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tedsters

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Joined
Oct 29, 2012
Messages
1,443
Location
Michigan
this is my first time member at anything on a computer.

ale

Welcome to GJ
it was good talking to you last week glad you come aboard you got a nice collection of vises, never heard back from you i will try to call you later tonight.

Ted
 

72CZ

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Joined
May 26, 2014
Messages
107
Location
League City TX
heres a few parker vises

Like the others have said "Welcome !!"


Ale

Do you have any info on Parkers ?
I have three Parker 87s.
Two of them are cast "Chas.Parker Co USA" and the pipe jaws are pinned in
the lower corner.
The other one is cast "C.Parker Co" and no USA on it.
The pipe jaws are pinned higher,towards the middle of the pipe jaws.
I take it this is an older model.
Anyone know when the started adding the USA to the lettering?
 

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ale

Active member
Joined
Aug 18, 2014
Messages
41
Location
RI
72 cz ; I don't have much info on vises ,I collected mostly the small ones # 19, 20, paperweights, and salesmens samples. The vises I have do not have the pipe jaws, some where I have a Parker book ,if I find it i'll see if it has some info for you.
 
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McBrownie

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Joined
Mar 27, 2014
Messages
1,827
Location
Cleveland, OH
This weekend I got my Big Girl finished up and mounted. Here are a few pictures of her and her new home. I didn't take as much time prettying her up like I have some of the others. She has work to do.



She was my first real vise purchase and will be my main working vise. Big thanks to Driveitfar for introducing her into my shop.

Nice Holland. Who is hiding behind her?
 

McBrownie

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 27, 2014
Messages
1,827
Location
Cleveland, OH
heres a few parker vises

Like the others have said "Welcome !!"


Ale

Do you have any info on Parkers ?
I have three Parker 87s.
Two of them are cast "Chas.Parker Co USA" and the pipe jaws are pinned in
the lower corner.
The other one is cast "C.Parker Co" and no USA on it.
The pipe jaws are pinned higher,towards the middle of the pipe jaws.
I take it this is an older model.
Anyone know when the started adding the USA to the lettering?

I think the "U.S.A." started around WWI. 1917 seems to stick in my mind, but don't quote me on that.
 

72CZ

Well-known member
Joined
May 26, 2014
Messages
107
Location
League City TX
72 cz ; I don't have much info on vises ,I collected mostly the small ones # 19, 20, paperweights, and salesmens samples. The vises I have do not have the pipe jaws, some where I have a Parker book ,if I find it i'll see if it has some info for you.

That would be great !

Thanks !

.
 

JeremyBurke

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 5, 2013
Messages
609
Location
Near Portland, OR
Nice Holland. Who is hiding behind her?


Thanks McBrownie. That is my dad's, 70th birthday present craftsman 5186. I did a thread on its restoration, link in my signature. It is just sleeping over until he gets moved into his new place. I posted it with my "new" Reed 204R a few pages ago. But just for fun here it is again.

ImageUploadedByTapatalk1412647860.946672.jpg

And with the Reed

ImageUploadedByTapatalk1412647911.077845.jpg
 

ale

Active member
Joined
Aug 18, 2014
Messages
41
Location
RI
McBrownie; here are a few pics from another room, to many to list.i'm not sure of what i have, however all the ones on display are small,
 

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drivesitfar

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Joined
Oct 23, 2013
Messages
36,032
Location
Pacific Northwest
Ale: thanks again for sharing pictures of your crew and i'll speak for myself that i'm jealous of all those nice little vises. i'm sure there are others here that would love to have a few of those (or a few more if they already own some).

i noticed you found the Vise Repair 101 thread and we all would enjoy hearing any thoughts you have on vise repairs or questions you might have if you have any.

