love these videos of the cool old stuff!!! Keep them comming!!!
@14:00 tapestry or mattress needles.
@18:00 horse shoe nails
@25:05 waxed thread, for sewing tents and tarps
All of these things came from a military surplus cache except the "Loctite" van. Those needles can also be used for tents, tarps, and canvass. Use wax on the needles and thread to help pass them through the material.
i always liked those latches on our tractor toolboxes they held the top tight where know days from the vibrating tractor u end the day walkin the field for tools
Yes I enjoy these types of vids tremendously! Thanks Cody and David!
Love watching these and hearing your surprise and glee. Your lucky to have a friend like that
Geez! What a box full of treasures you received. I felt like it was Christmas watching this video. Those grommet tools and chisel handles are incredible! I can not wait to watch the next video and see what else he sent you.
I believe the bits with your hand drill are called 'points', used to drill wood. Mine only has 3. The heavy needles are 'sailmakers needles' uses to sew heavy canvas and manilla rope. You're fortunate to have acquired the punch, grommets, anvil and grommet setter. Cheers.
I LOVE these unboxing videos! I laughed to tears when you opened the Loctite van!
17:00 is for marking pottery I believe.
7:50 - We used to call them chipping hammers in the merchant navy. Very good for chipping off large portions of paint that have had rust appear underneath. No as good as a needle gun for more sturdy paint, but just as loud and annoying on metal sheets.
The first tool reminded me of a screw starter.
The center part wedges the screw slot until you get it started.
Sack needles for hessian grain bags, Cody.
Thanks for the great video Cody and more importantly, thanks David for sharing all the cool stuff you find.
Your excitement is pure Wranglerstar. Thanks for sharing this experience in your video.
Cody I laughed right along with you at the Loctite van. That joke will never get old.
I love old tools, the craftsmanship is just so elegant yet functional. Just like traditional woodworking I am just getting into it and just the satisfaction and silky smooth surface you get. Love it!
Yes! I absolutely like these unboxing videos... I echo the praises for David... so glad he has the means and the desire to share his largess with all of us!
I used to use the "China Pens" that you got on a textile spreading table. They are very useful glad that you get to use them in your upcoming projects!
This video was most exciting!!! It's like Christmas in March...I am old enough (67) to recognize a lot of the items but not all. Thanks David for letting us all enjoy what you sent.
at 27:30 I just about lost it! haha!! Way to go David and amazing video, Cody!
Needles are for sails on sailboats. I’ve seen them around rigging shops. That wicked curved point can be driven through many layers of heavy canvas with a “palm”, a leather hand guard that carries a metal cup, similar to a thimble driving a needle. The hammer is a chipping hammer, used for the first, coarse removal of wasted paint off plate steel, or the removal of slag off of a fresh weld, prior to cleaning the weld with a wire brush.
Wax pencils good for marking glass, plastic, porcelain, leather, anything that won't normally take a regular pencil or pen.
Really enjoy these videos, some of my favorite types you do. Love the whole channel tho, it's my go to channel since I found it, good work!! Cheers Wranglerstar
sail needle, great for leather as well
I like the unboxing videos you do. I normally don’t, but your excitement is over the top and genuine.
Cody Your first tool is to start a slotted screw, it is capture by the tangs very useful for screws that are hard to reach. Eric
I absolutely love these unboxing videos and i can not wait for the other 2 very much looking forward to it.
That drill is amazing and love that heavy duty grommet set! Wow!
Another Christmas morning on the Wranglerstar channel. Love the unboxing.
Love the Van. Always great vids from the wood shop👍
needles for sewing burlap sacks !
You should hide the Loctite van in every video.
Raw hide mallets are also used by leather workers for stamping the decorations on leather. The needles are sail needles.
The china markers are indeed spiral wrapped and you pull the string to tear the outer layer then just unwind the cover.
always learn so much from these
You Need To Call Brian Over, And Do A Video Giving Him The Things You Pass On To Him.
