


I picked up an old Columbian HDWE Co. #504M vise last summer. It's not the prettiest one out there, but it gets the job done.
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ED: i know some of the Columbian vises have hollow jaws, but not sure that old Crowntop of yours does. or do you know for sure that it is hollow?
That's a nice Columbian with the almost never included pipe jaws to boot! Those could have come with or without the swivel base. it's not necessarily missing. You did well if you got it cheap! Welcome to GJ!
Thanks for the reply. Cost me £10 couldn't believe it! Just going to clean it up and put it to good use.That's a nice Columbian with the almost never included pipe jaws to boot! Those could have come with or without the swivel base. it's not necessarily missing. You did well if you got it cheap! Welcome to GJ!
No holes whatsoever, if you look at the close up pic you can see a large threaded bar underneath and the large wing nut is to secure. I'm gathering I should just be able to loosen the nut, move and re-tighten. Thanks for the reply!BB: nice find!! Since your vise only has one hole where the swivel lock would have been to mount it would be tough. You can drill another hole in the cast and mount with two bolts cause finding another base might be tough on your side of the big pond.
If you can weld maybe the best option is making a stand for it and welding your vise to the stand and then you’d have 350 degree access. Good luck!!

Many thanks,Based on the casting and jaws, I feel confident that you have a beautiful (1918-1926) Columbian vise m# 203-1/2. You are correct, with regard to missing the swivel base, but everything else seems to be there. The following catalog scan is from 1918.
Your vise is extremely rare and I'd encourage you to keep it as original as possible. Even though it could still be a good user, it has more historical than user value. Congratulations on a very meaningful vintage vise find!

Many thanks,
I thought it was missing a swivel as the base is not flush,and i gathered those raised bits would be for locking into a swivel base.
Restoration is literally only going to be the removal of rust and the flaking paint ( with care) then a good lube. I wonder how this ended up in in Northern Ireland?
You say historically valuable so what really should I do with it?Not wanting to sell or even know a value, I just love the way old tools are solidly built to last and look great.
Hey vise spreadsheet gurus: please add "Username Already In Use" post #18 COLUMBIAN HDWE CO. NO. 504M,
or "GalaxyRats" post #49 COLUMBIAN HDWE CO. No. 504M..........and "BB8" post #65 COLUMBIAN HDWE CO. CAT. NO. 203 1/2
to the spreadsheet when you can. The Vise Spreadsheet is, indeed, an epic work in progress.
I believe the thread is not Acme, but square. look at it from the side, and if the threads have strait sides, then it is square. found in a co-workers machinist handbook, my peg leg vise is 1&3/8 X 3 square thread.Well I finally ran into one - a broken Columbian 504M vise.
Oddly though, it was the leadscrew that sheared in half, nothing to do with the casting. Interestingly, the handle is not bend like a pretzel. The previous owner says he was just clamping a piece of metal by hand and it kept turning but not tightening. The story was he got it from his dad who had it in their workshop in the 1950s. The vise body had been hammered on a bit, but no casting failure. But I had to carefully file the slide for half an hour to disassemble it.
My first guess is it was a fatigue failure, possibly cased by a defect in the screw? The screw failed at the location right in front of the nut when the vise is closed.
Sadly, Columbian used a 7/8-4 acme looking thread, which does not look to be available. A standard thread is 7/8-6 and that thread is available. I'll put a wanted posting in the Vise Parts Swap thread and see if there are any Craftsman/Columbian screws available. None on Ebay. Is there another source I should look at?
I just ran across this same vice in just as good condition for $4.I recently purchased a Columbian (Warren Tool Company / Wilton Tool Company) No. 3 1/2, Type No. 63-3 bench vice. I cannot tell if it is the original paint as it seems there may be two colors. I am also looking to replace the jaw inserts if they can be found. I paid $12 for it and thought it might be a good deal. No luck in locating any documentation so far.