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The VISES of Garage Journal

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Beerhippie

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Oct 13, 2023
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9,912
Location
Far NE Oregon
Here's my curious little vise o' the day find:

54633447403_f236744475_o.jpg

54633218426_5b5a9a6b3a_o.jpg

54633447408_810770a327_o.jpg

The jaws are 1 15/16" wide; opening is 2 1/4"; OAL is 6"; width 4"; height 2". The hex-socket screw is reversed--left-hand thread. The right-hand way has adjustable brass grub screws. The screws that hold it together are shoulder screws. The jaws are welded on and the bearings for the screw are brazed in.

I'm thinking this is a shop-built tool, but it was a fairly good shop with a good operator.
 

Beerhippie

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Oct 13, 2023
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Far NE Oregon
Cool little shop made Timm!

Do I understand correctly that the slide is beveled onto the gibbs?
Yep. I lost my terminology for a bit there. With the brass (bronze?) gibb screws, it's tighter than a bull's *** in fly time. Not perfectly flat on the back, but I can fix that.
 

jawstight

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Joined
Feb 10, 2025
Messages
155
Certainly not an antique but I picked a new Wilton 4" up today.

The cheap little Bessey I've been using does not lend itself to using Parallels because the bed does not extend all the way out to the static jaw. I fixed that last night by making a spacer out of a left over piece of brass bar stock to go between the static jaw face and the body. But it has a very shallow 1" throat depth.
bessey1.jpg


This Wilton will work better for most things, and even with its 1-1/2" throat depth it's not nearly as tall as my Palmgren tilting vise.

Wilton11744.jpg
 

Tom Graham

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Apr 14, 2025
Messages
126
Location
Oklahoma
If you were guessing, what material would you say that this nut was cast from?

I’ve just dissembled a Charles Parker 974 and was more than a little surprised by this color I saw as I spun the fixed jaw around to remove the retainer pin and nut.

This is only Parker #5 for me. Maybe you’ve seen this before?

(edit: nut not screw)
10CFA83B-EF17-4A73-93B5-3D30E1EF19432025-07-04_17-29-26_029.jpeg
 
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micahd1997

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Apr 27, 2022
Messages
253
If you were guessing, what material would you say that this main screw was cast from?

I’ve just dissembled a Charles Parker 974 and was more than a little surprised by this color I saw as I spun the fixed jaw around to remove the retainer pin and main screw.

This is only Parker #5 for me. Maybe you’ve seen this before?10CFA83B-EF17-4A73-93B5-3D30E1EF19432025-07-04_17-29-26_029.jpeg
I love the look of bronze and steel! I can’t spake to how common a brass nut is in Parker vises, but I’ve owned several Prentiss’s with bronze nuts. I haven’t identified any rhyme or reason to the occurrences of bronze slides in vises, but I do always enjoy seeing them.
 

Beerhippie

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Oct 13, 2023
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Far NE Oregon
I'd say bronze, possibly brass. Bronze would be the right thing to use, but that nut isn't going to be as strong as steel.

My Parker 954 1/2 has a bronze collar:

54583597271_1918e12ed9_o.jpg

I believe the vise is ca. 1940.
 

Tom Graham

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Apr 14, 2025
Messages
126
Location
Oklahoma
The static jaw is the late generation 974 with the simple, angled brace (rather than scroll brace) at the rear. No other indications to an A or B suffix that I can see to indicate post-Union. (although I do wonder…)
I can see a “PM” on the dynamic jaw and a “974 P” on the swivel base brake shoe. (I just bought this on Tuesday in Wichita KS. This is not the same 974 with the extremely rusty swivel base and broken dynamic jaw that I posted a few days earlier (June 26 and Tuesday, July 1 .)
 

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RTM

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May 13, 2019
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SF Bay Area
I’ve just dissembled a Charles Parker 974 and was more than a little surprised by this color I saw as I spun the fixed jaw around to remove the retainer pin and nut.
When I see bronze or brass where a normal tool or part would normally be steel, or cast iron, I think recast or reproduction. If you can find an iron version, see if yours is smaller by the shrink rate difference.

Easier to recast in bronze than in steel, probably easier to machine too.
 

neophyte

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Apr 23, 2012
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Pennsylvannia
I'd say bronze, possibly brass. Bronze would be the right thing to use, but that nut isn't going to be as strong as steel.

