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The VISES of Garage Journal

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FMC1959

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Feb 9, 2014
Messages
2,319
Location
Montreal, Canada / Upstate NY
Got new HEUER FRONT 120 vise from eBay, only 149€ with UPS delivery!!! :thumbup:

heuer_front_120_01.jpg




It has some play, but it's a very good vise.

https://plus.google.com/photos/103814781691945290090/albums/6130497770242528001

I like your test methods! On your first video, when you super tighten the bolt on one side then the other, what's the popping sound when you unscrew it?

Watch this video. It's from the manual referenced above by CwazyWabbit.

Hmmm. I may have to get me a Heuer...



It looks pretty impressive!
 

FMC1959

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Feb 9, 2014
Messages
2,319
Location
Montreal, Canada / Upstate NY
They are similar in some ways to the Rigid/Pedinghaus Matador

I have the 5.5" Ridgid, great vise....especially for what they go for new. Very smooth, zero play. If you look at what they go for on Amazon, they have to be one of the best values $$$/quality wise.

The Heuer is twice the price, not sure what more it would have, but still would be nice to have. :)
 

bluebolt

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Joined
Dec 28, 2008
Messages
5,441
Location
Benton LA
Suppose A_Pmech or KMScott or someone has tooled up and begun making replacement pipe jaws for Shop Kings? To be authentic, of course, they'd need to be cast iron, not machined. Missing a pair on my 3 1/2", just wondering. I got it cheap at an estate sale, and had to talk them into selling it without the POS workbench it was bolted to. Fortunately, the bench was Craftsman and therefor far more valuable than the vise.:lol_hitti

I could kick myself for not spending a few minutes searching for the jaws, but wanted to git while the gittin' was good.
They're so frequently lost you'd think there would be plenty just lying around.:dunno:

Anyone have some spares, let me know.

Let me check on my Shop King.
 

sdavis622

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Joined
Mar 19, 2014
Messages
518
Location
Surprise, AZ
Hey guys, is this one to get excited about? Guy is asking $25. He is at work though and doesn't know the brand. Looks kinda rough.
46ecac6d3d33065603fbc7d1acc95cc9.jpg
 

Outlawmws

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Aug 9, 2011
Messages
39,262
Location
The Badlands
Kevin, incredible photos. I love it when you post your work.

Parkers, a hell of a lot of trouble and I bet a lot more of them would be in the scrap heap if they weren't worth all the effort. They probably went under from all the unnecessary size differences and fine tuning needed to build their vises. Seems wasteful.

Well, Parker was also a gun company, and in an era that saw many guns needing final fitment to work properly...

Kind of ironic for an industry that really laid the groundwork for Henry Ford and mass production...
 

bagged89s10

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Joined
Mar 13, 2005
Messages
4,607
Location
CT
So my buyer actually came thru and bought my Wilton 1760 for $300. :thumbup:
On to the next one I guess.
Anyone know what this one might be. I'm going to see it later today but this is the only picture he had of it until he gets home from work.
ImageUploadedByTapatalk1427382992.859908.jpg


~Veeps


How much should I offer the guy for this oswego? If indeed in good shape.


~Veeps
 

balane

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Joined
May 4, 2011
Messages
2,996
Location
Pacific Northwest
That old Parker is beat down, far past its usefulness unfortunately. However if you needed a spindle (Assuming that one isn't damaged or repaired.) and a collar that would be a godsend of a bargain for you.
 

sdavis622

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Joined
Mar 19, 2014
Messages
518
Location
Surprise, AZ
That old Parker is beat down, far past its usefulness unfortunately. However if you needed a spindle (Assuming that one isn't damaged or repaired.) and a collar that would be a godsend of a bargain for you.


Yeah I thought of just picking it up for parts. It is a ways away. If he still has it when I'm in that area next week Maybe I'll pick it up.

Thanks everyone for the insight.
 
