Excellent question!
Many of us who haven’t spent big money on a real anvil have a short piece of railroad track to use for heavy pounding.
IMHO, those “anvil” sections on vises are OK to use for light tapping kind of work. Of course anything like that might leave dings. A “user” vise will get scratches, chipped paint, dirt, etc.
I suppose there are some with show garages where everything is museum quality and the vise has a color sanded clear coat paint job and a mirror finish anvil section that gets waxed once a week.
All of my track sections came from Yard/Estate sales, a couple were already Anvil Shaped Objects (ASO). their is a thread for RR track anvils? - I didn't save it - maybe its the Anvil thread? https://www.garagejournal.com/forum/showthread.php?t=33788&highlight=Anvil
Any railroad line. It's free, but requires an investment in a portable bandsaw [emoji23]Where can I find a length of railroad track?
Any railroad line. It's free, but requires an investment in a portable bandsaw [emoji23]
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Somebody will just have to start that thread! You or me?
Some people modify the track sections to better approximate the shape and utility of a real anvil.
Did you ever see the one SnapMom posted way back when? Maybe she still has it.
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There is a guy on eBay (no connection to me) selling 12 inch long pieces for $25 with $15 more for shipping. He sells a lot of them. That would put you at about $40 to your door.
I got my chunk from a Craigslist deal for $20 but that was after a lot of time checking ads every day and being able to drop everything and drive out to pick it up. Considering everything, if you’re happy with $40 do it that way.

Here’s a finishing and general use anvil that I made. It’s a 4x4x16 of 1018 mild steel and works great for a variety of operations in the forge. I have full sized anvils but I let beginners start out on the 1018 instead of a hay Budden. I got the steel at a local supplier for around $80.
I made the stand out of Doug Fir 4x6’s and I used garage door handles to hold the tongs.
There are economical ways to start hitting hot steel with the price of anvils being so high these days.
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My son has been bitten by the Reed vise addiction. He found a round nose 208 listed @ an Amish run estate auction in Florala, Alabama. There were hundreds of Amish from all over the Mid West in attendence- seems they can hire someone to drive you in an f350 with goosneck to far away auctions. There were hundreds of horse drawn implements to auction and three auctioneers going simulatneously all day long. The estate included a very large anvil and vise collection -enough to cover most of the bed of a flatbed semi trailer. The anvils and vices were saved for a special 5pm auction. After watching the amounts of money being spent all day my son was worried he had enough money to be a contender.
One of the first anvils was a 982 lb one and it brought $5600. The auctioneer worked through all the anvils and the first vise up was the Reed 208. There were other 8 inch vises including a Columbian and a couple others I dont recall the makers of. There were a dozen or so smaller Reeds. My son had his alternate lot numbers written down. Because this was an Amish run auction there was no online bidding, or phone bidding.
We are from Central Virginia so it was a long trip to a farm on the Florida/ Alabama line nd my son was on a mission to come away with something. The Reed 208 was the first vise to auction. The auctioneer tried to start @ $2800 citing a recent sale of $3200 for a 208(my son also knew about this one), then he dropped to 2500, 1750, 1500, 1000, and then $500 and things took off. Son won for $1100. The lesser vises beside it went for $810 for the Columbian and $750 for the no name beside it.
Many here are able to buy things far far below market value and thats great but I dont think they could possibly value their purchases any higher than he does this 208. The vice was on a pedestal with a chunch of 1.25 inch plate as its ground base. Between the 288lb vise and the pedestal a conservative guess would be 400 lbs. It took 5 large men to lift the thing into the f350. Instead of lifting it out with a fork lift when we got it back to Virginia he disassembled it in the truck and moved it that way, cleaning and lubing it as he reassembled it.. He's read the date stamp thread and will try to find them in the morning. The handle has some bow in it- obviously a huge cheater bar was used on it in the past. He hoping our 50 ton press will straighten it. Personally I like the bend.
Thanks for sharing your story. I think Wrenchguy posted the link to this auction. Is this the vise?
It is. He's cut the welds and will file/mill off the rest. Swivel is free. He's not been able to free up the two twist/cam locks yet.

New to Garage Journal and I have become fascinated with the selection of vises you folks have. So much so that I just purchased a new Wilton 300 s (made in USA). I inherited this 4 inch PARAMO from my Uncle Mike who was a machinist and left me his complete machine shop. The PARAMO has zero rust, just patina and zero saw or file marks. The paint is 100% original and I am glad that I didn't repaint it. t I have been sorting and cleaning all of his tools during the pandemic and it is good therapy!
I keep the 4 youtube videos of the "Vises of Garage Journal" running in the background. I am hooked now!
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A Craigslist Success !!
Usually I have lousy luck with Craigslist. I swear my emails to the CL sellers goes into a 'black hole'. Weeks of daily emails [and the ad ONLY has an email for contacting the seller]
But Yesterday, Sunday evening, I checked CL and there was a new ad: 'Large Vise for Sale'.
The location was a town only 25 miles away and the ad had been posted at around noon on Sunday.
I looked at the three photos, while they were not great images, they clearly showed the vise to be a Charles Parker 976 ! And it appeared to be in reasonably good condition..
I fully expected to have the seller either reply with: Sold already! or ignore my email requests to come inspect/buy the vise.. But nothing ventured.. nothing gained.. So I sent the email.. And I got a reply within about 30 minutes.. The vise was available and yes I could come inspect it at 0900 on Monday..
So, I dusted off the alarm clock [after 50+ years of getting up to an alarm, I hate them! ]. And went to check out the vise..
And it is a really nice vise.. I think the 'fork' for retaining the main screw is a reproduction one, unless Parker on their later vises used brass for the fork occasionally? My 978, and 974A still used steel or iron for the fork.. So I think this is a very nice recasting of an original in brass. Great detail on the lettering too.
The jaw surfaces are very nice, some light hammer marks which are to be expected.. The handle is in nice condition, and the slide is tight, the nut tight in it's dovetail, etc.. A really nice vise..
And I had been looking for a 976 to complete my lineup of Parker 97- series.
I now have in the 97-series a 973, 974, 974-1/2, 975, 976, and the monster 978. I put them all on one heavy layup table for a 'family photo'.. I thought that I still needed to find a 7" '9-series', but I went to the spreadsheet info and looked at the brochures available, and there are no 977 Parker vises..
The first photo has the 974-1/2 near the 976 for comparison, but the perspective in the photo doesn't do justice to the size of the 976. The spreadsheet states, and brochures also state that the 976 weighs 157#.. And that checks with my scale.. within a pound.
THEN an amazing thing happened !! I finally got a reply to a CL ad I'd been emailing for weeks.. And I headed over to buy a DropFo 5". The big brother to my DropFo 4"..
So Craigslist paid off today !! Photos of the DropFo in a day or two.
Pierce A.


OK: To answer "tool-scrounge" (I don't have enough posts to message yet); I took a good look at the vise's static jaw and saw 60-3 as seen in the photo. Now looking with a more careful eye; I noticed that my Uncle Mike had the jaws reversed to protect the serrations so I was very happy to turned the jaws into their proper position and they are brand new! See photos of the 4.5 inch Paramo plus a 4 inch Columbian vise that I bought in 1974.