RagTopTA
Well-known member
I got this little Penny Pincher for $5 today! cleaned it up. someone had spray painted it copper colored... back to red now. Neat little vise.
Got my badly abused 1971 400s buttoned up other than polishing the handles. It should work great on my roll around welding cart. I'm cheap and this one fit in my budget. Made a set of smooth aluminum jaws for the delicate aluminum work I'll be doing with it.
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Love that Penny Pincher Ragtop. Nice job cleaning it up. It may not be a heavy duty vise but I appreciate the attempt at different styling. Hoping to find one myself someday.
Hi all learning a lot reading all these posts about to start restoration on my Wilton 450sj
Just my opinion, but I wouldn't restore a 450SJ in that good of condition. They are exceedingly hard to find in any condition, much less as nice as that one. For one thing, you'll have a nearly impossible time getting the color correct. I'd put new jaws on it, polish the handles and just clean the rest of it. If it was all beat up I'd strip and paint it, but yours isn't.
Hi all learning a lot reading all these posts about to start restoration on my Wilton 450sj
Excellent find for $25! I would love to work on that. Now that I have my degreaser tubs and derusting tubs, a nice long soak would be awesome for that vise. I bet it turns out great under all that rustNew arrival today - can't win if you don't play - garage sale of general household cr*p - asked the owner if he had any vises - said yes! $25
4-1/2" jaws. Seized up. Reworking will be a LOT easier and less stressful on this one due to learning curve kicking in from the first one.
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--------- UPDATE 9-10-2017 ----------------
All apart except removing pins and nut. Slide dated 11-83. Very little abuse. Odd thing is that sliding handle bar is absolutely frozen in the center part. More PBB and some patience!

So I wasn't happy how the green turned out because the clear took the hammered effect out when I sprayed the clear while the verde was still tacky.
Since I had to strip it down, I decided to "fix" the anvil surface. Damn near matches my cobra now.
I think I'll call this the humpback of Wilton Dame. Polished up Kevin's jaws, from Nick, and cleaned up the handles. Made my own dust cap from a freeze plug. some neon green for the letters.
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Excellent find for $25! I would love to work on that. Now that I have my degreaser tubs and derusting tubs, a nice long soak would be awesome for that vise. I bet it turns out great under all that rust![]()
Thanks! Had the morning to myself and procrastinated on the yard work and disassembled it all. The small pieces not shown are in the vinegar. Jaw inserts appear in great shape. Only odd part (besides the rusted handle) is it appears the pins have come out at least once before and some alignment issues were adjusted with a bigger hammer. Should not impact operational safety as all they do is hold things together, the clamping forces are between the nut and the casting.
Finished up the baby bullets and power arms. The two in the back are mine did the other two for ole Sandman
Asked at a garage sale on Saturday, if he had any old bench vises he wished to sell.
Out he brought a 4" jaw vise from the barn with one broken/brazed jaw, a section of the wing nut broken off that secures the vise via a center post which runs underneath a work table and missing the pair of insert-able pipe jaws.
Ended up buying it anyway, as it was marked COMB No. 2 and a logo with a round circle with a T inside.
Cleaned it up and weighed it, finding it was 60 pounds with max opening at 6 inches.
Couldn't find info on COMB or the logo, so hoping someone might have some info to share.
Mike
Asked at a garage sale on Saturday, if he had any old bench vises he wished to sell.
Ended up buying it anyway, as it was marked COMB No. 2 and a logo with a round circle with a T inside.
Cleaned it up and weighed it, finding it was 60 pounds with max opening at 6 inches.
Couldn't find info on COMB or the logo, so hoping someone might have some info to share.
Mike
Asked at a garage sale on Saturday, if he had any old bench vises he wished to sell.
Out he brought a 4" jaw vise from the barn with one broken/brazed jaw, a section of the wing nut broken off that secures the vise via a center post which runs underneath a work table and missing the pair of insert-able pipe jaws.
Ended up buying it anyway, as it was marked COMB No. 2 and a logo with a round circle with a T inside.
Cleaned it up and weighed it, finding it was 60 pounds with max opening at 6 inches.
Couldn't find info on COMB or the logo, so hoping someone might have some info to share.
Mike
AFAIK, It's still being argued.
Thank you for the adviceJust my opinion, but I wouldn't restore a 450SJ in that good of condition. They are exceedingly hard to find in any condition, much less as nice as that one. For one thing, you'll have a nearly impossible time getting the color correct. I'd put new jaws on it, polish the handles and just clean the rest of it. If it was all beat up I'd strip and paint it, but yours isn't.
AFAIK, It's still being argued.
Is there a general consensus of who made the vise in the arguement? Had to be American made. Anybody think Starrett? Jake,who do you personally think made it? Any opinions? I'd like to here what everyone thinks.
Just my opinion, but I wouldn't restore a 450SJ in that good of condition. They are exceedingly hard to find in any condition, much less as nice as that one. For one thing, you'll have a nearly impossible time getting the color correct. I'd put new jaws on it, polish the handles and just clean the rest of it. If it was all beat up I'd strip and paint it, but yours isn't.

Drives has proposed that Starrett made them based on some 80-90 year old machinist he bought something off of told him that. Nothing about the vise screams Starrett however.
There are elements of several different companies vises, in the design, but overall its unique.
I would rate that vise right along side of a Starrett/Athol for quality, size for size. (you can get larger Starretts however...)
Thank you for the advice
I guess I will rethink restoring it for now . What do you think is the approximate value of the sj450 ?
I used the paint to refresh my 3 ton arbor press
Drives has proposed that Starrett made them based on some 80-90 year old machinist he bought something off of told him that. Nothing about the vise screams Starrett however.
There are elements of several different companies vises, in the design, but overall its unique.
I would rate that vise right along side of a Starrett/Athol for quality, size for size. (you can get larger Starretts however...)
Restored a few vises this weekend. 1st is this Reed 3" #203 swivel base.
Its an early model. Dark blue Hammerite paint, BLO'd the slide. Really excellent jaws.
I know I posted this a couple of days ago but on Saturday I cleaned it, BLOd it and rebuilt it. I love the patina I get from this process.
here is my little vise collection. More are coming, a 2" Reed and a 2" Prentiss.
