General Geoff
Well-known member
My recently purchased Wilton 1765 that I purchased for use outdoors, with custom 464 naval brass jaws made by Logan over at https://www.antiquevises.com/






Yes, IIRC, they are flat. I might have an example at home but I am away right now.That type of pipe jaw can be made - generally needs a mill to do it right.
That looks good!Before, and a couple of outside and one inside after. What do you all think? Is this paint pretty close to Verde Green, with a blue or green tint depending on light and shadow?
Next I'm going to try my hand at making some soft jaws for it. I got brass and aluminum for that this week. Will try the brass first. Waiting on a counterbore.
Thank you! I was asked to remove the link because sometime GJ bans people who post links, but If anyone needs it again I can get it to you other ways.Those are hard to find, and very reasonable priced. As are all of your goods!
Thank you! I'm very glad to know your happy with them, that is the most rewarding piece when making these parts!I bought a set of swivel handles from you. No complaints.
Will they let you post the stuff you have for sale on the classifieds board?Thank you! I was asked to remove the link because sometime GJ bans people who post links, but If anyone needs it again I can get it to you other ways.
I'm not sure, i've not tried that. I was just told to never do it again. lol.Will they let you post the stuff you have for sale on the classifieds board?
I've been lusting after one of those for over a decade!
Yeah, me too. It's going to take a lot of luck for me to get one.I've been lusting after one of those for over a decade!






3”er that I’m not familiar with. I can’t read the first 2 letters on the meatball, **avens Vineland NJ. Does anybody recognize it? I would appreciate the help.
Tell me about it, I was about to post the answer and he had the answer 3 minutes before I was going to post. LolGood lord that didn’t take long!! Thanks @RTM.
Many of usI am thinking that heat is really the only option for the swivel jaw pin.

Red paint in the crevices is certainly a problem. Acetone might do the trick. In the old days, many of us used paint stripper that contained methylene chloride. That stuff was banned.The little that is left of the red paint I removed, i'll probably have to attack it with paint thinner or something like that as a wire wheel just isn't getting it


That’s a great idea! Thanks for sharing, I’ll try acetone first and see if that worksRed paint in the crevices is certainly a problem. Acetone might do the trick. In the old days, many of us used paint stripper that contained methylene chloride. That stuff was banned.
If nothing works, you can try a trick that I learned from somebody. Put a tiny dab of dark gray paint into the hole and then wipe off the surface leaving just a small amount to cover the red. It will be WAY less noticeable.
Aside from the Wilton branding and the rotation lock (and some customization), that's the spittin' image of my Roughneck:A few years ago, I bought a new-in-box but rusty Wilton at a pawn shop... I tried to strip the paint off, but couldn't find anything that would even start to remove it. I finally bought two gallons of cheap DOT type 3 brake fluid and soaked the vise parts overnight...
It worked pretty well...
After refinishing...
I know the vise had never been used because the jaws were still coated with cosmoline and the 'QC' inspection stickers were still on it...
-Bear

Bear:
Thats a good tip. Brake fluid dissolves paint quite well doesn't it?
Have you tried to re-use it for more paint stripping? If you don’t keep it in a sealed container it will absorb water from the atmosphere. That may or may not inhibit its ability to remove paint in the future.
Do you have a source for brake fluid at less than $25/gallon?
Thank you! I’ll give that a try!I kept it in a sealed 5 gallon bucket and used it several times before it absorbed enough moisture to quit working...
This was pre-inflation, so I'm sure it was a good bit cheaper then... IIRC, it was Supertech brand from Walmart.
But, for removing the remaining paint from corners and crevices, you could brush the fluid on, then maybe put it in a plastic bag to keep the part wet... and let it sit for 24 or 30 hours or whatever it takes. It wouldn't take a lot of fluid and should work as well, I would think.
-Bear
I kept it in a sealed 5 gallon bucket and used it several times before it absorbed enough moisture to quit working...
This was pre-inflation, so I'm sure it was a good bit cheaper then... IIRC, it was Supertech brand from Walmart.
But, for removing the remaining paint from corners and crevices, you could brush the fluid on, then maybe put it in a plastic bag to keep the part wet... and let it sit for 24 or 30 hours or whatever it takes. It wouldn't take a lot of fluid and should work as well, I would think.
-Bear
One question… how do you get rid of the lye solution after you are finished stripping a few parts? I asked one guy about getting rid of liquid waste where he lives and he said with a straight face… “every body around here just pours it into the river”.Aluminum and cadmium are the main metals that react poorly with lye--so don't use it on those. Other common metals--brass, copper, bronze, zinc and all steel/iron alloys--are fine.
Much cheaper and faster--just be sure to wear some PPE and don't get it on you.
Down the drain--it's sold as drain cleaner, after all. Might not want to do that if you're on a septic tank.One question… how do you get rid of the lye solution after you are finished stripping a few parts? I asked one guy about getting rid of liquid waste where he lives and he said with a straight face… “every body around here just pours it into the river”.