I pulled this out of my deceased Grandfather's shop this weekend. Not sure who made it for Craftsman but seems like a very decent vise. I should get some good use out of it.
It is stamped 12 55 which I assume is the date.
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I think I'll get it soda blasted and powder coated so it'll last me out![]()
This is exactly what I needed! For the benefit of SWMBO, I am going to print an 8x10 and post it in the shed near my very reasonable, nay, even moderate number of vises.Here are some of the biggest vises I set out for a pic. L-R they are Parker 958,240#, Morgan 80,210#, Hollands 18, 280#, (2)Yost #80?(no number present on either) 261#, Columbian 508,158# ,Hollands (Lackawana RR) 255 #, Reed 208R, 291#
Back Row L-R Hollands 28, 327#, Reed 109,300#, Hollands 19,289#, Desmond Stephen 81S , 239#
I have a Reed 108, Columbian chipping vise 8" and a Parker 60 that are not here to be with the others. Would be great to have a photo of all the big ones. The Hollands is the heaviest by far but there is about 1 turn before it opens. They went cheap on the screw slack adjustment. My favorite is the Reed 208. It is the nicest vise that size that they made. The columbian is the poorest made in my opinion. It is not ver heavu on the slide and does not have the iron in it the others have. You can actually still buy parts for the morgan. When I got it the nut was missing and I got a new one for $40. Each vise has come from a different state. The Morgan is the only one found in Kansas. If anyone wants more photos or info please ask. There is 3118# og My goal is to set up a small museum of vises and blacksmith equipment. I want to have the complete line of reed vises to display as well as others. I get closer every weekHope you enjoy
Here are a couple of pics showing removal of the taper pin from my Morgan 340B. It was even better than I hoped because once the frog and the swivel base are removed, a punch/drift fits through the swivel attachment hole and aligns with the taper hole easing removal of the taper pin from the bottom. Had to beat it pretty hard.I posted a separate thread about this, but it's been nothing but crickets so I'm going to see if it gets more traffic here:
I've been disassembling and cleaning the Prentiss Metalworker's Vise No. 20 that I bought the other day, and I've run into a question.
I've been systematically destroying the tapered locking pin on the pivot jaw trying to get it out... I've soaked it in PB blaster, soaked it in the parts washer, heated the pin cherry red with a rosebud, to no avail.
But today after taking it out of the parts washer, I noticed these pins on the left side of the vise. Have any of you Prentiss owners seen anythign like this on your vises? I'm starting to wonder if someone somewhere tried to lock this vise into a fixed position by cross-drilling the pivot and the locking pin. In any case, I'll make a new pin on the lathe, but I have to get this one out and it ain't budging.
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Andy, that is one really impressive vise.I set up a workbench this week and cleaned up dads old Dawn offset vice. It's one of the old "Made in Australia" models
What's printed on the end above the numbers?
I got my wilton and this!
http://www.flickr.com/photos/44259078@N03/6312964481/in/photostream
*can we not post pics from flickr here? I am not able to get an image in to a thread.
here is a better look at the wilton:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/44259078@N03/6313487996/in/photostream/
ThanksAndy, that is one really impressive vise.
The vice is actually setup on the edge of the bench, it's just the angle of the pic that makes it look like that.But... the way you mounted it defeats the purpose of the offsetIt should be mounted closer to the edge to allow the vise hold in it long objects hanging down without obstruction. That's the whole idea behind offset vices.

Thats a beauty! If you got it for anything under $2.00 a lb. you got a deal. Those are hard to find, and expensive to ship. The jaw towers are massive and by the looks of it, it wasn't used much. See if you can make a stand alone for it. When those huge vises are on standard height benches they become difficult to work with. They almost sit too high (unless your tall) That 600S you want to work actually over it. It could be one reason it wasn't used that much. My 2 cents..Don't touch the outside. It still has 80% of its original paint. It looks great!
I already have a Polish vise on my bench. I will probably try to sell this locally.
I appreciate your advice. I was told it's owner preferred a smaller vise. I am wondering how much effort I should put in to this vise. I will keep the exterior original. The action is smooth, but it does need a lot of cleaning. Should I open it up or just give it a good cleaning. I already have a Polish vise on my bench. I will probably try to sell this locally.

Scott,Oh, I forgot to mention, the dynamic jaw opens inward.
One note on your 600S. That front jaw is seperate from the channel bar. Its actually a 2 piece assy. I bought this 600S for a song years ago. Everyone thought it was trashed. Me and 2 other guys straightened it out on a press in 5 minutes.
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Yeah, its like a lazy boy of vises. You can have a wall 3" from the handle and still use it. That model is a very well make vise with the gib adjustment screws to adjust vise side play.
One note on your 600S. That front jaw is seperate from the channel bar. Its actually a 2 piece assy. I bought this 600S for a song years ago. Everyone thought it was trashed. Me and 2 other guys straightened it out on a press in 5 minutes.
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Andy, indeed!The vice is actually setup on the edge of the bench, it's just the angle of the pic that makes it look like that.
In regard to the 600S you fixed using a press, was the front jaw loose on the channel bar or was it tight but just rotated?
Thanks

That is the cleanest, nicest 1C I have ever seen! That sir is a keeper!
I have a Reed vise. The jaws are only 3½" wide, but open over 7½".
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Thats a nice looking 1C!
I posted a separate thread about this, but it's been nothing but crickets so I'm going to see if it gets more traffic here:
I've been systematically destroying the tapered locking pin on the pivot jaw trying to get it out... I've soaked it in PB blaster, soaked it in the parts washer, heated the pin cherry red with a rosebud, to no avail.
But today after taking it out of the parts washer, I noticed these pins on the left side of the vise. Have any of you Prentiss owners seen anythign like this on your vises?
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