• Rare antique No. 7 locking jaw adjustable wrench pliers Patent No 2388580 by Botnick Motor Corporation from Binghamton, NY. Vintage made in USA collectible hand tool marketed as "It's a wrench and 5 other tools"
  • Rare antique No. 7 locking jaw adjustable wrench pliers Patent No 2388580 by Botnick Motor Corporation from Binghamton, NY. Vintage made in USA collectible hand tool marketed as "It's a wrench and 5 other tools"
  • Rare antique No. 7 locking jaw adjustable wrench pliers Patent No 2388580 by Botnick Motor Corporation from Binghamton, NY. Vintage made in USA collectible hand tool marketed as "It's a wrench and 5 other tools"
  • Rare antique No. 7 locking jaw adjustable wrench pliers Patent No 2388580 by Botnick Motor Corporation from Binghamton, NY. Vintage made in USA collectible hand tool marketed as "It's a wrench and 5 other tools"
  • Rare antique No. 7 locking jaw adjustable wrench pliers Patent No 2388580 by Botnick Motor Corporation from Binghamton, NY. Vintage made in USA collectible hand tool marketed as "It's a wrench and 5 other tools"

Vintage BMC Mfg Corp No 7 One Pressure Lock Wrench Binghamton, NY

$29.00

In stock

SKU: 202310220005 Categories: ,

Description

Rare antique No. 7 locking jaw adjustable wrench pliers Patent No 2388580 by Botnick Motor Corporation from Binghamton, NY. Vintage made in USA collectible hand tool marketed  “It’s a wrench and 5 other tools”, that is, adjustable end wrench, pipe wrench, gripping tool, multi-leverage pliers, hand vise, and locking clamp. Ready to be shipped across North America. Contact us for international shipping.

Brand

Botnick Motor Corporation

"BMC originally stood for Botnick Motor Corporation, which was the prominent Binghamton Chevrolet dealership founded by Saul Botnick in 1922. This dealership, still operating today, has been in its current Front Street location since 1930. "Mr. Botnick started a tooling shop, located here in the basement of the dealership facility, in October 1944," explains Todd Wilson, Botnick Chevrolet's parts manager and an avid local historian. "The tooling shop specialized in making 'Precision Locking Pliers,' which were like Vise-Grips; they were advertised in magazines like Popular Mechanics." More info at http://progress-is-fine.blogspot.com/2015/09/vanished-tool-makers-bmc-manufacturing.html https://www.garagejournal.com/mystery-vice-grips/