oldldh
Well-known member
I wonder if they're still there???
Over a hundred years old...
I wonder...
Over a hundred years old...
I wonder...

Who'd have thought that Chinese steel was once much better than UK steel! I guess the forgot the recipe. ....Great story Oldy. I. Believe you actually saw the real thing.
But one little thing you made a mistake on is the Bessemer process. I come from the real home of steel and the process. Sheffield U K.
At school we were well educated on local history.
http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bessemer_process
I think Bessemer AL was probably named after the process rather than the other way round.
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Looking at those pictures it looks like the action of closing the vise also locks the rotation. Scale that up to the best part of 700lb and it becomes a bit dangerous. I can't imagine the head is perfectly balanced, so there is a good chance that when you try rotating it that it will run away on you, even more so if you had something clamped in the jaws and started to loosen it. If that is the case they may have all been disposed of thanks to health and safety ......-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Trijeff,---Here's one that just hatched.---Weighs 5 lbs.---When it reaches maturity, they can weigh between 5 and 600 lbs., and have been rumored to weigh as much as 695 to 725 lbs.---No one knows what the life expectancy is on one.---By the time one is found it may be 250 years old.
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You saw it in person? There is a humungous difference between a 103 1/2 (at 29 pounds) and a 207 (at 204 pounds).
If there are no cracks or welds and it is a 207, don't offer, give them $90 and you can run out the store screaming you just robbed a bank! (Might be hard running out of a store with a 204 pound beast, but adrenaline should kick in at this point).
If it is a 103 1/2 (no swivel on this model), it is a nice vise, my guess is you can find similar in the $50 or less range.
I did see it in person. It does not weigh 207#. I called back for the numbers. Owner said those were the numbers on it. I'll check it out in person again. He said it had the 103 1/2 on it and then also the number 207.
I did see it in person. It does not weigh 207#. I called back for the numbers. Owner said those were the numbers on it. I'll check it out in person again. He said it had the 103 1/2 on it and then also the number 207.

drivesitfar: FYI my Dawn has the exact same spring setup (except the washer is held in place by a heavy duty cotter pin that I plan to replace with a small steel rod), and I was trying to figure out how to compress the spring when I put it back together. That tool will work perfectly.
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Originally posted by CwazyWabbit.
Looking at those pictures it looks like the action of closing the vise also locks the rotation. Scale that up to the best part of 700lb and it becomes a bit dangerous. I can't imagine the head is perfectly balanced, so there is a good chance that when you try rotating it that it will run away on you, even more so if you had something clamped in the jaws and started to loosen it. If that is the case they may have all been disposed of thanks to health and safety
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Never thought about that Cwazy.---The internal mechanism does lock the swivel base and the rotating head when tightened down on something, but I wonder what happens when you start to loosen the thing with a train axel in the teeth.---They probably had to crane and harness it up to the jaws to start with so that would also catch it when they turn it loose.
Here's a look at the guts.
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Internal locking is a shared concept by several makers.---here's three more that use this feature.
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Got this delivered by another GJ member this weekend. Athol 624 1/2. Nice piece, needs restoration.
Can anyone post a pic of the internal spindle setup. Mine is far from complete and I want to straighten that up first.
While cleaning it up I found this label. Pretty cool.
Thanks
ALL: a new member CoolTool lives near Vancouver, British Columbia (Canada) and is looking for a good source for new jaws for his Record #5. anybody have a source because i have yet to find a Record with bad jaws and they don't exactly grow on trees in my area?
I might **** a little

Joe: happy ExMaxima's or another member's pipe idea helped you with your Athol. BTW were you working in your garage until 2am last night?


Banj: it looks like you are trying to **** yourself and if it's possible we don't want video just a notary saying that it's true. otherwise i'm pretty sure you can't and you have been given the first rule of GJ and as a new member we won't be too harsh on you. BTW welcome to our forum and since you have the one vice do you have others to post pictures of or is that your first one?
it looks like your Samsonia has a quick release option. yes??
Jeremy: Awesome picture and not sure which vise those are, but the handles look 2 foot long hanging down so i'm guessing they are fairly stout vises.![]()


ALL: i started a search looking at old steel company factory pictures last night so all you guys with better googling abilities than I might be able to see that Pittsburg RR vise sitting in the middle of a work area to post it. or just find some cool old pictures to post with your next post about a vise.

I have worked on a number of engines like that at the local farming museum. Biggest one is a 15hp fairbanks that is probably about the size of those ones. Very simple, interesting to watch run. Easy to work on, although they are generally very temperamental (as you would expect for a 100 year old engine) sounds like a shotgun when they backfire. My dad has a small one we restored a while back. He and I, along with another from the museum look after the display of those engines at the fairs they hold. Quite the site (and sound) seeing half a dozen of them running at once!
you can never have too many tools
Do you ever get down to any antique tractor/steam engine shows? I remember my old man taking off to one in Oregon early last year, maybe in April or May.
IT IS quite a sight to see 100 of them going at once
