should be a washer, very thin between the spindle and vise body. Keep it lubed up.I found a Google thing with a breakdown.
No bearings which is crazy.
The jaw tightening is metal on metal.
The horseshoe is chewed into so not sure why.
I'll take a look when I get home at the end of the month.should be a washer, very thin between the spindle and vise body. Keep it lubed up.
Go big, put a thrust washer in there, couple of bucks. I had to buy a few for a project, gonna try it on the next vise I clean up.should be a washer, very thin between the spindle and vise body. Keep it lubed up.
Nope, Wilton didn't see fit to put a bearing in there - either the hub bears on the horseshoe, or you shim in the pocket behind the horseshoe and shift the bearing surface to the inner part of the hub and the dynamic jaw's bore. I put a bronze washer in there for bearing and to take up the backlash. Some advocate for a needle thrust bearing, but on mine, there wasn't enough depth for the bearing and two hardened thrust washers.I found a Google thing with a breakdown.
No bearings which is crazy.
The jaw tightening is metal on metal.
The horseshoe is chewed into so not sure why.
Is that a CNC mill, or are you somehow rotating the dynamic jaw?I’ve repaired several Wilton spindle’s that also involves machining the Dynamic counterbore. Once the pocket is machined then either a Bronze bushing recommend or recutting the Horseshoe washer groove after welding it up can fix the backlash issue. I like .015 clearance in the washer to the groove. A few pics that might explain what I’m writing about.