You guys won't believe what plate showed up in the mail today!


Sent to me from our very own member LJ.



I'd like to believe that Nobody else in Germany has one of these.

Thanks a Million LJ!



It's an awesome Addition! I really appreciate it Buddy!



.
cool collection OC, it brought back memories of my dad’s keychain when I was growing-upOLDE CUTLER wrote: ↑Sun Jun 01, 2025 5:21 pm I have this small collection of the pocket keychain screwdrivers that used to be seen years ago given as advertisers.
VERY NICE key ring tools, OLDE CUTLER!
I found them useful.OLDE CUTLER wrote: ↑Sun Jun 01, 2025 5:21 pm I have this small collection of the pocket keychain screwdrivers that used to be seen years ago given as advertisers.
Dekalb seed corn
Sears Craftsman
Statesman Insurance
Turner Hutchinson Electric Co-op
Cole National
Marlin Firearms
Colt Pistols Revolvers
McQuay-Norris Ball joint Inspection Tool
IMG_6078.JPG
Ditto, my dad always carried one of these as well.bestgear wrote: ↑Sun Jun 01, 2025 5:39 pmcool collection OC, it brought back memories of my dad’s keychain when I was growing-upOLDE CUTLER wrote: ↑Sun Jun 01, 2025 5:21 pm I have this small collection of the pocket keychain screwdrivers that used to be seen years ago given as advertisers.
Something of the same ilk I carry on my key ring.New_Windsor_NY wrote: ↑Sun Jun 01, 2025 7:15 pmVERY NICE key ring tools, OLDE CUTLER!![]()
![]()
These are my only two. Just never caught the collecting bug for these.
PACIFIC BELL.
HUSKY.
Hi Tom:TPK wrote: ↑Sun May 04, 2025 4:31 pm ...While cleaning and mounting the West Virginia plates Chris sent to me, I noticed something very interesting. Something I haven"t seen untill now. So we all know how the"raised lettering" on plates are right. Well on the 1965 plate the letters or not"raised", they are indented. Meaning pushed in towards the car bumper. Never seen this feature on any other plate before. So I find that very unique.![]()
.
Very interesting information. Thanks Chris!PringleTree wrote: ↑Tue Jun 03, 2025 12:07 amHi Tom:TPK wrote: ↑Sun May 04, 2025 4:31 pm ...While cleaning and mounting the West Virginia plates Chris sent to me, I noticed something very interesting. Something I haven"t seen untill now. So we all know how the"raised lettering" on plates are right. Well on the 1965 plate the letters or not"raised", they are indented. Meaning pushed in towards the car bumper. Never seen this feature on any other plate before. So I find that very unique.![]()
.
For what it's worth (), I found out today that the depressed characters (lettering/numbers) is known as debossing--the opposite, of course, of embossing (raised lettering). I was looking at some 1960s WV plates at a flea market today and found that the odd numbered years in the 1960s all had the debossing: 1961 debossed white lettering on a red plate; 1963, 1965, 1967, 1969 were all debossed yellow lettering on a blue plate.
Chris J.
VERY NICE, chickenman62.
Just FANTASTIC!!
Cool find Cody!cody6268 wrote: ↑Wed Jun 04, 2025 8:46 pm While really way too big for my personal tastes, I've gotten back into American pressed-steel toys lately.
Just bought this Tonka today for $20 at my local antique store. Still in pretty good condition, despite a little rust. 100% complete also. No missing or broken parts. The top (commonly missing) along with its supports (usually almost always gone if the top's gone), steering wheel (soft rubber, and they often broke), and the hitch (from kids doing stupid stuff).
Appears Tonka started making these 1:12 Jeeps in the '60s, then discontinued the military version towards the latter years of the Vietnam War. Apparently, this one was 1975 only, as it had the big tires, but still with the CJ-2 grille of the '60s models. In '76, Tonka moved to a newer model with larger headlights and different decals. Then, towards the '80s, the tired old stamping was replaced with a smaller, largely plastic version suitable for Play People figures (3.75-ish).