ConductorChris
Well-known member
- Joined
- Mar 21, 2017
- Messages
- 160
Thanks Private Lugnutz and slowtwith73 - I guess for all the things I have been using vice grips for.
Hand vise. For holding a very small workpiece you are working on with the other hand. Especially when you don't want your fingers or knuckles in the way. They can be clamped in a bench vise, too. I just used one in my left hand on a 5/16"-18 lag bolt that needed its threads cleaned up with a thread file in my right hand, for example. And I used them all the time on small things I am hitting hard with a wire brush.
I do! Two of them actually. One is a little smaller. The Palmgren is great because it's aluminum and light in the hand. Often I don't even use the wingnut. I just squeeze. Because the workpiece is not being held that long. But it's so much easier and (as Brian alluded to) wider than pliers or vise-grips.Just perusing the Lugzsonian, and see you have one of these in your prep tools.
Pin vises are a little different, in my experience. Pin vises are the shape of a pen with a tiny chuck at the end with little jaws that screw open and closed on various bits that machinists' and also jewelers' use. (Never mind. What slowtwitch said! Haha.)Also called a pin vise, I believe.


Pin vises have pins that can be moved around various holes to hold irregular parts.
This is a pin vise.
Agreed. If Lee Valley wants to call their engraving vises "pin" vises because of the moveable pins, it's their prerogative, but it does beg confusion with traditional terminology.No. You're thinking of an engraving vise.
One is a vise that has pins.I use a pin vise (a 'vice' is related to a failure of moral turpitude) for cleaning passageways in carbs. Just a poke with an appropriately-sized wire will usually do it, to remove hardened accretions.