That is a mk1 Renault Trafic. I used to work on them when I started my apprenticeship at Renault Trucks
I like the tool unboxing. Fun to see the old tools. I have too many tools...but I can’t get enough. This way I can share the excitement and then go about my business without figuring out what to do with all the stuff or how to store it.
the thread is prewound bobbins probably for a commercial sewing machine for leather or canvas.
great to see this stuff come from my home state. palmetto state armory is about 5min from me
All really interesting items. Fun being there with you.
Wranglerstar, my wife and I are huge fans. We have adopted your method to get out of debt (you posted a video about it over a year ago) and it’s working really well for us! Thankyou!
That was fun! I'm not sure what I like better, the discovery of each new tool or listening to your enthusiasm and appreciation. :-)
Always fun to see what you get Cody, give us more!
Great video! Thanks David! As to whether we enjoy these videos as much as you do...yes, but not quite as much as you. Thanks for sharing!
26:17 “Do you guys enjoy these unboxing videos as much as I do?” YES!
Neat stuff. Your friend David is very generous. Love the hand drill, man. The bent needles remind me of sailmaking needles that penetrate canvas, but they could be for leather as well. The wax crayons or pencils are great for marking things. I used to use them on tires. The nails look to be shoeing nails to shod horses. The roll of nylon strap material is used to make webbing or straps for packs, tie-downs, or whatever. Oh, my....those box latches are very cool. The thread that was in with the chisel handles is most likely for use sewing the nylon webbing together. At least that's what I think. And the Loctite van is the BEST!!
I worked for the Bell System and we had a tool similar to the first one only a little shorter with no handle that fit in our side tool pouch. - It is to hold slotted screws so they don't fall when starting them. We use to deal with small slotted machined screw in electronics.
The loctite van at the end was amazing. Love the videos. Keep doing these unboxing videos. I love seeing things I never nee existed.
I’ve got a few of these items, It never dawned on me that they were part of the lesser known collection.
David is one awesome guy with apparently a great sense of humor I literally died at the end with the loctite van toy 😂😂😂 that was way too perfect!!
These are always interesting videos when you unbox stuff. And that was the perfect last thing to open!!! LOL!!!
When I was in the Navy, we used those double peen hammers to chip paint off of the ship. That thread looks like it will fit one of those hand leather stitchers.
I really enjoy these videos!
Like a kid at Christmas but aren't we all for the things we love?
I really enjoy watching your unboxing videos, they are fun and educational. It is always a delight to see an old tool that was made to last and possibly hand down to the next generation unlike some of the disposable tools of today. Gotta love the Loctite Van just gotta. lol
I really like videos like this! It's like a little adventure into history and different crafts.
Love these vids Cody! I write on my mixing board with China/grease pencils to indicate what's being recorded on each channel...easy to read and remove. That drill is an amazingly beautiful machine!
Loctite! Thank you David, and thank you Cody.
David does a lot of Military surplus shopping. That first screwdriver is used to hold the screw so you can reach into tight spots.
Put the screw on the tip then turn the handle to lock the screw on to the screwdriver tip.
1st little long shalfed item ...is a screwdriver with a center that binds in the slot of the screw to hold it on the screwdriver.
These are fun. Also cool to see some of the same items in my tool box that has been passed down to me from my grandparents.
Love that the van was last . I dont know who laughed harder ,you or me . Keep up the good work . Always enjoy your videos .
Yes it is a Renault Trafic :) Long time since I've seen one of those.
Great a van for your Loctite! Always fun to watch the unboxing videos.
Love the latches!
China markers...brings back some very good memories...my dad used them in his black and white darkroom in the 50’s, 60’s and 70’s to mark up his proof sheets - e.g., for 35mm film a sheet of 24 to 36 pictures created by laying the negatives directly on the photo paper. He would choose which shots he wanted out of a roll and then, after enlarging them, would mark them up with the china markers again to indicate how much to crop.
Another use for the wax pencils is on the fire engine. As an engineer I would use one to write dispatch info on the glass windows. Also, on the pump panel you can mark static pressures and where each discharge is going i.e., interior attack, RIC, or floor 1/ floor 2, etc..Then wipe away with a rag when done.
awesome tools!! I have been wanting one of those hand drills for quite a while
@Wranglerstar the bag you open at 05:54. The first two things you pulled out are part of a PLD (personal lowering device) they are used in the United States Air Force with parachutes. The small one is a clasp that you wrap around the risers of your parachute and hook into a ring. The bigger one hooks into the front clip on your parachute harness and has a piece of nylon that runs through it and you use friction to help lower you down to the ground. The nylon is 150 feet long and the system is designed to help the wearer of the parachute lower themselves down to the ground in case they get caught up in trees or something similar.
