To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

The VISES of Garage Journal

To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

CRSINMICH

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 15, 2015
Messages
2,414
Location
Southeastern Michigan
Mark S: I found a 331/2 too. Neither mine nor the one pictured in this 1953 Parker catalog have springs on the guide bars. That might have been user-added at some time in the past. Notice that the catalog specifies acme thread.

1953 Parker catalog.jpg

EDIT: I just noticed that the spindle hub on yours is different too.
 
Last edited:

tool_scrounge

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 20, 2010
Messages
4,206
Location
Southern California
) The badges on the craftsman vises are half an inch smaller than the more common badges on toolboxes etc. which are 3 1/2 inches wide. Too bad for us vise restorers. 🙁

66B613B6-6495-456A-9043-1629DB98B2AE.jpeg
That I did not know. I had one that in mechanically good shape but painted with a few layers of grey paint and a damaged badge. I was going to restore it but never found a tool box to supply the badge. Finally sold it a bit back as a good user vise to someone who will actually nurse it. Glad I did not find a tool box and then realized the badge would not fit the vise.
 

Shiftless

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 9, 2014
Messages
14,557
Location
East Bay SFO
That I did not know. I had one that in mechanically good shape but painted with a few layers of grey paint and a damaged badge. I was going to restore it but never found a tool box to supply the badge. Finally sold it a bit back as a good user vise to someone who will actually nurse it. Glad I did not find a tool box and then realized the badge would not fit the vise.
I have an almost NOS badge that I bought before I learned of the different sizes. ☹️
 

fishwatcher

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 26, 2023
Messages
759
5" looks to be the largest of the Cadet line. Pretty cool

1762616672470.png
I love the Wilton Cadet’s style. It’s classic, unique, and still super functional as far as a mostly covered main screw. It is very Bullet-like.. and easily strong enough for anything I would do, especially a 5” version!

I have a 4.5” Cadet. A chunk of the jaw support was missing.. but a little epoxy putty and paint helped to conceal this flaw. I’m not selling it anytime soon.. it’s got a permanent place on my work bench. IMG_3010.jpeg
 

fishwatcher

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 26, 2023
Messages
759
I found this listed on FB MP and it is a Wilton 5 inch vise but a cadet, the body of the vise looks like a normal 500 Wilton but it is cast cadet. Is this unusual?
Compared to a Wilton Bullet 5”.. my guess is the Cadet is less bulky as it is a mechanic’s vise, not the higher end machinist or combination vise.
 

eflem

New member
Joined
Nov 8, 2025
Messages
2
I have this reed 224-1/2 R I recently restored also. Completely broken down, 100% sand blasted every part, primed painted, all hardware was black oxide coated and I milled the jaws flat and parallel. I believe it’s 1940’s. I have a second one that I am keeping in original condition.
 

Attachments

  • IMG_9441.jpeg
    IMG_9441.jpeg
    884.2 KB · Views: 42
  • IMG_9444.jpeg
    IMG_9444.jpeg
    955 KB · Views: 49

Tom99

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 16, 2017
Messages
73
I picked up this little guy last week at an estate sale. All the tools were priced stupid high, like a craftsman #4 plane for $50. No price on the vise or workbench, so I asked the lady about the vise. She said how about $20?

Jaws are only 2 1/2". It swivels and rotates very smoothly. I'm impressed. I'm guessing pre-WW II date of manufacture. Am I in the ballpark?
 

Attachments

  • IMG_20251108_135835.jpg
    IMG_20251108_135835.jpg
    620.9 KB · Views: 81
  • IMG_20251108_135821.jpg
    IMG_20251108_135821.jpg
    534.8 KB · Views: 78
  • IMG_20251108_135844.jpg
    IMG_20251108_135844.jpg
    511.1 KB · Views: 78

Outlawmws

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 9, 2011
Messages
39,305
Location
The Badlands
I picked up this little guy last week at an estate sale. All the tools were priced stupid high, like a craftsman #4 plane for $50. No price on the vise or workbench, so I asked the lady about the vise. She said how about $20?

Jaws are only 2 1/2". It swivels and rotates very smoothly. I'm impressed. I'm guessing pre-WW II date of manufacture. Am I in the ballpark?
you **** SO BAD!...

And yes.
 