ALL: while you are talking about Parker we know that Union bought them in 1957, but when did Union stop making vises or sell their inventory and to who?? :dunno:
 

zkling

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 23, 2007
Messages
16,939
McBrownie; here are a few pics from another room, to many to list.i'm not sure of what i have, however all the ones on display are small,

You sir have great taste. What is the story on the Winchester? Is that a half octagon 32?
 

ale

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Aug 18, 2014
Messages
41
Location
RI
ZKLING the winchester is a mod 94 30-30 .it was made in 1896,(antique) there are 9 fact. options. takedown,short rifle,pencil barrel,deluxe wood, pistol grip,tang sight,express sight, 2/3 mag and shotgun ****, traditional guns were my passion. i have more of them than vises, you could say that they were my viCes.
 

ale

Active member
Joined
Aug 18, 2014
Messages
41
Location
RI
drivesitfar; found this on my toolroom wall
 

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wild cowboy

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Mar 11, 2014
Messages
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Location
Birmingham
ZKLING the winchester is a mod 94 30-30 .it was made in 1896,(antique) there are 9 fact. options. takedown,short rifle,pencil barrel,deluxe wood, pistol grip,tang sight,express sight, 2/3 mag and shotgun ****, traditional guns were my passion. i have more of them than vises, you could say that they were my viCes.
I have a very similar looking gun, need to take another look at it, I remember it is a model 189? and has an octagon shaped barrel, my mind is too cluttered with tool information to recall the specifics without looking at it again.
 

nords1853

Member
Joined
Jan 29, 2014
Messages
16
Location
Jax, FL
Hey guys. I'm looking for more info on Monarch vises. This is what I have so far. The Monarch line was made by Prentiss. Prentiss Vise Co was created by Mason Prentiss of White Creek, NY. He lived from 1872 to 1948. He worked as a gunsmith before working for Hall Manufacturing Co. He ended up buying out Hall to create his own company. PV Co produced vises from 1880-1950 in Watertown, NY. They were bought out by Chas. Parker Co. soon after Mr. Prentiss' death. Parker produced vises under the Prentiss name for a few years in Meriden, CT before absolving Prentiss into the Parker line. I know Monarch was a "budget" line and was lighter duty compared to Bulldog. I'm unclear on the other details of the line, what years the Monarch line was produced, whether or not the line was produced for Monarch Machine Co, why some models have PV Co on the dynamic jaw while other models exclude it, etc. If you guys have any old ads for Monarch vises, it would be cool to see those too. Any insight would be greatly appreciated. Thanks, Brad
 
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PghJKB

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Joined
Oct 13, 2012
Messages
489
Location
Industrial Heartland
Hey guys. I'm looking for more info on Monarch vises. This is what I have so far. The Monarch line was made by Prentiss. Prentiss Vise Co was created by Mason Prentiss of White Creek, NY. He lived from 1872 to 1948. He worked as a gunsmith before working for Hall Manufacturing Co. He ended up buying out Hall to create his own company. PV Co produced vises from 1880-1950 in Watertown, NY. They were bought out by Chas. Parker Co. soon after Mr. Prentiss' death. Parker produced vises under the Prentiss name for a few years in Meriden, CT before absolving Prentiss into the Parker line. I know Monarch was a "budget" line and was lighter duty compared to Bulldog. I'm unclear on the other details of the line, what years the Monarch line was produced, whether or not the line was produced for Monarch Machine Co, why some models have PV Co on the dynamic jaw while other models exclude it, etc. If you guys have any old ads for Monarch vises, it would be cool to see those too. Any insight would be greatly appreciated. Thanks, Brad

Check into the Monarch Machine Tool Company, maker of Monarch lathes. Based on what I have read, these vises were probably made for them. Their early logo was a Lion Head.
Check out this post on Practical Machinist:
http://www.practicalmachinist.com/vb/monarch-lathes/monarch-history-1909-1929-long-post-203252/

It is too long to get into here, but should provide some insight as to when the Monarch Vises would have been made.

In 1913 Monarch adopted the Lion Head logo, if they trademarked it, you can check the trademark records.

Good Hunting
JKB
 

Outlawmws

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Aug 9, 2011
Messages
39,260
Location
The Badlands
jkb, Monarch Vises were made by the Prentiss Vise Co. Monarch lathes is a completely different company...

The fact that both used Lion heads is simply that English Royalty (Monarch's), used lions as an emblem for centuries.
 
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PghJKB

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Joined
Oct 13, 2012
Messages
489
Location
Industrial Heartland
Outlaw
Please re-read my post.I said that the vises were probably (bad wording, possibly is a better word choice) made FOR Monarch (by Prentiss).

