My first vise restoration began with this Parker 205 earlier this month. Bought on the bay as vise restoration syndrome took hold.
Unfortunately, it arrived with a broken main screw.
You can see that the front collar has been brazed to repair a crack (this damage was known before my purchase). Other than the main screw and the brazed collar, the only other damage is the evidence of a relatively hard life (or ownership by a blind gorilla with a claw hammer).
After some hand wringing, off to ebay again and I was able to find a main screw that *should* work. I couldn't find anyone who said they have a spare 205 main screw, but after the ebay seller sent me some more pictures and measurement for this item, I thought it would probably work. This is from a Parker 272 (another from the family of Parker 4-1/2" jaw width vises). I thought the 974 1/2 (which I think is a newer version of my 205) would work, but not sure.
Happily, this screw threads right into my vise's nut. So full steam ahead. Bonus: the new handle is less bent than the handle that came with my 205.
I have completely disassembled the vise, given everything an initial cleaning, and become better acquainted with my angle grinder. Most of the vise is down to bare metal now and I haven't found any other major structural damage.
Tonight was the first reassembly with the replacement screw/handle assembly.
I think the next step is to take the vise to work and use our blast cabinet (media is glass bead). I'm not worried about saving the patina as this one has no sentimental value to me. But, if the gurus here have some concern of precautions about blasting, I would appreciate hearing about it.
There are plenty of scars, but (at this point) I'm not planning to use fillers. Whatever the wire wheel and glass beading do to the surface will be the the final paint prepping.
Does anyone know the estimated production years for the Parker 205? I would love to have some more info about this vise. My understanding is that Parkers generally do not have dates like the Reeds (I'm also working a Reed 204 1/2 - more on that later).