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Biggest bench vise ever made?

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R6 Racer

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Joined
Feb 21, 2010
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1,632
Location
Northern Ontario Canada
Mine is not the biggest one around. But it will definitely get the job done!
Its a Parker 79 & 1/2 @ 193.5 lbs.
Oh Ya & thats the price I paid for it 2 months ago! ($55.00):)

Steve
 

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Plombob

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Oct 19, 2008
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4,116
Location
Tennessee
Big honkin Columbian:

4572033545_87f9b43e50_o.jpg

Whoa! What would you do with that? Get a hernia turning the screw.:eek:
 

demoman

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Joined
May 4, 2010
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244
Location
North Central Kansas
This is as far as I know the biggest vise ever made weighing in at 695 pounds. Thats right almost 700 pounds. Click on the ad I posted and you see it is even a swivel head AND base. I dated it to 1907. If you have one of these in your shop I will pay to enter and see it! I have thought about making a mold and havig one poured in cast steel. It would be fun to machine it out. This is a must have for big vises. There must be one left somewhere out there in a RR museum or where? The best big vise I have is the Hollands #28 which is a newer 8 inch version that weighs 327#. I know it needs a paint job and I will get to it this winter. I have been working on my shop. WE actually use a reed 108 and reed 4c in the shop to work on heavy equipment parts so they are not just setting around. I have about 60 vises now and that is not good. There must be help out there!
Post more photos of big ones or weird vises.
Click on the attachment for the pdf ad.
 

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BanjoSavesTheDay

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Nov 10, 2009
Messages
627
Location
Huntington, WV
This is as far as I know the biggest vise ever made weighing in at 695 pounds. Thats right almost 700 pounds. Click on the ad I posted and you see it is even a swivel head AND base. I dated it to 1907. If you have one of these in your shop I will pay to enter and see it! I have thought about making a mold and havig one poured in cast steel. It would be fun to machine it out. This is a must have for big vises. There must be one left somewhere out there in a RR museum or where? The best big vise I have is the Hollands #28 which is a newer 8 inch version that weighs 327#. I know it needs a paint job and I will get to it this winter. I have been working on my shop. WE actually use a reed 108 and reed 4c in the shop to work on heavy equipment parts so they are not just setting around. I have about 60 vises now and that is not good. There must be help out there!
Post more photos of big ones or weird vises.
Click on the attachment for the pdf ad.

Wow....you never disapoint. :bowdown: That thing is awesome!
 

bczygan

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Joined
Nov 4, 2009
Messages
22,002
Location
DETROIT! Arsenal of Scrappers
This is as far as I know the biggest vise ever made weighing in at 695 pounds. Thats right almost 700 pounds. Click on the ad I posted and you see it is even a swivel head AND base. I dated it to 1907. If you have one of these in your shop I will pay to enter and see it! I have thought about making a mold and havig one poured in cast steel. It would be fun to machine it out. This is a must have for big vises. There must be one left somewhere out there in a RR museum or where? The best big vise I have is the Hollands #28 which is a newer 8 inch version that weighs 327#. I know it needs a paint job and I will get to it this winter. I have been working on my shop. WE actually use a reed 108 and reed 4c in the shop to work on heavy equipment parts so they are not just setting around. I have about 60 vises now and that is not good. There must be help out there!
Post more photos of big ones or weird vises.
Click on the attachment for the pdf ad.

Here is a patent for a vise, by the guy who was president of that company George P. Blackiston. Similar design.

BlackistonVise1.jpg


BlackistonVise2.jpg


BlackistonVise3.jpg


BlackistonVise4.jpg



Bill
 

coolreed

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Apr 10, 2012
Messages
595
Location
Oklahoma City, It's a Windy Heat.
This all makes me wonder, back in the day that is,..what businesses were these very large Vises used? Railroads come to mind first, then the steel industry, but what others? And why aren't the few American companies left like Reed, Wilton, etc, not making a few Large Quality Vises anymore. Reed doesn't make anything near what they used to, and many of the Wiltons are cheap imports.

I have managed to find four vises with 6" jaws or wider. They are difficult to find and expensive. :3gears:
 

venturesomerite

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Joined
Nov 3, 2011
Messages
1,135
Location
Connecticut - not sure why though...
I recently visited a hydraulic shop that had several of those big guys mounted about 7-8 feet apart down a steel bench that ran the length of the room.(about 60 feet) The bench was 1" steel on top, and at least 4"x4" (prop 1/8" thick) legs every four feet, all the cross bracing and what not. He was trying to get a fitting of a pump he had in the vise and was actually lifting the damn bench off the ground, and mind you this is one, solid, continuous bench, that was clearly built in place and will never be moved.

