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Lets see how many know this tool?

Started by Stoney, November 30, 2011, 04:36:45 PM

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Stoney







Ten inches long, made in the 1930's with a stacked leather handle.
"Never laugh at live dragons" Bilbo Baggins "The
Hobbit"

"Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work."
-Thomas Edison

http://www.plantshepherdplus.com

64longstep/Brian

If all else fails use a bigger hammer...
Member of PHARTS - Perfect Handle Admiration, Restoration and Torturing Society

scottg

Grain sack sewing needle?
  yours Scott
PHounding PHather of PHARTS
http://www.snowcrest.net/kitty/sgrandstaff/

wvtools


JessEm

It looks like a clock weight but a football lacing tool is winning so far...
Vintage Power Tools WANTED: Porter Cable 500 belt sander, beam saws (circular saws with 10"+ blades) including Mall Saw 120, Skil 127, Makita 5402A & 8190039, B&D, ETC...

Stoney

There are on markings.  Look at the size of the hole. 
"Never laugh at live dragons" Bilbo Baggins "The
Hobbit"

"Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work."
-Thomas Edison

http://www.plantshepherdplus.com

rusty


I am thinking it's for shorting out light sockets.
Tho, I can't think why you would want to do that.

Perhaps a fly swatter for people with really good aim?

I notice the tool is twisted just under the handle, so I'm thinking it is rotated in use a lot....

Just a weathered light rust/WD40 mix patina.

Branson

I'm remembering a tool something like this for pulling plugs into holes in tires.  Looks too long for lacing footballs and such.

Stoney

#8
This is a weavers reed hook.  In particular it's my Dad's reed hook when he was a weaver in Lincoln Mills in the middle '30's.  It was also my reed hook when I was a loom fixer in Huntsville Manufacturing in the '70's. 

A much older loom but run on the same principles as the 1898 looms I ran except ours had 4 harnesses instead of 2.


In the upper right is the shuttle.  It is running in the shed and in that position is going over 100 miles an hour and is traveling on the lathe.  The vertical bars behind the shuttle is the reed.  When the shuttle has boxed, the lathe will come forward against the thread just laid down and pack it tight in the warp threads.  The harness will shift, so that the threads that were up, are now down and down is now up and the shuttle goes the other way.  The loom does this about 88 times a minute.  When a thread breaks the loom stops and the weaver/loom fixer/tie in  will tie in a new thread in a weavers knot (like a surgeons knot) ,clip off the ends and using the reed hook pull the new thread through the right harness slot and the right reed slot and tie to the broken thread.  Then restart the loom.
"Never laugh at live dragons" Bilbo Baggins "The
Hobbit"

"Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work."
-Thomas Edison

http://www.plantshepherdplus.com

Branson


rusty


Thanks Stony :)

I had this feeling it was a textile tool, but I couldn't think what it might be
and didn't go with it :(
So much for trusting intuition ...
Just a weathered light rust/WD40 mix patina.

Stoney

I posted in General Discussion more about cotton mills.
"Never laugh at live dragons" Bilbo Baggins "The
Hobbit"

"Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work."
-Thomas Edison

http://www.plantshepherdplus.com