Just looked at it and its awesome.
Glad it is working, and that you like it
Re: RGRUDE's vise info spreadsheet:
Yes it worked for me.
Wonderful info - and raised a question. My newly acquired Reed 32 matches the description except for the jaw size. The list claims 4 1/2", but mine measures 4 1/4. Were tolerances that loose, or has mine been "trued up" a time or two too many?
At the risk of asking too much, I always like to see dates of manufacture. The closest I can guess for my Reed is 1920 or earlier because of its stud mount.
But, great work - and a huge amount of it!!
As mentioned, there can be errors. I went and checked the brochure, and sure enough, like you said it is 4 1/4". I made the correction on my working spreadsheet and also on the Google doc. If I did it right, it should now show 4 1/4"(new to Google docs, not sure I am doing it right)
For now I still have other specs and photo links to work on, this will take weeks (or months). Dates would be great but they are very ambiguous. Wilton has dates on the slide, but those are for each individual vise. For model runs, it is hard to be exact.
As an example, I know Reed was founded in 1896, but what was their first vise; a 100/200 series, a 30 series combo like you have, maybe neither and it was one of the pipe vises they are still famous for. The 100/ 200 series went till mid to late 1930's then they came out with the "R", then late 50's early 60's came out with the 100 N & S which have the oval Reed logo. These are all aproximations hard to get exact dates. The original 100's although remained the same model in the early 1900's before coming out with the "R", did change the base to a flat 4 bolt at some point. Then the "R" was introduced with the "meatball" handle, but later scrunched to a flat mushroom head. These changes were made at some point without changing actual models.
This is for Reed, for some others even less is known and most dates are really a crapshoot at best for some. It would not be easy to collect and tabulate this info.