CRSINMICH

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 15, 2015
Messages
2,414
Location
Southeastern Michigan
PeterPeter: A lot of companies made oval slide vises and they're sometimes hard to tell apart. Early Sears and Wards catalogs had them without identifying the manufacturer. You may be reasonably certain that the one you posted is not a Parker - it doesn't have the Parker collar. Here's a 1926 cut showing Adams Oval Slides but I wouldn't want to wager any money on yours being one of theirs.
1926 Adams Oval Slide vises.jpg
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

Shiftless

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 9, 2014
Messages
14,557
Location
East Bay SFO
No price on the vise or workbench, so I asked the lady about the vise. She said how about $20?

Jaws are only 2 1/2". It swivels and rotates very smoothly. I'm impressed. I'm guessing pre-WW II date of manufacture. Am I in the ballpark?

I'll trade you my Chinese made 4.75" vise straight up, you pay shipping.

I can do a lot better than that.

4330BDAB-CA75-46C3-B404-95ABF3AE40B7.jpeg
 

Tom99

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 16, 2017
Messages
73
Me too! I'll buy him a brand spanking new one from HF, so he doesn't have to deal with all the cleanup, de-rusting and painting....

Just to help a guy out, ya know?
[/QUO

Wow. Thanks . You guys are too kind.
 

n6lrv

Member
Joined
Nov 10, 2025
Messages
8
I recently picked up a Wilton turret/patternmaker's vise similar to the greenish one shown in some other threads however, mine is missing the main auger nut. Could someone with the same vise reply with photos of what the proper nut looks like? Next to a ruler would be helpful too. Based on the shape of the fixed jaw's machined void I think it might be like the one shown in the picture I attached but some photos of the real thing would be best. If it's possible to find an orphaned one in the wild I thought it best to ask here first.
 

Attachments

  • Wilton nut.JPG
    Wilton nut.JPG
    22.7 KB · Views: 16

Outlawmws

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 9, 2011
Messages
39,305
Location
The Badlands
I recently picked up a Wilton turret/patternmaker's vise similar to the greenish one shown in some other threads however, mine is missing the main auger nut. Could someone with the same vise reply with photos of what the proper nut looks like? Next to a ruler would be helpful too. Based on the shape of the fixed jaw's machined void I think it might be like the one shown in the picture I attached but some photos of the real thing would be best. If it's possible to find an orphaned one in the wild I thought it best to ask here first.
See my comment in the parts swap thread.
 

TheRealZeus

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 4, 2021
Messages
5,012
Location
CONTINENTAL USA
I do not believe Wilton provides parts so you may have to consider reproduction/remaking, or another one as a part horse, unless someone else knows of part numbers, and vender for it, of course. Seen a couple with the wide jaws busted.
Patent:
IMG_9367.jpegIMG_9368.jpeg
 

n6lrv

Member
Joined
Nov 10, 2025
Messages
8
I'm aware of the 91A but mine, like many others discussed here, does not have the "L" shaped woodworking jaws shown in the ad for 91A's. Instead, it has 7"x3-1/4" square offset woodworking jaws like those shown in the patent drawings but the guide rail in mine is square steel and "Wilton" is cast vertically into the moving side of the small jaw. The mount and nut design appears to be the same as what's shown in the patent drawing. I wonder if mine is still considered a 91A or a later variant.
 

Outlawmws

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 9, 2011
Messages
39,305
Location
The Badlands
A good tack weld on the bolt to nut solves that for the most part, or at least makes the removal process far more noisy/obvious...

Back more than 55 years ago (parents were still married, I was barely in HS) someone tired to steal the 10,000 lb winch of my dads's international (former house mover's truck...). I found broken wrenches in front of the truck... Winch was still there, but the power cables had been cut.
 

Beerhippie

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 13, 2023
Messages
9,941
Location
Far NE Oregon
A good tack weld on the bolt to nut solves that for the most part, or at least makes the removal process far more noisy/obvious...

Back more than 55 years ago (parents were still married, I was barely in HS) someone tired to steal the 10,000 lb winch of my dads's international (former house mover's truck...). I found broken wrenches in front of the truck... Winch was still there, but the power cables had been cut.
Back in my air-cooled VW days, theft of engines was a common problem. Just too damned quick and easy to pull one with very few tools. Two guys could easily heft one into a truck.
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!
Top Bottom