Clik
Well-known member
Is an Eron related to a Record?
... As I said before, one of these would keep your workbenches from shooting across the shop, as they are want to do!!!![]()

Here is what I found online. (what did we ever do before the intraweb? Oh yea, encyclopedia's and public libraries).

I would like to hear from you how the vise feels, how is it's quality and when the jaws are closed are they parallel and gap free from top to bottom. that is what I look at on a vise before buying.






The addiction is starting to set in, please don't tell the misses! Just picked up this 8" ERON No 200. Needs jaws, but couldn't pass on the price, FREE!
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Wrench------Did you get a response back on the 208?
All the talk about about 8" & 9" vises ? Why not move up to a real Big Vise
24" jaws and about a 72" opening. It would make a cool table if nothing else![]()
is that 4 bundling cedar shingles?
I know what I'm getting sometime soon...
http://www.axminster.co.uk/125mm-mechanic-s-multi-purpose-bench-vice
Less than a hundred UK money-pounds.
I don't know what came first, probably this one, as the design is 70 years old, so I've been reading, but the Swindens is over a thousand UK money-pounds
http://www.swindens-vices.co.uk/swindens-4inch-101mm.html
Re: The VISES of Garage Journal
Quote:
How much does it weigh?
The Swindens design is a bit older than 70 years. I've got a 4" dated 1936, so they've been around since before then. Funnily enough, it was due to a thread where someone mentioned on of the modern equivalents how I ended up with mine. It needed quite a bit of attention to get the leadscrew and nut sorted and usable, but it cleaned up half decent for its years on the end.
I'll be keeping an eye out for one, but hens' teeth around here. You never know though, and it's possible there's one rusting quietly away in a forgotten corner just waiting for me.
How about we start with the Craftsman 5198 since there are plenty of catalogs out there and several close versions of the vise?





you could still look every day and every hour for an original and have one on your bench in the meantime.
I bet that screw isnt original on that American Chain Co....looks newer.
But for us non-collector, vise amateurs who can't afford Wiltons or don't need 200 pound vises, what type of slide is preferred in a smaller non-bullet vise? A stamped slide attached (pressed in?) to the movable jaw or a cast slide that is part of the movable jaw?
I have a 5-1/2 " USA Craftsman with a stamped slide and a 4" Taiwan Craftsman with a cast slide. Which is better?
Fretters: i agree with the search and rescue theory and wake up every day with that in mind for a few things. i was just saying it would be nice to have a company start (or continue if they already are) making old US style and quality vises so some of the guys with no time to search can have one. also so the younger generations could be talking about these great old vises made in the US in 2014 fifty and a hundred years from now that their grand dads bought new.
PGH: here is a picture or two of the bottom of my slide on the dynamic jaw of the LMV vise i own. since i don't have a vise nut for it yet i'm exploring other options on maybe using a screw and nut from another big Reed i own with a bad jaw. I was happy to see your screw protruding and what kind of nut I might be looking for. if i remember correctly my screw is 1.125 so not a common size. another option i thought might work would be to grab a screw, vise nut and retainer from a Parker and drill and tap a hole in the front of the dynamic jaw. i do like this big vise and i think there was only one other one mentioned on all the Garage Journal threads.
what do you think my other options are?
Seems like a rare old vise, so my vote would be to try to keep it as original as possible. Someone with a lathe should be able to cut those threads for you. Have you looked into having a nut made?

SNIP
PGH: here is a picture or two of the bottom of my slide on the dynamic jaw of the LMV vise i own. since i don't have a vise nut for it yet i'm exploring other options on maybe using a screw and nut from another big Reed i own with a bad jaw. I was happy to see your screw protruding and what kind of nut I might be looking for. if i remember correctly my screw is 1.125 so not a common size. another option i thought might work would be to grab a screw, vise nut and retainer from a Parker and drill and tap a hole in the front of the dynamic jaw. i do like this big vise and i think there was only one other one mentioned on all the Garage Journal threads.
what do you think my other options are?