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Tiny Plane Brand Name ?

Started by rustyric, July 20, 2018, 03:31:11 PM

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rustyric

Can anyone put a brand name to this tiny little plane ? The sole measures appx. 3 3/8" x 1 1/4"




coolford

This is partly a guess, but I say Craftsman. :smiley:

rustyric

Thanks - anyone else ? (I cant see a name under the rust on the blade)

Bill Houghton

Clean it up, and you might find out.  It looks a lot like the Stanley 101 - http://www.supertool.com/StanleyBG/stan12.htm#num101 - but the few examples I've seen didn't have a slotted screw on the lever cap.  Here's Patrick Leach's picture of the Stanley:

As Professor Leach points out in his little essay, a lot of manufacturers made imitations/clones/versions of the Stanley plane; and, if Sears decided to add it to the lineup, they'd have contracted with one of those companies to produce it for them.

I owned one for a while, cost me $0.67 (three items for two dollars at a yard sale).  I found it awkward to use...just too small for my hands.

rustyric

I will clean it up and see what turns up and let you all know, many thanks

Northwoods

The Stanley box label shows the 101 at 3 1/2".  Don't know about the one in question.
Note that the Stanley's finger dimple is set back from the front by just a bit, but the one in question has its dimple even with the front.
So?
The ORIGINAL Northwoods.

DeadNutz

So the question is did someone copy Stanley's or did Stanley copy somebody else's?

Bill Houghton

Quote from: DeadNutz on July 21, 2018, 03:01:22 PM
So the question is did someone copy Stanley's or did Stanley copy somebody else's?
There's a third possibility, always.  Stanley was kind of the Microsoft of the 19th/20th century woodworking tool world: always buying up competitors or companies offering a product they'd like to offer.  The design could have entered their product line that way.

I don't know which it is in this case.

bird

I've seen those (thumb planes ?) by a bunch of makers.... as usual, Stanley had it "first." But, Craftsman, Stanley, Sargent, Stanley Handyman , ... after that every high and low class plane maker had them.  I can't tell from the picture, but how "thick" the blade is can tell a little bit about it. Also, if the "thumb" part is completely smooth, more likely a Stanley then the others. That's my two sense... which may not make sense at all.
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