One Arm Ricky
Member
- Joined
- Nov 30, 2022
- Messages
- 8
I received this vise as partial payment for tearing down an old workshop several years ago. It was in this shape when I got it. I just finished my new shop and wanted to fix this vise up before I attach it to my bench.What parts?
In my experience, those are not a common vise at all and I think old enough that Jet won't have parts. Is something broken with it?
I know nothing about Jet vises but I would be inclined to agree with this. Even if a little low, it seems like the right order of magnitudeThink about 30 yrs old, worth $40 to $50 cleaned up fixed shiny new. $15 in present shape. Usable vise if careful, not particularly valuable.
What would be the best way to go about it?That handle can easily be repaired.
Thanks for the advice. Honestly it's not really a "treasure" to me. Im really just wanting to make it look better, and function smoother.not to discredit your treasures by any means, but you have a made in China low end vice .
you can straighten the handle with some force & properly placed supports while hitting it.
a buff & spray paint will make it look great. myself, I wouldn't look at doing a restore on it
I agree with the Cobbler.not to discredit your treasures by any means, but you have a made in China low end vice .
you can straighten the handle with some force & properly placed supports while hitting it.
a buff & spray paint will make it look great. myself, I wouldn't look at doing a restore on it
I definitely will. Looking forward to the project. I only have 1 hand, lost my left hand when I was 13 years old. Its going to be fun, and hoping to learn a lot in the process.I agree with the Cobbler.
Not everybody can find a nice Reed or Starrett vise to start with. I have found that a wire wheel on the faces of used jaws often makes them quite useable. Stripping, filling, priming and painting that low value vise would be a learning experience. Go for it and post results or questions that one of us more experienced guys might be available to answer.
the value, where to find a model or serial number?
Thank you for the advice!The model is cast right in the side, "5".
A sign it might be higher grade Asianium, they did at least have the pride to cast the cool jet logo on the other side.
I'd wager that vice is strong enough to straighten the handle. Of course you'll need a suitable temporary handle, maybe socket extension with a bit of pipe over it for length.
I set up so the particular bend I'm working on is like a rainbow where each pot of gold is a block of softwood(2x4), with another at the press point on top. With this bridge arrangement you can go a bit past straight(it will spring back a bit), the bar crushing into the wood keeps it from squirming, and as the wood densifies it moves and elongates the pressure point(less chance to make a bunch of smaller squiggles).
Also keeps from adding teeth/bashmarks to your workpiece.
Usually 2 screws of some kind hold each jaw.
If they don't readily unscrew, take a good fitting driver and hammer it straight into the fastener for awhile and try again. At least from what I see in the picture, a kiss from the wire wheel will render those jaws better than just "serviceable".
Edit; just read the one arm thing, that makes setup more of a challenge for sure. I wrecked a rotator cuff and I'm still adjusting.
Tape your blocks in place I guess.
Jet was quality-controlled stuff you could rely on. Hoists, machine tools, etc. Jaws look good; hasn’t been abused. Handles are soft mild steel and get bent with cheater pipes, hammers. It’s to be expected. Easy to straight en so it well slide all the was through. I wouldn’t hesitate to mount it where you can use it.Those Jet vises are actually pretty nice.. inline with Jet in general.. not your typical Chicom junk.