It was quite a sight, the guy wasn't a big guy either, just had alot of cheater pipe!
 

bobcatdan

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Jan 4, 2011
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9,948
Location
Kaukauna,WI
Wiltons still makes some monster, the 800 is still availalbe at 238 lbs and the C3 combo is right around 210. Yost has some big 8"s, that weigh in the 170 range. I would give my right testicle for that 700 pounder!
 

Lump

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Mar 16, 2009
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Location
Jamestown, Ohio
LOL. I think you're joshin' us, Mickey. That's a little Wilton on one of those little model floor jacks, right? Nice photo.
 
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mcmlvif100

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May 2, 2010
Messages
627
Location
Northern Indiana
Great find. Hollands 27 suggests it should have 7" wide jaws with the 2 indicating a swivel base. More details please -- jaw width, weight, etc.
 

WOODFORGE

New member
Joined
Jan 28, 2013
Messages
3
Location
Buffalo, NY
How about this one?

amherst-20130126-00340.jpg


More on it here: http://woodforge.edpardo.com/projects/bench-vise-from-hell

The vise in front is a standard size bench vise...

-WOODFORGE

The vise is 7" wide, 31" long and 14" high. I had to push the vise off my tailgate into a snowbank to get it out of my truck. I soaked it with penetrating oil and then in the morning, worked on separating into 2 sections...otherwise it would still be on the driveway.

My rough guestimate puts it at about 300 lbs. I will take more pics as I work on it.
 

DKerns

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Joined
Feb 24, 2008
Messages
31
Location
Marietta, Ga.
The vise is 7" wide, 31" long and 14" high. I had to push the vise off my tailgate into a snowbank to get it out of my truck. I soaked it with penetrating oil and then in the morning, worked on separating into 2 sections...otherwise it would still be on the driveway.

My rough guestimate puts it at about 300 lbs. I will take more pics as I work on it.

I found an identical vise behind my grandfathers shop....... Could do nothing short of roll it over. It is missing the base though!!
 

mcmlvif100

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May 2, 2010
Messages
627
Location
Northern Indiana
So what are the specs on a Hollands 46?

From the picture, it looks like it might have a swivel jaw. Correct ?

My understanding is that a Hollands 1X designation is for a fixed base vise with X" jaw width and that a 2X means a swivel base vise with X" jaw width. Just a guess but perhaps the Hollands 46 designation is for a swivel base, swivel jaw vise with 6" wide jaws.

Regardless, the vise looks interesting. Is it yours? If so, more pictures, please.
 

WOODFORGE

New member
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Jan 28, 2013
Messages
3
Location
Buffalo, NY
The vise is 7" wide, 31" long and 14" high. I had to push the vise off my tailgate into a snowbank to get it out of my truck. I soaked it with penetrating oil and then in the morning, worked on separating into 2 sections...otherwise it would still be on the driveway.

My rough guestimate puts it at about 300 lbs. I will take more pics as I work on it.
So what is a Hollands 27 worth? Any interested buyers?
 

gatewaysysop

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Joined
Nov 11, 2008
Messages
3,288
Location
Arizona
Let's bring this sucker back on track with some bench vises of gratuitous girth, shall we? :thumbup:

I'll submit the biggest I've got, which according to the catalog I have, is/was the heaviest that Athol ever produced. She weighs in at a full 300 pounds, and you can see my original acquisition thread with more pics here. :cool:

As I've told others, I still grin every time I set eyes on this thing. Can't believe I actually acquired such a monster.

Behold, the 8" Athol 628 in all its glory:

Original seller photos:

Athol_8_inch_vise_1.jpg Athol_8_inch_vise_2.jpg

Devouring a 4" Prentiss swivel jaw... :shocking:

Picture 210 (Medium).jpg

For scale, it's sitting next to my 6", swivel jaw, 170+ pound Athol 646. :eyecrazy:
Picture 246 (Medium).jpg Picture 248 (Medium).jpg

Picture 256 (Medium).jpg Picture 247 (Medium).jpg

As to someone else's earlier question of how you move such a monstrous vise, I can only say that I moved it in pieces and even then I needed help. You know it's a sickness when you draw other people into the madness with you. :eek:
 

jabberwoki

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Joined
May 1, 2009
Messages
6,455
Location
puyallup wa usa
From the picture, it looks like it might have a swivel jaw. Correct ?

My understanding is that a Hollands 1X designation is for a fixed base vise with X" jaw width and that a 2X means a swivel base vise with X" jaw width. Just a guess but perhaps the Hollands 46 designation is for a swivel base, swivel jaw vise with 6" wide jaws.

Regardless, the vise looks interesting. Is it yours? If so, more pictures, please.

No it`s not mine the dude wants 250 for it. As for the swivel jaw the back jaws/top does have a pin and it`s a sepporate part more like a cap?
 
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