va.grouseman
Well-known member
Mr. Prentiss.


Zkling, Next year I will try to sell the complete buiness with machines, if that don't happen maybe I can find a shop that would buy the websites and all my jigs and fixtures. Wilton has let their customers down and have sent customers to me where it was to much. It's a money maker but gotta have the right person to run it, need to know vises. If the Columbian jaws were added then oh boy, a whole new website just for them. Get calls and e-mails everyday for Columbian jaws. OH, I bought a Bridgeport for my new home, can't be without a mill and welder.
Interesting, hope that goes smoothly. I agree on having to have a mill and welder at home. I now remember you posting the bridgeport you bought.
Looks like your site is down, specifically the gallery of restored vises. Will you be bringing that back? Any plans to take down your wordpress site? I stole a few fixture ideas from there.
Why settle for just 30?
Another ad in the Chicago area on Craigslist offers 72 ! (Picture below)
It’s a couple of weeks old so maybe a lot of them are sold, but what’s up with bulk sales there? Is the market peaking and guys are liquidating their collections? Or is it just that collectors like me are now past 70 y.o. and maybe getting too old or sick to continue and/or have to move into assisted living? Or is it the heirs unloading Dad’s vise hoard?
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thought I was done for the holidays as far as vises were concerned but...
4 1/2" jaws and 77 lbs so guessing under all that surface rust is a Craftsman 5197. Now I think I'm done .....
There is a guy near me here in Arizona who is selling a previously repaired Reed 106R for $100. The split nut (screw in collar), handle and leadscrew assembly and presumably the main nut all appear to be in good shape. The dynamic jaw assembly is probably fine as well. The static vise body was broken and welded to a heavy metal plate.I just found a Reed 206R that is missing some parts. The main nut and what holds it in place, also the collar assembly that hold the screw to dynamic jaw. Both jaws are fine. The handle is straight but both ends need work as someone welded them. Anyone have a parts source for this monster?


Interesting, hope that goes smoothly. I agree on having to have a mill and welder at home. I now remember you posting the bridgeport you bought.
Looks like your site is down, specifically the gallery of restored vises. Will you be bringing that back? Any plans to take down your wordpress site? I stole a few fixture ideas from there.

There is a guy near me here in Arizona who is selling a previously repaired Reed 106R for $100. The split nut (screw in collar), handle and leadscrew assembly and presumably the main nut all appear to be in good shape. The dynamic jaw assembly is probably fine as well. The static vise body was broken and welded to a heavy metal plate.
If the parts would be worth $100 plus shipping to you PM me and we'll see if we can make it work.
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Well, he did have to go through New Jersey, and you know what they say: "In New Jersey everything's legal as long as you don't get caught."Is that from the loss records when too many vises don’t make it to the final destination because they “fell off the truck”? (Wink, wink)![]()
Mark nice job on the Wilton!
MERRY CHRISTMAS TO ALL!!!
Welcome Navigo! Nice Wiltons you've got there. Good job with the stand. Is that for blacksmithing?
Thank you. No, that stand I built specifically for C3 vise.
Sweet! I'm sure you got a great deal on it. Any idea what that bench retails for?I finally found a suitable work bench for the snap on vise..... now just to rip it all apart and paint it to match.......
Sweet! I'm sure you got a great deal on it. Any idea what that bench retails for?
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akasrick
I'm not sure anyone else is that interested in why some Littlestown Hardware and Foundry vises are marked "NEW YORK" when the outfit was located in Pennsy, but I could not find any evidence of them ever being primarily located there or moving from there to Pennsy. I did find something indirect and tertiary - their trucker running afoul of the state, RR, and union - that kinda sorta indicates they may have had an office (warehouse, distribution point, etc) in New York.
I just "found" the same vise (by fait accompli - it was inside a toolbox I bought) this morning at the flea market, Red. Tiny. 1-7/8" jaws. And it won't even clamp on my bench. Found your old, old post in a search. And I think Outlaw has an even smaller exposed screw rail type clamp-on Littlestown No. 1.
Question is: Does anyone know when Littlestown Hardware and Foundry moved from New York to Pennsylvania?
Before WWII, New York was put into the casting because of F. G. Acomb, who was a hardware sales manager responsible for New York, NY. Although the castings were made in Littlestown, he thought the items would be easier to sell and have more prestige with New York on the hardware.
source of information: EARLY HISTORY OF THE LITTLESTOWN HARDWARE & FOUNDRY CO., INC.
By Luther D. Snyder 11/13/1979
Smitty:
So, hypothetically, if somebody came into your shop and removed either your Prentiss 22 or your Reed 4C, which one would you miss the most?

Shift
It’s funny that you put it that way. The 22 is still my favorite but the 4C is a really close second.
