
See THIS for an article about Clyburn. I have a big one but the jaw has been broken and then welded.
One thing that struck me when I read this is that Bahco also claimed to be the inventor of the adjustable spanner.
Just reading this reminds me of my 6 inch plastic ruler. I bought it on the day of my first O level exam in June 1966. I used it for A level exams, all my University exams, and even post grad qualifications . I call it my lucky ruler. I still have it, but it has no markings on it now it is just a rough bit of clearish plastic.PanBiker wrote: ↑28 Jun 2021, 09:13 On my very first day of work when I was 16, I was enrolling at Burnley College for my 5 year City and Guilds. At lunchtime I went down to Sutcliffe tools and bought my first bit of essential kit for an electronics engineer. A pair of CK side cutters, they had orange insulated handles. They stayed with me in my overall pocket for the next 20 years as a field and bench service engineer. I moved into computing and network deployment then and still used them for another 15 years or so. I misplaced them during the BSF move in Burnley when I went from working at Teds to the former Barden High School. I reckon I left them in the roof space somewhere at Teds which was bulldozed to build the new school that is on the site now. So either someone found them in the rubble or they are in the foundations of the new school. They were faithful friends for 35 years or so.![]()
A lot of mine too Stanley. Mum and Dad moved to Burnley the day after I went to University in Salford. I only had what went with me to uni, Mum and Dad left all my other possessions for the little girl moving into our house. I was very upset at the time. The plastic ruler ( and my hockey stick) however went with me to university . I looked for it yesterday and could not find it. I wonder if I threw it away when we cleared the study in December to decorateStanley wrote: ↑07 Jul 2021, 03:09 The whole of my childhood possessions is a forgotten corner as they all vanished when I went in the army and the family flitted from Stockport to Sough. I remember all of them and could sill write a list of the interesting things I had and still miss. Perhaps the most memorable (and possibly valuable today) was two books, 'Dixon Kemp's Yacht and boat sailing' and a year's Boy's Own from about 1925, Bound in an enormous red book. I can still remember some of the stories.