It seems too much of a coincidence that both Prentiss and Monarch adopt the same logo around the same time - Monarch Machine 1913, and Prentiss Monarch vises sometime after 1911 (Prentiss patented the screw in replaceable jaw in 1911, I have yet to see a Monarch Vise without this type of jaw. Anyone out there have a Monarch vise without replaceable jaws?)

America is the land of litigation, and even though it may be a stretch, I could see one suing the other for trademark infringement. There would be a court record of this somewhere...

Maybe there is no connection, but the pursuit of knowledge is always a positive thing.

JKB
 

zoomieport

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Joined
Nov 21, 2011
Messages
1,803
Location
The Mall City
Outlaw
Please re-read my post.I said that the vises were probably (bad wording, possibly is a better word choice) made FOR Monarch (by Prentiss).

It seems too much of a coincidence that both Prentiss and Monarch adopt the same logo around the same time - Monarch Machine 1913, and Prentiss Monarch vises sometime after 1911 (Prentiss patented the screw in replaceable jaw in 1911, I have yet to see a Monarch Vise without this type of jaw. Anyone out there have a Monarch vise without replaceable jaws?)

America is the land of litigation, and even though it may be a stretch, I could see one suing the other for trademark infringement. There would be a court record of this somewhere...

Maybe there is no connection, but the pursuit of knowledge is always a positive thing.

JKB

You'd better watch what you say, you will be CORRECTED!!! And definitely don't make a joke, or god forbid an assumpition or deduction and he doesn't like jokes and will not tolerate them!
 

EOC_Jason

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Joined
Jun 25, 2012
Messages
11,388
Location
Bentonville, AR
Outlaw
Please re-read my post.I said that the vises were probably (bad wording, possibly is a better word choice) made FOR Monarch (by Prentiss).

It seems too much of a coincidence that both Prentiss and Monarch adopt the same logo around the same time - Monarch Machine 1913, and Prentiss Monarch vises sometime after 1911 (Prentiss patented the screw in replaceable jaw in 1911, I have yet to see a Monarch Vise without this type of jaw. Anyone out there have a Monarch vise without replaceable jaws?

I've posted an old ad a few times, I don't feel like digging it up again, but anyhow it clearly showed that the Monarch vises were made by Prentiss, as kind of their "value" line. Kind of like the difference between the Wilton machinist bullets and the tradesman. If you look at the models side by side each jaw size the Monarch's are lighter in weight.
 

Outlawmws

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Outlaw
Please re-read my post.I said that the vises were probably (bad wording, possibly is a better word choice) made FOR Monarch (by Prentiss).

It seems too much of a coincidence that both Prentiss and Monarch adopt the same logo around the same time - Monarch Machine 1913, and Prentiss Monarch vises sometime after 1911 (Prentiss patented the screw in replaceable jaw in 1911, I have yet to see a Monarch Vise without this type of jaw. Anyone out there have a Monarch vise without replaceable jaws?)

America is the land of litigation, and even though it may be a stretch, I could see one suing the other for trademark infringement. There would be a court record of this somewhere...

Maybe there is no connection, but the pursuit of knowledge is always a positive thing.

JKB


Could Monarch have been a customer? As you said, Possibly. But as was noted Prentiss sold these to the general public See the ads below), and it was a second tier vise. Monarch made some of the best tool room lathes available back in the day. So if they were a Prentis customer, I'd expect them to be buying the top of the line vises.

Hard to trademark a lions head emblem so broadly that EVERY version could be included.

I just done see the linkage so we will have to agree to disagree

I've posted an old ad a few times, I don't feel like digging it up again, but anyhow it clearly showed that the Monarch vises were made by Prentiss, as kind of their "value" line. Kind of like the difference between the Wilton machinist bullets and the tradesman. If you look at the models side by side each jaw size the Monarch's are lighter in weight.

Yep supports that it was a public offering.

attachment.php


You'd better watch what you say, you will be CORRECTED!!! And definitely don't make a joke, or god forbid an assumpition or deduction and he doesn't like jokes and will not tolerate them!

Zommie, please let it go as a misunderstanding; you posted something you claimed was in jest. I saw nothing in the post that said "I'm funning you guys", and I responded. I was not trying to offend, nor did I try to diss you for what you said. I simply stated my opinion.

Can we let that water go under the bridge?
 

Gary Indiana

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 21, 2010
Messages
111
Location
near Chicago, IL
I got me a nice vintage American made Craftsman for $5 off Chicago's CL.

