Radio Ron w4ron
Well-known member
I'll try posting this again.
This past Saturday I was out hitting some of the local antique shops,
one of them have a pile of old tools, mostly rusty junk, but I did spot an
interesting old vice that was cheap enough to be interesting.
I thought about it the rest of the weekend and decided to go back Monday
afternoon and pick it up.
It was originally priced at $18 but it had been marked down to $15.
Attached are a couple pix of it before I started cleaning it up.
It's a Oxwall that was made in Japan. Looks old, does anyone have any
idea when it was made?
Yesterday I took it apart and went at it with my soda blaster, it took the
dirt and rust off but it wouldn't touch most of the original black paint.
I wonder if it was baked on.
This afternoon I tried some spray on paint stripper on it, I think it took
the rest of the paint off. After wiping the stripper off I used hot water to
wash the rest of it off, I then put it in the oven on 250 degrees for
about an hour to bake the water off of it.
I'll see what ti looks like tomorrow and decide where to go next.
I'll also attach a photo of a nice old wooden clamp I bought Saturday,
it's nice being all wood including the screws.
This past Saturday I was out hitting some of the local antique shops,
one of them have a pile of old tools, mostly rusty junk, but I did spot an
interesting old vice that was cheap enough to be interesting.
I thought about it the rest of the weekend and decided to go back Monday
afternoon and pick it up.
It was originally priced at $18 but it had been marked down to $15.
Attached are a couple pix of it before I started cleaning it up.
It's a Oxwall that was made in Japan. Looks old, does anyone have any
idea when it was made?
Yesterday I took it apart and went at it with my soda blaster, it took the
dirt and rust off but it wouldn't touch most of the original black paint.
I wonder if it was baked on.
This afternoon I tried some spray on paint stripper on it, I think it took
the rest of the paint off. After wiping the stripper off I used hot water to
wash the rest of it off, I then put it in the oven on 250 degrees for
about an hour to bake the water off of it.
I'll see what ti looks like tomorrow and decide where to go next.
I'll also attach a photo of a nice old wooden clamp I bought Saturday,
it's nice being all wood including the screws.
Just delete and go again.


I only wish!
