Finally!!! The monster blacksmith vise restoration is complete. All I can say is that it was a SH#TLOAD of work, my arms are a LOT stronger and I'm glad it's done. This one was definitely privately forged except for the leadscrew and nut assembly - I've actually seen old catalogs where they just sold those parts then the blacksmith made the rest. On this one you can see a bunch of work marks and forge welds, it is really neat in that regard. Definitely have nothing but respect for those guys' skills. You might notice that the mounting bracket in the 'after' photos is different than the ones in the 'before' photo - the after is the original and the before is a modification that some owner had done to be able to mount it to a full length post. Still have both and will let the new owner decide what route they would like to take. The measurements on this one are as follows:
Jaw width...................7-3/4"
Weight.......................205#
Height........................38"
Width (jaws closed)......22-1/2"
Width (jaws open)........31"
Jaw opening max.........12-1/2"
Handle length..............21-1/2"
Leadscrew diameter.....1-7/8"
Before:
Apart:
After:
Leadscrew comparison:
Top is a 1740 Tradesman and lower left is Prentiss 98 [1-1/2"] - lower right is this blacksmith vise
Steps were disassembly, electrolysis (had to build a new tank), wire wheel then finally BLO. A ridiculous amount of surface area on this guy. Did I happen to mention this was a LOT of work???