It is missing the little round "dish" part in clamp. Anybody knows of any way to get or to substitute that bit? Thanks in advance.

9aah5k.jpg


2qa4krt.jpg


sy579d.jpg


2dshlzp.jpg


2jh8i1.jpg
 

zoomieport

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Nov 21, 2011
Messages
1,803
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The Mall City
Zoomie, please let it go as a misunderstanding; you posted something you claimed was in jest. I saw nothing in the post that said "I'm funning you guys", and I responded. I was not trying to offend, nor did I try to diss you for what you said. I simply stated my opinion.

Can we let that water go under the bridge?

Sounds good, I agree!

Done deal!

Take care! :beer:
 

balane

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Joined
May 4, 2011
Messages
2,996
Location
Pacific Northwest
This little honey here is an American Scale Co. No. 51C. I've never seen nor heard of this model before. It's a 3" vise which weighs 23.4 Lbs and is quite stout for a small jaw vise. It's also pretty big for its size at nearly 15" long. Incredibly clean, free of work marks and with great jaws. It's painted flat black. No idea on the date, it isn't marked that I could see but I would guess 20's or 30's.

EDIT: I didn't have to sand on this vise on bit, it was this smooth when I got it.

.
 

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ale

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Aug 18, 2014
Messages
41
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RI
Air8 I'm not sure. The vises are so small it would have to be a anvil for jewelers.
 

zoomieport

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Nov 21, 2011
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The Mall City
This little honey here is an American Scale Co. No. 51C. I've never seen nor heard of this model before. It's a 3" vise which weighs 23.4 Lbs and is quite stout for a small jaw vise. It's also pretty big for its size at nearly 15" long. Incredibly clean, free of work marks and with great jaws. It's painted flat black. No idea on the date, it isn't marked that I could see but I would guess 20's or 30's.

EDIT: I didn't have to sand on this vise on bit, it was this smooth when I got it.

.

Nice work Balane, looks great!
I can get over the size of the main screw "knobs" on the American Scale vises, I've got a 4-1/2" or 5" (can't remember) and the knob is as big as a soup can!
:lol_hitti
 
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balane

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Joined
May 4, 2011
Messages
2,996
Location
Pacific Northwest
Nice work Balane, looks great!
I can get over the size of the main screw "knobs" on the American Scale vises, I've got a 4-1/2" or 5" (can't remember) and the knob is as big as a soup can!
:lol_hitti
Thanks guys.

Yeah, I do not see the benefit of extending the spindle hub like that. American Scale must have had their reasons but I don't understand why it would be that way. If you broke the end off you could cut off the extra, drill a new hole for the handle and plenty of space left.
 

rusty65

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Mar 20, 2012
Messages
2,279
Location
Pekin,IL
Thanks guys.

Yeah, I do not see the benefit of extending the spindle hub like that. American Scale must have had their reasons but I don't understand why it would be that way. If you broke the end off you could cut off the extra, drill a new hole for the handle and plenty of space left.

Maybe they press fitted the screw in the handle knob and wanted a deep tight fit so they extended the knob to get as much holding pressure as possible?
 

Outlawmws

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Joined
Aug 9, 2011
Messages
39,260
Location
The Badlands
Nice work Balane, looks great!
I can get over the size of the main screw "knobs" on the American Scale vises, I've got a 4-1/2" or 5" (can't remember) and the knob is as big as a soup can!
:lol_hitti

Yeah Balane, that 51C looks like they just shipped it to you from the factory. Looks awesome!

Thanks guys.

Yeah, I do not see the benefit of extending the spindle hub like that. American Scale must have had their reasons but I don't understand why it would be that way. If you broke the end off you could cut off the extra, drill a new hole for the handle and plenty of space left.


:+1: Looks NOS, so pretty incredible!

I have a 6" AS, and yes the head on that thing is huge!
 

Gary Indiana

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Joined
Oct 21, 2010
Messages
111
Location
near Chicago, IL
Gary, you might try forming a fender washer with a small enough hole to pop on there, then peen the button.
Outlawmws, thanks for the tip.

What I'm afraid of is that if the dish part isn't sturdy enough then it will flatten while mounting the vise to a table. Maybe a C clamp from Harbor F would have a fitting dish that I could "borrow"?
 
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