March 15th. The new Christmas !! Cody acts like a kid under a spruce tree. David is the new Santa. David you are a special person. Yes Cody, I too love opening pkgs, though I have to get mine from Amazon. Cheers to Cody and all his fans. No, we aren't jealous.
Rawhide mallets are also used by percussion musicians with concert chimes--precision tuned instruments that need a serious force delivered but are delicate as well. Woodworking is music, so it makes sense to use the same mallet.
Used those china markers a lot in the Navy. Used them make on acrylic boards. We would have to write on the board backwards so the officers could read them on the front side. The boards where light from the side illuminating the marks on the board. The string is pulled down to then next indent in the pencil and then the paper is pealed of giving access to more of the marker as you wear it down.
It looks to me like David got a hold of some old Dept of Defense surplus. The welded rings and grommet sets at one time were issued to units in a wooden locker kit for textile repair from WW2, all the way into the early 90's. They also issued units carpentry kits and barber kits. In the Army, each company or detachment were issued these kits. I'll wager the nails and unused hand crank drill came from a DoD carpentry kit. The rawhide mallet and hickory handle may have come from either kit textile/tent repair or carpentry. The Welded rings and D-rings are for textile repair or tent repair. The same pouch has some parachute and aerial delivery items. The locking gate hook is a very old "Static Line Snap Hook" still with a portion of the "Static Line" (yellow Type VIII nylon webbing), sewn in long tri-fold. A paratrooper would attach the static line of their parachute to an overhead anchorline cable inside the aircraft by means of snap hook, the hook gate locked in place to ensure it was secure. The snap hook slides on the cable as the paratrooper walks from the front of the aircraft to the paratroop door to exit at the rear of the aircraft. Once the paratrooper jumped from the aircraft door, about 16' of Static Line would play out from their parachute. Upon reaching the end of that line, the Static Line would pull the main parachute open. The paratrooper was responsible for deploying their own reserve parachute in the event their main parachute had a malfunction. The dual "L-Bar Connector Link" is still used today on modern military parachutes, as is your "Quick-Fit V-Ring" belt buckle. The Quick-Fit V-Ring is used on the parachute harness leg-straps. All three of those items are used on personnel parachute harnesses. The buckle with the floating fat bar is used on canvas components for aerial delivery containers used to parachute supplies and equipment during combat operations. I am guessing most of these items I mentioned, even the files and china markers (wax) came from an Airborne or Aerial Delivery/Parachute Rigger unit. Riggers use the china markers to mark parachute materials while measuring and marking textile repairs on parachutes and other aerial delivery items. The markers were originally developed for marking on porcelain and tile, things that pencils and pens could not mark well, before we had Sharpies and modern markers. The china markers work great on textiles.The screw driver looking irem is a "screw starter". Holds a screw on the tip. For wood screws, slide the handle like a slide hammer to start the screw. The curved flat needles are "Sail Maker's" needles, used in textile repair for canvas and leather items for both tents and aerial delivery equipment and containers. Upholsterers also use those needles. The chisel handkes also look the same as the ones we had in the DoD carpentry kits.
the curved ones look like sail making needles, looking at the eyelets etc you have a lot of sailmaking tools
This type of video is random enough to really keep a fellow interested !
Hey Cody, about them lumber pencils, all you do is pull the string about 1/4'' toward you so that it cuts the paper and then peel off the paper around and around down to the tip. They are cool I always like using them on wood or steel.
Perfect ending. Great video!
I used the China markers when I was in the navy and the nylon strap roll is also from military supply. Great video yet again!
Hay just got my package in the mail Thanks.
those 2 needles at the 14:30 mark are used in carpet mills we called them backing needles to sew the backing roll into the machine to tuft the yarn into carpet