AngryBeaver
Well-known member
Long story short, I bought a "cheap old" vise for my service truck while scouting scrap yards, garage sales and Craigslist for years trying to find a large vise for my shop.
This one ended up being larger than the pictures made it look. Paid 50 bucks for it.
I've been trying to find out more about it since I'm an ohio native and lived down the road from the ridge tool company for 3-4 years.
Any ways. I can't find any info on the Ridgid 45FCPN. After searching the vise thread and seeing a few Columbian 204-1/2, I believe this is a 1971 columbian made Ridgid.
The swivel has 604-1/2 - 3 stamped in the bottom. There is a 7128 raised casting beside it. What I assume is a date code.
The dynamic jaw has 71 15 cast into it (15 or maybe 25 from the best I can make it out). The set screws for the pipe inserts resembles the Colombians to a tee.
The jaws are mint and held on by Phillips head bolts. Actually the whole thing is mint other than surface rust. I think it was purchased and then sat in a barn. The score has very minimal grease on it (like the amount on new ones) no **** inside the base, etc
Now. The date of 1/71 or 2/71 fits the timeline before Wilton purchase columbian in 72.
If it's columbian, why would a company like ridgid have someone else cast them when they made their own pipe vises and wrench castings? Or did the ridge tool company buy the columbian molds?
Thoughts?
Img]
This one ended up being larger than the pictures made it look. Paid 50 bucks for it.
I've been trying to find out more about it since I'm an ohio native and lived down the road from the ridge tool company for 3-4 years.
Any ways. I can't find any info on the Ridgid 45FCPN. After searching the vise thread and seeing a few Columbian 204-1/2, I believe this is a 1971 columbian made Ridgid.
The swivel has 604-1/2 - 3 stamped in the bottom. There is a 7128 raised casting beside it. What I assume is a date code.
The dynamic jaw has 71 15 cast into it (15 or maybe 25 from the best I can make it out). The set screws for the pipe inserts resembles the Colombians to a tee.
The jaws are mint and held on by Phillips head bolts. Actually the whole thing is mint other than surface rust. I think it was purchased and then sat in a barn. The score has very minimal grease on it (like the amount on new ones) no **** inside the base, etc
Now. The date of 1/71 or 2/71 fits the timeline before Wilton purchase columbian in 72.
If it's columbian, why would a company like ridgid have someone else cast them when they made their own pipe vises and wrench castings? Or did the ridge tool company buy the columbian molds?
Thoughts?
Img]
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