Oldtuleguy
Well-known member
- Joined
- Nov 4, 2017
- Messages
- 10,459
Slide is steel, so I thought bending It back might be possible. This thing has been abused in the shop since long before I got there. Was coated in layers of grease and grime. Soaked it for 3 days in a bucket of that nasty purple stuff I use on the floors and it cleaned up. I will pull it apart and take a shot at straightening it.Is that one of the kind where the slide is made from steel I stand of cast as part of the dynamic jaw?

Here's what I'm thinking. Get a big piece of steel. Like an I beam, or a piece of heavy channel stock. Get a second piece of metal that's a bit thicker than the difference between the bottom of the slide and the bottom of the jaw. Measure that distance. Cut up some thin sheet metal.Your making shims. You will stack enough shims to make up for the hypothetical space under the jaw, with the metal bar under the slide, when it's all sitting on the I beam. Clamp it down, heat the bend with an acetylene torch until it starts to glow. Use harbor freight clamps, because this will not be kind to them. Tighten the clamps, heat some more.I agree with the thinking that this vise isn't worth a lot, but if you like a challenge maybe get a torch (hotter the better) to warm up the slide before you bend it back. did the screw survive without bending or the vise nut not break?
lots of these out and about so finding a parts vise might work or selling off or trading your decent parts for cash or another tool could be your best option.
just curious what you were doing and how you bent it this much?
good luck!!
Damn. Brutal.Ah, it's still a *************...
You have now made it perfectly functional and YOU are now the expert. I'd be proud to have that on my bench.No just wanted to get it functional again. I am sure the vise experts here could have done better!