I wish I took more pics during the repair. The guy I bought it from wasnt the brightest bulb in the bunch, which was pretty obvious by his drill job.![]()
Great job
I wish I took more pics during the repair. The guy I bought it from wasnt the brightest bulb in the bunch, which was pretty obvious by his drill job.![]()
More Emmert pics:
JoeStriper---
I think you need to contact Kevin Scott...
www.benchvisejaws.com
He will probably be able to help you...
Here are pics of the Wilton. Mounted solid to the table with bolts, no swivel. I would like to raise some $$ for friend's daughter; any ideas as to value? Missing moveable part's actual jaw; screws appear to be broken off in the holes. Screw seems OK, did not turn it all the way out; turns in almost to close then gets a little stiff; I did not try to close it all the way. Obviously dirty with who knows how many years of grease, grime, etc. Don't they call that "patina"?
Thinking about picking this little guy up. What say ye?

Thinking about picking this little guy up. What say ye?



That one looks good Jason. It seems everyone is going with some shade of green on the paint jobs lately.
Okay, finally got around to cleaning up my Reed 2C, also installed some new pipe-jaws (purchased from Mr. Scott)... Painted "Army Green" (Rustoleum camouflage paint)... I just realized this is the first vise I've painted that was a "flat" paint... I really like how it turned out... The red spots aren't rust, that is where the primer seeped through the tape lines. This one lived a hard life, but is still very solid and tight.
Now I just need to clean up my 3C and I can take a nice group picture!
Okay, finally got around to cleaning up my Reed 2C, also installed some new pipe-jaws (purchased from Mr. Scott)... Painted "Army Green" (Rustoleum camouflage paint)... I just realized this is the first vise I've painted that was a "flat" paint... I really like how it turned out... The red spots aren't rust, that is where the primer seeped through the tape lines. This one lived a hard life, but is still very solid and tight.
Now I just need to clean up my 3C and I can take a nice group picture!
Here are pics of the Wilton. Mounted solid to the table with bolts, no swivel. I would like to raise some $$ for friend's daughter; any ideas as to value? Missing moveable part's actual jaw; screws appear to be broken off in the holes. Screw seems OK, did not turn it all the way out; turns in almost to close then gets a little stiff; I did not try to close it all the way. Obviously dirty with who knows how many years of grease, grime, etc. Don't they call that "patina"?
I'm more interested in that Rock Island i see in the background. What the heck happened to that thing?
I'm more interested in that Rock Island i see in the background. What the heck happened to that thing?


Here is a small update on the 5198. Besides having a really busy work schedule on top of my projects, my shop is a comfortable 105 degrees by the time i get there to work on things. That's with the doors open and fans on
I finally got the lockdown polished to a nice shine. What's odd is the lockdown is cad plated while everything else is bare metal
The box of matches is for size reference. The round stock used for the nut is about 1 1/4" in diameter. Not exactly small
I wondered what you'd been up to...
The thing folks forget about a 5198, is, it's not like a "normal" 5" Craftsman vise...A 5198 is stout, and weighs over 100 pounds...most other Craftsman 5"'ers weigh less than 40 pounds...
The nut being an inch and a quarter doesn't surprise me at all....
Your 105 degree garage sounds a tad cooler then mine..."It's not the heat, it's the humidity"...Down here, it's BOTH...105 and 98% gives a heat index a smidgen below boiling...
Keep us posted...BC...




I've been up to plenty and not a day goes by that the 5198 doesn't get at least a few minutes of work applied to it along with the smaller 5197 sitting beside it. Both are coming along nicely and will hopefully be ready for pictures in a month or so.
I have plans for those two...
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"Great Shape"
Question on restoration. I've been cooking the 4" Fulton in my e-tank for a few days, and now that a lot of the grit/rust/paint is gone, I've got a better sense of what's going on.
First, there's a pin that's driven in front of the female threaded receptacle for the screw that prevents the receptacle from being removed (which I'd like to do to better clean the internals of the static jaw.) As a novice with these things, it's not clear to me how the pin is driven in and whether or not it even makes sense for me to remove it. The receptacle does move a little (wiggles side to side) so clearly it should be removable if the pin is gone.