Going through old tools...what are these for?

I don't know what those are but I wonder how many would recognize this tool.

brake1.jpg


brake2.jpg
 
I can't tell you the names of them, but the prybar looking thing is for taking up floor tile. You slip it under or at the edge and the tap with a hammer. The stick looking thing is also for tile work. I don' remember how. I have both things here. My husband did tile work when we first married. I have a lot of things here for tile.
 
No, it's not a pry bar. The squares are one inch each, so the tool is just 8 1/2 inches long.

There was a time when the brakes on a car needed to be adjusted every couple thousand miles. I learned to do this when I worked at a service station in the '50s. There was a slot with a rubber cover on the inside of the wheel housing. You would insert this tool and turn a nut with bumps on it while spinning the wheel to feel a little drag. It was easiest to do with the car on a lift.

Eventually, they figured out how to make brakes self adjusting and the tool became obsolete. But, it is useful sometimes for prying things.
 
They certainly look like pry bars but I will do a google image comparison search :)

Vintage Craftsman Brake Tool​

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Mine has a radius on one end for pealing the keeper spring off the pins.

As for the other tools.....I think the yellow one is a paint scraper that takes a replaceable blade, which is missing.

The metal ribs look like the edges from a plaster/joint compound trough. They're used to clean the back side of your blade as you pull compound out. They're removable from the trough for easy cleaning.

Update...someone mentioned the flat bars are for file hangers and I think that's the correct answer. Enlarging the picture shows the different lengths you could snap the bars off to to fit your drawer.
 

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