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My chain vise stand.

AngryBeaver

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Joined
Jul 12, 2017
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Location
Lake Milton Ohio
I didn't want the simple brake drum and pipe stand, so the Royce chain stand got me thinking. Didn't want To permanently mount it, so it had to be heavy enough for general use, and look cool doing it.

167lb base plate gear
78lb toothed gear.
30lb clogged gear
38lbs of chain
37lb top plate that still needs cut. Comes in right at 350lbs on the work scale without a vise. I can live with this I think.

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2oolhound

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Dec 18, 2010
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BC Canada
I did a bit of head math.
With your weights as described.
When you mount that vise I think I could tip it over with a hacksaw job cutting exhaust tubing due to your angle, let alone cranking on something.
I see in your pics that you didn't place that vise out at the far/useful end of the table. It would tip.


Pretty and unique, but it would be Bolted to the floor in my shop.

Yeah but, all he has to do is fix it so the gears and chain rotate at a high speed. Then the gyroscopic forces will keep it upright for heavy work.
 

Spareparts

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Mar 12, 2010
Messages
2,045
Location
Lansing Ks.
Put the top plate the other way and mount the vise directly over the base plate, still looks cool but more stable.
 

jw3

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Oct 26, 2014
Messages
109
I'm a plumber by trade. This wasn't what I was expecting.


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OP
A

AngryBeaver

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Jul 12, 2017
Messages
1,705
Location
Lake Milton Ohio
I did a bit of head math.
With your weights as described.
When you mount that vise I think I could tip it over with a hacksaw job cutting exhaust tubing due to your angle, let alone cranking on something.
I see in your pics that you didn't place that vise out at the far/useful end of the table. It would tip.


Pretty and unique, but it would be Bolted to the floor in my shop.

its not getting bolted down. its a fukton stronger than any brake drum stand. the "table" didn't get cut down due to running out of oxygen on the torches the base of the vise will be centered over the top "gear" aint no hacksaw tipping this over. the whole point was to not bolt it down so it could be moved. heavy work is delegated to a C2 mounted on a 1/2" plate 8'x4' solid steel bench.
 
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2oolhound

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Dec 18, 2010
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BC Canada
All you'd need is an outrigger made from a piece of 1" rod or the like, maybe 2 16" lengths that thread into the base.

How about this: the base gear teeth are aprox.1" off the ground so you make a ring that is 1" high that spins below the gear teeth. Cut the ring in 2 places and install 16" struts that pivot to fold up but when you want extra stability you fold them down and rotate the whole 1" ring so the pivoting struts are under the gear teeth which will hold the struts down for use. Spin this new ring again so the pivot is between the gear teeth and the struts fold back up.
 
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C_F

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Joined
Jan 21, 2005
Messages
9,675
Location
Utah...SNOW BLOWS!
That stand looks great! Cool idea, thanks for showing it off. :) Are you going to paint it eventually, or leave it as is?
 
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