Fretters
Well-known member
Nice to see you back on here again.
Bought and moved some heavy iron myself recently, it is hard work.
Cheers. It seems to get heavier too, with each year we age.
Nice to see you back on here again.
Bought and moved some heavy iron myself recently, it is hard work.
That's a lot of nice hardware--and I'm not just talking about the vises!
A couple of those saws look in great shape and I could use that Kennedy mid-box to complete my stack.
You should post details on the 2020 Garage Sale thread.
Would you have any idea where i might be able to find replacement parts for the Wilton Turret vises?
The threaded tension release on all three are missing.
Thank you
Miller
AB, Here is a page from Catalog no. 40 which I’m guessing is from the war years.
Even the cast in jaws were available smooth.

Thanks Dave. Enjoyed the write up. I'd like to try something like this one day for sure!Hey Chris, I totally forgot to reply to you on this. Here's the write up...and I still use my knee to knock the ratchet around to snug up items that take 2 hands to position. I really really like this design still.
https://www.garagejournal.com/forum/showthread.php?t=388958
[emoji481]
Its incredible how powerful social media is!
So I found this vise in my grandpas shed half buried in the dirt floor. It has sat there for years and never did anything with it until I need one for my bench at home! So I took it home and let it sit in a bucket all winter long and would keep spraying it with PB blaster and WD-40. Well it finally unfroze and I went to work cleaning it up. Now this hole time I was never able to figure out the brand nothing. Not a single marking on this vise other then 2 words "front" and 1 saying "back" indicating how to mount the vise. So I decided to go through and paint it and make it look good again.
Now just last night 5/17/20 I post this "quarantine" project to my Instagram. Come to find out a hashtag I threw on it, a guy commented its a "Dropfo made by Fulton. Drop Forge vise, very desirable, very robust for its size". So I take a look at his Instagram, he buys, collects and fixes old vises to sell!
So from this I did some googling this morning that lead me back to this forum! So with all that being said I want to share my Fulton Dropfo Vise I knew nothing about 24 hours ago! haha
Here are a couple of DropFo ads:
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JKB
Shipping $1 per vise - lol!
SP3, that Ridge is a really sleek looking vise but I have always had a problem trusting cast in pipe jaws.---I just don't think they can or will stand the strain of serious torque that removable tool steel pipe jaws can stand.---And some of those cast iron pipe jaws that ride the open screw I wouldn't trust either.





Shift
The small reeds are my favorites.





Jeppen
That would be correct. I would refer to the first two generations as rear facing arched lettering. After the grafitti script Prentiss did the foreword facing arched lettering that everybody is familiar with.
I was so excited today. I saw a Wilton 6" tradesman vise for $50 advertised, but when I had him send me additional pictures it had a large casted "6" in the side. Obvious copy, but a dead ringer.
Thanks guys.
Since you asked...
I used Modern Masters satin metallic. The color is Oxford Brown. It’s a very dark brown. Really more of a black with some brown in it. 2 coats on the sides directly over iron that was stripped using the Simple Green soak. The jaw towers got Rustoleum self etching sandable primer and then 3 coats of the MM satin metallic. No clear coat.
After cleaning up the handle and meatball with sandpaper, a wire wheel and finally a Scotchbrite flap wheel, I rubbed on some Fluid Film to preserve the finish.
The slide had a lot of rust and uneven staining. I attacked that with a knotted wire wheel on my angle grinder. Then I sprayed on a bit of Fluid Film and rubbed it off with a paper towel (which will be removing black oily residue). Then repeat. Then repeat again. This gives you control on the degree of blackness you want to end up with on the steel. Personally, I’d never want a polished slide on an 85 year old vise.
That's probably very true. You know the world is changing when you search on offerup for "vise" and it autocorrects your result to "vase."
Great job on your 103 1/2 Shift!Thanks guys.
Since you asked...
I used Modern Masters satin metallic. The color is Oxford Brown. It’s a very dark brown. Really more of a black with some brown in it. 2 coats on the sides directly over iron that was stripped using the Simple Green soak. The jaw towers got Rustoleum self etching sandable primer and then 3 coats of the MM satin metallic. No clear coat.
After cleaning up the handle and meatball with sandpaper, a wire wheel and finally a Scotchbrite flap wheel, I rubbed on some Fluid Film to preserve the finish.
The slide had a lot of rust and uneven staining. I attacked that with a knotted wire wheel on my angle grinder. Then I sprayed on a bit of Fluid Film and rubbed it off with a paper towel (which will be removing black oily residue). Then repeat. Then repeat again. This gives you control on the degree of blackness you want to end up with on the steel. Personally, I’d never want a polished slide on an 85 year old vise.
