drivesitfar
Well-known member
Trainman: Craptain is correct about the wood handle is all you'll need for your wood vise and I've seen a lot of them with galvanized pipe with screwed on caps too for a replacement.
You know before thumbing through this thread I could have gone home without this vise! Instead, picked it up, wiped it off, bolted it down to use it, just needs a little lube. Parker 433 1/2, wish it had the original swivel lock bolt and wrench, anyone got an extra?
Very nice. There is a guy on my local CL selling a #2 wrench for $45. There is also two currently on ebay. As far as the bolt goes, I need one of those too for a parker I have, once I get a wrench (#3) i'll look for a bolt or to have one made.
http://www.ebay.com/itm/Parker-Mach...685?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item5d56e9ed15
http://www.ebay.com/itm/VTG-CHARLES...366?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item4d2f9e492e
Thanks much, I have been watching one of the wrenches, maybe I will have to have a bolt made as well
Thanks much, I have been watching one of the wrenches, maybe I will have to have a bolt made as well
I have never seen a bolt for sale. My vise takes a #3 wrench so its a slightly larger bolt than yours. #2 s are common so I don't think it would take much for someone to make a duplicate if they had an original in their hand.
CW, I found the one I was referring to, and I am quite surprised to see this much of a weight difference.
This is not a model that was around for a long time, like as an example Reed 100 series or Columbian 200, 500, and 600 series. These were around forever and there were weight differences over times, but never to this magnitude.
Either Parker made a substantial change to this model at some point, or more likely, one of these ads got it wrong from the marketing department.
Thanks much, I have been watching one of the wrenches, maybe I will have to have a bolt made as well
I have never seen a bolt for sale. My vise takes a #3 wrench so its a slightly larger bolt than yours. #2 s are common so I don't think it would take much for someone to make a duplicate if they had an original in their hand.
Hey guy's, I drew one up for a Parker 974, here is my drawing. Take it to a machine shop and they can build it for you or use it as a model for a larger wrench. I do not have a lathe so I can not help you.
Did some checking and this "X" series was like the 1st Gen Parker Superior Vise, they were replaced by the 800 (stationary) and 820 (swivel) series 2nd Gen.
If you look at the 808, the equivalent to the 60X, it has it at 297 lbs. like your ad for the 60X. There might have been some big change at one point to account for 2 ads with a 32 lb. difference on the same model, but from what I see, I would say the first ad I posted showing 265 got it wrong.
CwazyWabbit, I see odd ones like you say but to have a free run at the vast selection in the US would be great, fatal maybe but great while it lasted! I was pleased to grab a Reed 206r a month ago but that kind of stuff isn't common enough for my liking.
The Prentiss vice could well be called a coachmakers, I just call it sheetmetal as that's what I usually use it for. It is very adaptable mind, holds everything from cylinderheads to timber.
You know before thumbing through this thread I could have gone home without this vise! Instead, picked it up, wiped it off, bolted it down to use it, just needs a little lube. Parker 433 1/2, wish it had the original swivel lock bolt and wrench, anyone got an extra?
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1NRO: so we've had new GJ members show up on our vise thread and post 10 or 20 vises, but it sounds like you might have a few more. any chance for a family photo for some of us to admire and save to our laptops?
also welcome to our group because it sounds like you are a good guy with some vise knowledge.
I have to add that the coachmakers vises were not made for metal and I've seen many broken or with huge braze welds holding the jaws back together. there are better tools and maybe vises made for bending metal so hopefully you'll find one soon.
Thanks for the welcome.
I do have a few vises though not in an order that's suitable for a group photo. I'm moving house and workshop ask we speak and when I have the new workshop ready I'll get them gathered in a line. It'll be a month or two before that happens as I'm a bit swamped at the moment.
I'll not be breaking the Prentiss, I'm not hard on my tools and know to treat them well as my livelihood depends on them. Anything requiring muscle would go in the beater 36, that's had a life already, never seen a handle bore worn like it.
Hey guy's, I drew one up for a Parker 974, here is my drawing. Take it to a machine shop and they can build it for you or use it as a model for a larger wrench. I do not have a lathe so I can not help you.
Kevin, your light years beyond 95% of us. That jaw tweaking on that Hollands was a work of art. I can't get enough "grinders in action". You show me things I knew existed but actually never saw them in action like you show. You have taken this thread to another level. Thanks a lot
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CW: your 2 piece jaw is hard to see in your picture, but we've been thinking a few of the old vise companies cast their jaws with a different type of steel as the jaw faces such as Reed might have done. can you post a couple pictures of that entire Wilton vise because i'm not sure I've heard of that name you mentioned before? thanks
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CW: The only time I've seen that type of facing is on the old blacksmith vices. That little bench mount one of mine has a similar thin facing strip on the jaws. No idea how they were attached/forged though......
Definitely seems to be a technique that disappeared a long time ago for vice jaws...
It's a Wilson Riley in the UK and a Massey in the US
I quite agree it's hard to see, but there is a difference there, it's more noticeable in the shot of the whole jaw piece by the subtle colour difference, the other jaw is the same.
Here's a couple of pics before I started the clean up.
The patent
A few work in progress pictures
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Cool looking vise!
CW: Your Wilson Riley does look a lot like my Massey vise so here's a picture of mine to compare while we are talking about it.
Fretters: nice looking duo and will the big guy replace your old faithful on the bench or are you making a stand for him? nice picture of the blacksmith jaws showing the two different materials.
JRobb: sweet looking Parker and i bet you are happy the first guy didn't show to buy it.
What is decent cheaper vise? I don't need a showpiece, just one that holds something while I hit it with a hammer. This will primarily be for automotive work. Will a Harbor Freight $80 6" multi-purpose do the job? Is there another that way better for ~1.5x that price?
A harbor freight will do the job .... once ... twice maybe more??? Or you could check your local cl for a time tested vintage vise that could be ready to bolt down or have a blast restoring then bolt down and go to work. Any brand pre 70's should do . My fav working vise is a parker 954 or 974. Lots of them out there and are as good as any in my opinion as if that matters.

Nice job on the Torco, looks amazing. Can you post the paint info please? I like the color.

Not really here nor there but for those of you who may want to refinish an original mint-green, early Chicago bullet this is the most original paint I've ever seen on one. May be useful for color matching. This one isn't mine, just found the photos on line. Still, Valspar Satin Leafy Rise is the closest I've found.
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