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jreb10

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Oct 18, 2014
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329
Location
Westby, WI
With the weather having warmed up a bit, I was able to sparkle up the Baby Bullet that I lucked into a couple of weeks ago. Here are some before/after shots:

IMG_0632 (Small).JPG IMG_0651 (Small).JPG

IMG_0633 (Small).JPG IMG_0652 (Small).JPG

IMG_0635 (Small).JPG IMG_0654 (Small).JPG

IMG_0655 (Small).JPG

I was able to paint in front of the open garage door for the few seconds it takes to spray this little jewel. Now it looks so good that I may need to sell it!
 

trijeff

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Jan 21, 2015
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Location
Northern Cali
Really diggin that restore, jreb! Very, very nice work :) What did you use to get the un-coated sections so mirror-like? Scotchbrite EXL?
 

balane

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May 4, 2011
Messages
2,996
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Pacific Northwest
This is a Wilton 645 vise made in 1976. 5" jaws, 44 Pounds. The color is hammered dark green. I decided to smooth the rough cast iron on the nose piece instead of painting it. This took a long time and a few sanding belts but I think it was worth the effort. Had to put new jaws on this vise because one was snapped in two.

.
 

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bagged89s10

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jreb10

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Oct 18, 2014
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Westby, WI
Really diggin that restore, jreb! Very, very nice work :) What did you use to get the un-coated sections so mirror-like? Scotchbrite EXL?

It depends on the level of "bling" that I am after. I usually start with a variable speed wire wheel, with the speed depending on how "deep" the oxidation layer is.

Then if I want to smooth out some shallow dings and reduce the deeper dings I use my die grinder with either a 2" 180 grit disc or a coarse (brown) roloc. This works on handles too. You need to be careful as you are removing material. Then I use progressively finer rolocs usually ending with fine (blue).

I use a deburring wheel on the handles after taking out the big dings, rather than the finer rolocs. It is easy to spin the handles against the wheel. A dremel can clean up the tight areas where the wheel can't go.

I try not to "overpolish" the bare metal, but just get it "up to standard" with the body of the vise. The deeper dings are still there, but that is just character in my book.
 

joe.striper

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Sep 13, 2013
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2,251
Location
agawam, ma
Hey I bought a very nice Reed 403 1/2 R today. the seller is holding it for me. he sent me pics and in the last batch I noticed the blemish on the tail. I asked for more pics and this is what I got...WTF?! If it is a repair it is done nicely but I cant see a split or crack in the slide's *** end.

any opinions from Y'all?
 

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wrenchguy

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Sep 22, 2011
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4,698
Location
NW Indiana
Hey I bought a very nice Reed 403 1/2 R today. the seller is holding it for me. he sent me pics and in the last batch I noticed the blemish on the tail. I asked for more pics and this is what I got...WTF?! If it is a repair it is done nicely but I cant see a split or crack in the slide's *** end.

any opinions from Y'all?

casting seam or flaw or surface rusted slide with repair under the rust.
 

zkling

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Jan 23, 2007
Messages
16,939
Someone probably put it on there to act as a slide stop, preventing the dynamic jaw/slide from falling out of the static jaw/main casting if someone opened it too far.
 

trijeff

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Jan 21, 2015
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1,359
Location
Northern Cali
Joe: I'm certainly no expert but looks pretty good to me! Really like that pin retainer system, will definitely have to remember that when I get a swivelin' swiveler! The jaws look really crisp on that one. I'd say nice find.
 

Outlawmws

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Aug 9, 2011
Messages
39,262
Location
The Badlands
Hey I bought a very nice Reed 403 1/2 R today. the seller is holding it for me. he sent me pics and in the last batch I noticed the blemish on the tail. I asked for more pics and this is what I got...WTF?! If it is a repair it is done nicely but I cant see a split or crack in the slide's *** end.

any opinions from Y'all?

Someone probably put it on there to act as a slide stop, preventing the dynamic jaw/slide from falling out of the static jaw/main casting if someone opened it too far.


:+1: again; that bar was added by someone to keep the un-trained apes from overextending the slide. Probably the same guy that added the lanyard chain on the pin so it wouldn't grow legs...

