Both my Parker and the Prentiss use tapered pins. The Parker had the original pin so I don't know if it is a standard taper (1/4" per foot). The Prentiss was a ?? taper and I just had to measure the narrowest part of the hole (bottom) and the top....and then just try to grind it between the two. Machinist dye after a while to see where it was rubbing and repeat. Make sure to post up photos as you go....no photos = no pie for you.
And yes, I used the Hammertone Rustoleum instead of basic black on the vise. I am fond of it now and really like Rustoleum in general.
Craig
I read your vise recondition thread and saw what you did for the pin. When the the time comes for a clean up for this vise, I'll get one of the guys where I used to work to make me a pin, if I don't have my own lathe by then, I'm looking for one now. Actually, what the previous owner did works fairly well, when you drive a bolt into the taper, the threads roll over and conform to the taper. It won't move unless you put a wrench on the hex and give it tap with a hammer. There's just a slight amount of play in the jaw hole, but I can live with that for now.
Right now I'm cleaning up a mess I discovered in one of my toolbox drawers. All I can say at the moment is...don't store a liquid filled gage in with any tools that you value. What a mess that made, the liquid(supposed to be glycerin, I thought), leaked out when the rubber plug failed. It etched the scale on a combination square(which was supposedly satin chrome plated). Everything that it got on has some corrosion and build up on it, including the drawer box. I had a little chemical factory going on in that drawer

I'll take some pictures of this mess and post a thread on it shortly.
I'll have to check out that paint, I like the looks.