![]() Dedicated to the Promotion and Preservation of American Muscle Cars, Dealer built Supercars and COPO cars. |
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Made by Dutton Lainson Co. in Nebraska. Still in business.
Looks like and air gun of some kind, but how in the world would you attach an air hose? Same thing is available as part of an oil can with a nozzle on the end. Looks like it would spray oil EVERYWHERE!!! Look here: https://www.ebay.com/itm/306368333847 and here: https://www.ebay.com/itm/205202203449 Also a painted one on ebay: https://www.ebay.com/itm/116724591885
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Don't believe everything you read on the internet ... Ben Franklin |
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It's only Orig once I spend a lot of money on Wine, Women and Cars, I waste all the rest. 1978 Y88 1995 Q45 |
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You may want to post here: https://www.garagejournal.com/. They are great at identifying bizarre old tools. I went down a mile long rabbit hole trying to ID a couple of bizarre unadjustable torque wrenches that i found in my Father-In-Law's tool box and learned they were made by a company "Jo-Line" that supplied WWII military production factories with calibrated screw drivers, and wrenches for repetitive assembly work to precise tolerances. In a total fluke of coincidence the son of the son of the original inventor found the thread and started filling everyone in on these amazing tools. The man's grandfather was a mechanical genius and held the patent on the micrometer-based torque wrenches we all use today. He would confer with his nearly 100-year old father and post the stories of the goings-on at the factory back in the 1940s to the 1970's.
These two wrenches were prototypes for future production made for one of their reps in Chicago. One was calibrated to 50 inch pounds and the other to 75 inch pounds. Here's the thread on the Jo-Line wrench story with 70-year old the son chiming in after discussing the tools with his then, late 90's aged father: https://www.garagejournal.com/forum/...enches.413693/ Last edited by njsteve; 08-31-2025 at 05:24 PM. |
The Following User Says Thank You to njsteve For This Useful Post: | ||
396 SS/RS (08-31-2025) |
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Posted on GJ. Will see.
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Don't believe everything you read on the internet ... Ben Franklin |
#5
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Easy...
It's blow gun for a ball chuck on your air compressor line: ![]() ![]() Wayne BTW..standard equipment in old back country garages... ![]() |
The Following 9 Users Say Thank You to Arrowsmith For This Useful Post: | ||
169indy (Yesterday), 396 SS/RS (08-31-2025), 69M22Z (08-31-2025), big gear head (Yesterday), dustinm (Today), dykstra (Yesterday), L78_Nova (Yesterday), scuncio (08-31-2025), YenkoYS-199Stinger (08-31-2025) |
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very cool!
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Eddie M Camaro-less 87 El Camino SS Few Ferrari's |
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Wow!
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Dang.
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It's only Orig once I spend a lot of money on Wine, Women and Cars, I waste all the rest. 1978 Y88 1995 Q45 |
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"Easy"
Yeah, right, for you. I never said I was smart. Thanks man!!!!! Got the same answer over at GJ. Guess i will keep it.
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Don't believe everything you read on the internet ... Ben Franklin |
#10
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It actually works pretty good on my little one cylinder portable compressor…never tried it on my big shop compressor…
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