My Parker 954 1/2 has a bronze collar:

54583597271_1918e12ed9_o.jpg

I believe the vise is ca. 1940.
Steel would potentially be stronger than Brass/Bronze, but only if the right type of steel alloy were used.
Presumably, foundries casting vises would cast the nuts out of a material appropriate for casting, and iron and Bronze/Brass, are usually the metal alloys way more commonly cast.
Iron might be used because it was cheap, and and foundries casting vises would most likely already be pouring iron.
Brass or Bronze might be used, because even older brass and bronze alloys were way stronger than cast iron was, until modern iron alloys and heat treating techniques.
Brass and bronze alloys also tend to have a lower coefficient of friction when combined with a steel or iron screw, and would make tightening a vise easier, especially if the vise screw didn’t get lubricated frequently.
 

Tom Graham

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Apr 14, 2025
Messages
126
Location
Oklahoma
The yellow main nut on my late-generation Charles Parker 974, which I disassembled last night, is definitely cast brass, not iron or bronze. I tested it with a strong magnet today, and it’s not magnetic. The bright yellow color suggests brass, but I also performed a positive sound test for a more distinct ring and observed a chemical reaction for zinc (using vinegar, hydrogen peroxide, and salt).

I’ve set the newer brass nut side-by-side to the typical cast iron nut from my older 974 for you to compare.

The threads on each nut match the main screw from either 974 easily. The brass nut is much heavier than the cast iron.

5396E319-5D5A-41D2-B025-29CB97DA217F2025-07-05_12-56-53_187.jpeg
 
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OneMoreVice13

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Nov 15, 2024
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Las Vegas, NV
Just purchased this guy earlier on offer-up! Any info about it? I found model 43S but nothing 43SN. It's in really good condition.
 

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OneMoreVice13

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Nov 15, 2024
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OneMore: I just discovered that by 1967 the Ridge Tool Company changed the name of their vises from Simplex to Ridgid. That narrows the possible age of your vise to 59 - 61 years.
It's definitely in pretty good shape for it's age. I think I might clean this one up and keep it. Replacing the jaws might be a fun time once I learn how to go about it.
 

Tom Graham

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Apr 14, 2025
Messages
126
Location
Oklahoma
What original paint colors were used on Charles Parker vises? I thought that I had seen reference to initially black and then green. My only personal example that I believe to be good, original paint is this pictured late example of a Union-Parker 954.

i ask because I would like to select a color for a couple of older (pre-Union) Parkers that I have begun to restore. I initially thought that they looked best ”au naturel” but have since decided that I would like to paint at least one (starting with a 973 1/2)

I am leaning to the use of a flat or matte finish, think either of matte black, matte charcoal (or even indigo?!) and I’ve seen one flat green that looked nice.

If you have tried to re-create a Charles Parker original paint color with spray paint, what did you use?
 

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ranger08

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Nov 12, 2021
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287
If you were guessing, what material would you say that this nut was cast from?

I’ve just dissembled a Charles Parker 974 and was more than a little surprised by this color I saw as I spun the fixed jaw around to remove the retainer pin and nut.

This is only Parker #5 for me. Maybe you’ve seen this before?

(edit: nut not screw)
10CFA83B-EF17-4A73-93B5-3D30E1EF19432025-07-04_17-29-26_029.jpeg
looks brass to me, brass nuts were used to impart less wear on the spindle, they are easily replaceable vs the main spindle, theoretically just as strong as steel as forces are in direct compression and not in shear, IMO
 

Private Lugnutz

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Mar 30, 2012
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The Authentic Jersey Shore
I plucked this teeny tiny critter out of a box of old C-clamps this morning at the flea.

20250711_125028.jpg20250711_125043.jpg

I can see why it was mixed up with them. The static jaw and the dynamic jaw look like a vise, but the spindle looks like a clamp, and it has the overall shape and appearance of a C-clamp, with a base and provision for fastening to a bench. If anyone knows anything about it, please pipe up.

20250711_125159.jpg

Not marked except for a "LANG" on the static jaw, which seems to be user-stamped...

20250711_125101.jpg

...and a forged-in model number tab, "S4" or possibly "54".

20250711_125141.jpg
 

cody1325

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Joined
Apr 17, 2024
Messages
1,102
Location
Southwest Virginia
I recently traded a pair of beater axes and a couple pocketknives for a Lakeside to replace my Harbor Freight special. Should be getting it in a couple of days.

Curious--who made the Lakeside vises for Montgomery Wards?
 

Private Lugnutz

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The Authentic Jersey Shore
Saw - and left behind - this massive Columbian (I didn't measure and guy didn't know, but looked at least like 8" jaws) this morning. I couldn't read the model number. Posterity pics.
 

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