perhaps they were used for lapping ball seats ?

animal
On 4/29/25 10:11 PM, Miket_NYC via
groups.io wrote:
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I bought these recently in a thrift store in New
Hampshire where I've bought many tools. They're made by Starrett
and each consists of a ball on the end of a knurled shaft.?
The balls are very precise. The small one is 1
1/2 thousandths
smaller than 0.5" (an amount that could easily have been lost
over the decades). But the small ends of both shafts are
swollen and scarred from pounding, so these were apparently
intended to be pounded into something with hammers.
I have both a modern Starrett catalog and a 1936
catalog, and I don't see these listed,? either under measuring
tools or punches and similar things intended to be hit with
hammers. Also, they don't have part numbers, like most small
Starrett tools.
Initially, I thought a previous owner might have
welded or brazed the balls onto Starrett punches or something
like that, but that's apparently not true. It's clear, at
least on the large ball, that each ball and shaft is turned
from one piece of metal.
Any ideas? These gizmos were so cheap that I
couldn't pass them up, but I'm flummoxed about what they are
and what they could have been intended to be used for.
Mike Taglieri?