I'd guess once you get it in you hands, you may find other refinements on it... That find has possibilities.
 

bagged89s10

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Mar 13, 2005
Messages
4,607
Location
CT
Someone probably put it on there to act as a slide stop, preventing the dynamic jaw/slide from falling out of the static jaw/main casting if someone opened it too far.


Hopefully you're right.

It doesn't seem cracked. In the pics.


~Veeps
 

autopts

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Joined
Jul 4, 2009
Messages
2,268
autopts: you are absolutely brilliant. Snap-On branding that Tradesman AND going with the extreme green is pure genius, that 1745 is going to sell for an absolute mint. Definitely tucking this idea away for any Tradesmans I decide to part with.

http://www.ebay.com/itm/151630616485?_trksid=p2060353.m1438.l2648&ssPageName=STRK%3AMEBIDX%3AIT

Extreme Green.jpg

Thanks for the compliment. I've seen closer "Extreme Green" colors. Lately, auctions have been a real **** shoot for me. Making big money flipping vises is a thing of the past, at least in my area. If we could get some decent weather I've got a few others I have rehab outside.
 

autopts

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 4, 2009
Messages
2,268
Hey I bought a very nice Reed 403 1/2 R today. the seller is holding it for me. he sent me pics and in the last batch I noticed the blemish on the tail. I asked for more pics and this is what I got...WTF?! If it is a repair it is done nicely but I cant see a split or crack in the slide's *** end.

any opinions from Y'all?

Don't feel bad Joe. I got this Parker beast 249X and the back static has a crack
 

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Steevo

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Aug 18, 2009
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43.49600, -112.04300
I continued with the teardown, cleanup of the Wilton C1 today.
drivesitfar and 454ragtop were correct in that the pipe jaws were retained by spring clips on the back of them.
I got those out, and decided to stop fooling around with the jaw screws.
It is times like this that having a mill makes things soooo much easier.
I mounted the vise body on the mill table, selected an end mill that was just the diameter of the head on the cap screws retaining the jaws, and bored the heads off the screws.
i-v9PWVZ8-M.jpg

This makes it possible to pop off the jaws, grab the screw shanks with vise grips, and get them out easily:
i-TgNDtD4-M.jpg

i-SB5dshd-M.jpg


With all the jaws off, I blasted the parts, cleaned up the torch and grinder gouges in the vise, and milled off the anvil surface to clean it up:
i-8GHbjfF-M.jpg


The end cap was pretty beat up, dented and had a nasty crease in it, but at least it was still there.
I took a hammer and some shaping tools to it, and got it as close to original dome shape as I could:
i-Jz97Mp7-M.jpg


Then I sanded it and buffed it, and it came out surprisingly well:
i-nCpwBJq-M.jpg


With warm weather forecast for this weekend, I should be able to get the body painted and ready for re-assembly.
 

autopts

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Joined
Jul 4, 2009
Messages
2,268
This is a Wilton 645 vise made in 1976. 5" jaws, 44 Pounds. The color is hammered dark green. I decided to smooth the rough cast iron on the nose piece instead of painting it. This took a long time and a few sanding belts but I think it was worth the effort. Had to put new jaws on this vise because one was snapped in two.

.

That tool box will one day make a excellent replacement for your stump.
 

zoomieport

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Joined
Nov 21, 2011
Messages
1,803
Location
The Mall City
Hello all!

Seems to be some curiousity about Oswego vises lately...
I too am curious. I have these 3 swivel base, rotating jaw, combination vises and don't know a thing about them.
"Sawyer Oswego"

Take care!
ZOOM
 

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FMC1959

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Feb 9, 2014
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Location
Montreal, Canada / Upstate NY
Zoomie, that is an awesome lineup you have there! I saw your first post not too long ago when you were just starting the vise itch late 2011, sure has grown fast, you have a count of how many vise you have now in the " sea of tetanus"?

I think that sea has one of the nicest bullet collections avywhere :thumbup:
 
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