I scored a post leg vise recently from a junk dealer. I've wanted one of these for about 50 years and finally pulled the trigger.
This one's a 5". I talked the seller down to $40 because there was so much slop in it. I've since learned the dynamic jaw and main screw float so they don't absorb any shock from pounding on the vise. All that force goes straight down the leg to the ground. That accounts for some of the slop and misalignment I felt in the jaws. After a bit of cleaning up I found the makers stamp. It's an I. Nash and Sons of Stourbridge Eng. Isaac Nash died in 1877 or 8 but the company moved to Stourbridge in 1896 and still going strong apparently.
There was a similar thread here a month or so back but danged if I could find it. That thread inspired me to clean this one up too instead of just using it as is.
I usually attack rust with a vinegar bath but this vise would need a special tank so I just went at it with a wire brush mounted on a 3/4 hp bench grinder.
The tight corners and crevices were gotten with a knotted wheel or cup brush on a small angle grinder.
This one's a 5". I talked the seller down to $40 because there was so much slop in it. I've since learned the dynamic jaw and main screw float so they don't absorb any shock from pounding on the vise. All that force goes straight down the leg to the ground. That accounts for some of the slop and misalignment I felt in the jaws. After a bit of cleaning up I found the makers stamp. It's an I. Nash and Sons of Stourbridge Eng. Isaac Nash died in 1877 or 8 but the company moved to Stourbridge in 1896 and still going strong apparently.
There was a similar thread here a month or so back but danged if I could find it. That thread inspired me to clean this one up too instead of just using it as is.
I usually attack rust with a vinegar bath but this vise would need a special tank so I just went at it with a wire brush mounted on a 3/4 hp bench grinder.
The tight corners and crevices were gotten with a knotted wheel or cup brush on a small angle grinder.




