Shiftless
Well-known member
Ryan340 and Smitty:
Nice hauls fellas!
Nice hauls fellas!


I’ll guess 5/47 on the baby bullet.



Wow, that’s a great deal for a Wilton C0 and it looks like it’s in good condition. I found the same model vise without a base last year. I had a 9140 Cadet and the base fit perfectly. The base and swivel locks are period correct for the C0. I’d rather have a Cadet without a base than a C0....
Speaking of Fulton star vises I have this rarely seen 6”no.58, it’s a beast. [/url]
I wish there was more details on what bases will accommodate other models for the Wilton bullet vises.
Mr Pete is a fan. He did a couple videos on the float lock, including making one of his own.




Lightly cleaned up this Stanley 763. Especially like these little Stanleys with the replaceable steel jaws. Couple odd things things though...
The main screw is retained against spring tension and this makes the handle very tight rotating. Is this spring original?
And the groove for the nut is much longer than the nut, letting it slide fore and aft as you open and close the jaw. A previous owner had jammed a piece of scrap metal in the groove to prevent this. The nut does not appear altered; why is that groove so long?
I took some more pictures of the mystery frankenvise. I think it raised more questions than it answered. The dynamic jaw seems to be cast and the entire static jaw tower is welded plates. The lead screw is machine threads not acme. The drive nut is homemade and not very well done. There is some kind of casting on the back of the beam that I cant make out. I thought maybe it was some kind of kit but the mounting pieces are far too rough. Any thoughts would be appreciated. I cant decide if it was 100% home built or if a dynamic jaw was saved and the rest built around it???
OK, I gotta know, how did you read that mess??? The 192 looks to be the one but the tower is obviously homemade. It must have been some sort of farm repair. I was told the vise came out of an old barn. Do you think those threads on the lead screw are original??
This seems like the arrangement in J.G. Baker’s 1915 “lost motion take-up” patent. Bonney was assignee. The patent would have lapsed around 1935, I guess.The main screw is retained against spring tension and this makes the handle very tight rotating. Is this spring original?
OK, I gotta know, how did you read that mess??? The 192 looks to be the one but the tower is obviously homemade. It must have been some sort of farm repair. I was told the vise came out of an old barn. Do you think those threads on the lead screw are original??
I believe he has those special "Superman" powers.
Fier: i've always been impressed by your wisdom and your collection of catalog pages, but while I think I saw 1928 on the back of the Mr. W's vise I didn't see 192 and immediately think Rock Island.