Several comments, besides that your screwdriver refurbishing job looks great! 1) From the picture, it looks as though that is the same screwdriver that came with Johnson and Evinrude outboard motors of the period. Makes me wonder who made them back then. What we now would call OEM. 2) I also check another Forum every day - the Model T Ford Club. This thread makes me feel right at home, because putting together "original" kits of tools is a pastime of many Model T owners (not me - mine is a "driver"). Most if not all of the tools shown above are the same I see on the Model T forum. There's also a lot of back-and-forth about the size and specifications of the roll-up pouch they came in, and how to get a local shop to make an exact duplicate. 3) There are two rust-removal techniques that have been extensively covered on the Model T forum. One involves suspending your part inside a plastic bucket filled with water and washing soda, into which are also stuck one or more pieces of iron or steel (most folks use re-bar), and applying voltage from a battery charger. I won't try to give you the polarity and the size charger needed, because I have forgotten, but if anyone wants them, I'll get them for you. It leaves the part rust-free and with a black finish. The other is the more fascinating one to me. It involves tossing the part (your screwdriver, say) into a bucket, tank, or pot into which a mixture of one pound of molasses to one gallon of water have been added. You simply let it sit for about 3 weeks and the part comes out like new. You need to leave it outdoors, apparently, because the molasses ferments and stinks, but plenty of folks have tried it on everything from bolts & nuts to whole fenders, and it works!
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