If you bring home the vise, is your wife going to make you move into that house?![]()
She just might, lol
If you bring home the vise, is your wife going to make you move into that house?![]()
Is it your worst nightmare because someone just dropped that off at a recycling place?
Do you know what size it is yet? Or should I say, are you on your way to get it?
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I do not understand your dream and nightmare. Vise a 1/4 size of your house or a cone equal size of your house.
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Yeah I was thinking Prentiss 21 or 22 also. I went and found the FB post after replying. Looks like that company in WA posted that months ago. I wonder if they sold it and if they did, for how much. It did look complete and in good shape.Im pretty sure it’s a Prentiss no.22. The lines on the vise are really clean and you can tell it’s in great shape. Somebody dropped this off for 10¢ a pound.
Yeah I was thinking Prentiss 21 or 22 also. I went and found the FB post after replying. Looks like that company in WA posted that months ago. I wonder if they sold it and if they did, for how much. It did look complete and in good shape.
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Oh I do not know where that is but here in Washington if you need a boat you go to the docks with cash the boats drive you places. In California you can get to Mexico or Hawaii via fishing boats the more trouble your in and the more you need to avoid authority the more monies you need to bring. If you need to go to Asia you need to go via the ports this will cost no less than 20,000(Asia) Mexico is about $5,000. Of course if your have Id and passports the cost is about 750$ either direction. If this garbage island is not far a day trip may only cost a couple hundred. I went from Seattle to Alaska for 300$ once.I don’t have a boat to get to island recycling.
I'll be shooting for a 60mm. From what I looked up, a brand new one with swivel locks should be under $100 shipped.
I’ll take some better photos once it’s done. I’m just letting the color cure. You can’t really see the color or the metallic properly.
Speaking of unique vises; I received that Chinese vise that was posted the other day by another member, last night. I gotta say fellas, this is a nicely made little sucker and I think it's pretty old. I didn't play with it too much last night, but I think that knob on the side is for a quick release mechanism, possibly? All the grease is dried up, so it's gummy, plus it isn't mounted, so it's kind of hard to try to fully fiddle with the mechanism. It seems to me to be a kind of amalgamation of US-design aesthetics of the older vises from the turn of the century, but with some British-esque design cues, like the possibly quick release mech?
https://i.postimg.cc/8PnTyjgm/IMG-20181217-204410.jpg[/IMG
Talking to my buddy with the Chinese wife again, to clarify, he says,
[I][INDENT]"So remember, IF there is pinyin on the vise it's the English letters.
The Chinese characters on there are legit and say "metal wares for use on ships at sea" with a slight bit of wiggle room for meaning through translation. Probably more like "steel goods for ships" or "steel tools for ship use" something like that."[/INDENT][/I]
I dunno what I have, and I don't know how to do better research on it, but it sure is a cool little sucker, imo.
[IMG]https://i.postimg.cc/N0DJ42Wg/IMG-20181217-204423.jpg
So, anyone out there have any kind of ideas about how I could better date this thing? Or how I could do some better research on its history? I'm all ears!
Personally I would suggest not doing anything to clean, remove crud or try to make it work until you have done more research. Is there a rush? If by chance you have a very old and very unique piece of history it may be worth more as is, than if cleaned and restored. It may take time to find more info about this but if mine, I'd leave it alone and discover its story first. Just my thoughts.
You may have to start researching companies that built ships for China in the past or Chinese industrial history itself by making contact with some historians that are actually in China if you suspect it may have originally come from there. If asking local Chinese people to translate, find some really older folks and not just the young ones working here. Perspectives change over the generations and someone older may have a different take on translating the characters.
It's a cool piece of industrial history.
I received a response from york and was told you can actually buy their vises under the Wilton brand in the US, so it's cheaper to get it here than shipping across the pond yourself...
007: well in VOGL's defense being in Czechoslovakia in the late 1930's probably wasn't a real good place to hang your hat. i'm guessing over the years maybe Vogl passed on some good information and maybe a little cash back to YORK is maybe why their relationship is what it is. who knows maybe the owner of York is Vogl's grandson? or maybe there is a big company that owns both vise companies now?





Smitty alerted me to a fresh eBay listing for a Prentiss 57 in my area. I would have seen the listing today while going through my saved searches but certainly no surprise Smitty beat me to it!
Anyhow, this vise ended up being literally 2 streets away from my house and I was able to go take a look this morning. Gotta say it, it's certainly a big un'. Not quite as big as that Rock Island 67 w/ jaws north of 8" that I saw recently, but the 57 is big nonetheless.
It has the characteristic tail crack but it has been repaired by drilling and bolting through and then welding or brazing. The bolt is removed as can be seen in the pics so the repair at least appears to be solid. Otherwise the vise looks pretty good. Used and abused but not in bad shape for its age which I'll again assume it's pre 1911 due to it having cast-in jaws.
Now the seller certainly is starting high and after talking to him this morning I'm not sure how much he'll eventually come down to get it sold. I'd love to have it in my collection and it may end up there if his 30 day auction runs it's course and he comes waaaaay down in price but I thought I'd post about it here for all of you to look at. If anyone was interested in making an offer I can help negotiate that and also help to figure out transport/shipping. It is located in SW AZ and I could easily get it to a meeting spot in So. Cal, AZ or Vegas. Again, I have no affiliation with the seller in case anyone wondered.
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Quick restoration I did. Decided to keep finish natural and coated with WD. May go with BLO if it starts rusting up.
I'm thinking of buying a Yost 865-D2 (made in China?) as my first vise. It seems to get good reviews, does anyone here have one?
... These jaws are rock hard, first set I have seen on a Parker. ...
Those are some fancy jaws. Looks almost like they're dovetailed to the body.
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Here is a Parker 973 I finished, did not need jaws. These jaws are rock hard, first set I have seen on a Parker. Built a new handle, wrench and a new collar. Fit a bronze washer for a nice backlash. This one I painted and used Ford Semi Gloss paint from Dupli-Color. I like Parker's, got another 229X just as clean.

Here's a pretty good deal if you live near Peru, Illinois.
https://www.ebay.com/itm/Large-Anti...lacksmith-workbench-pick-up-only/372542474317
Welcome to Garage Journal and congratulations on your Athol. They are very well built vintage vises, definitely regarded as one of the best and stoutest built vises of their day.My first post on Garage Journal of my first vintage vise, a well used Athol 615 that I'm going to restore. Anyone have experience with the 615's?
Here's a pretty good deal if you live near Peru, Illinois.
https://www.ebay.com/itm/Large-Anti...lacksmith-workbench-pick-up-only/372542474317