mxdev
Well-known member
MX
That is an interesting find and personally I find the 1927 date stamp very curious. I have three Parkers (204,974 and 955) and do not recall a date stamp on any of them but I guess it it is possible during the cleanup (before painting them) I missed the date stamp. So I am curious if there are other Parkers with date stamp out there.
As for the braze job, well in the past on this thread there have been some heated discussions regarding how strong a vise really is after being seriously repaired (brazed, welded etc) and I rather not start another round of discussion here.But I guess if the vise is not excessively stressed, it should serve you well.
I think the back part only broke off after part of the post for the back jaw snapped. It's either that, or the upward stress from the beam snapped it.
Definitely not as strong as brand new, but I think it would still put my Record #6 to shame.
MX
What are the specs on your Record 36p (jaw width, weight etc)?
Your orange stand is super cool!Did you design and fabricate it yourself?
6" Jaws, 4" depth, 7-1/4" opening, ~65#. When looking it up I found some catalog images, probably came from this site.
Yea, I designed and fabbed up the stand. Had a general idea of what I wanted (mobile, balancing, hammer storage) and threw it together with stuff I had laying around. Took some calculation on layout of the wheels so it would balance, but it's pretty stable to move it out to my driveway for cutting/grinding type work.
MX
That is an interesting find and personally I find the 1927 date stamp very curious. I have three Parkers (204,974 and 955) and do not recall a date stamp on any of them but I guess it it is possible during the cleanup (before painting them) I missed the date stamp. So I am curious if there are other Parkers with date stamp out there.
I have never seen a Parker with a date stamp on on it. I did find a man's name
"M.J. Hicks" stamped on the 974 I am working on presently.
The styling of the numbering is also fairly elegant (curves, serifs etc) which would lead me to think it wasn't done with modern letter stamps. Maybe just something a retailer added? From some google searching, consensus is that the bulb shaped screw ended in the 30's so figured it made sense.
But I guess if the vise is not excessively stressed, it should serve you well.
Did you design and fabricate it yourself?






























