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Drill Press Vise - Advice

1956ford

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Dec 6, 2015
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Cypress, Texas
I recently bought a Delta Homecraft bench top drill press. I believe it is 1957 vintage, operates perfectly, well maintained. HEAVY!

For ordinary home / garage use, is a drill press vise recommended?
If so, what are reasonably priced and decent brands.
Is a one dimensional vise sufficient? Or is the cross-slide, two dimensional one that much more useful?

Thank you for any suggestions.
 
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CobraRed

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May 30, 2014
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Yost Dpv-4 or DPV-5 is best bang for your buck IMO.

$40-50, I went through 2 Irwin cheapies than got this. Thousands of drill holes, no issues with it.

As for cross slide, I suppose that depends on what you need it for. Depends on the user.
 

Davefr

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It really depends on your projects. For me, this is what I always have at the DP since you can use it on 5 of it's 6 sides. Don't even think of getting one without the two V grooves in the stationary jaw.:

CH_9612251.jpg


One of these might be better if you anticipate a lot of clamping of work to your DP table but you sacrifice versatility.

YOV_50004.jpg


I have a crossfeed vise but rarely use it. I've also rarely use a DP angle vise.
 
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exmaxima1

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It really depends on your projects. For me, this is what I always have at the DP since you can use it on 5 of it's 6 sides. Don't even think of getting one without the two V grooves in the stationary jaw.:

I like V-groove idea, though I rarely use it. For me, stepped jaws are the most important. Makes things much faster, and saves scarring the vise
 

NC Rick

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Asheville
Nice drill press! I’m with Dave on the vise selection, being able to tip the vise on its side adds a lot to versatility. And x-y table (preferably with graduated rotation also) is good if you have to layout accurate hole patterns. You can do the math or use an internet calculator for hole patterns in a circle as an example. Learn to use a spot drill if you are using one of those. Forget about milling with one.
 
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zkling

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For that drill press, a vise like the first one dave posted, a fence and a few good sized c or f clamps should do all you need.

Putting a float lock style safety vise on that small of a drill press will be a royal pain (in my opinion).
 

lilredex

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Apr 29, 2006
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My most used DP vise is a HF type mounted on a track. Easy on, easy off ....never an excuse for accident prone hand holding stuff.

Believe yours also has a rectangular table.
 

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shawhite

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May 28, 2014
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Those type of vises take up a lot of vertical height on a bench top press which has limited headroom as it is. I can set up my float lock quicker than I could clamp something in one of the screw type vices. I would personally use a clamp vise before I use the screw type drill vise. Unless I needed parallels or a v block.

https://www.homedepot.com/p/Yost-6-in-Drill-Press-Vise-Clamp-DC-6/207206028
 
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1956ford

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Dec 6, 2015
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Cypress, Texas
Thank you all. Outstanding information. I will follow up your suggestions and links.

El Wifo and I are looking at homes in Arkansas soon and some have shops, so hoping one works out.
 

matt_i

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Mar 14, 2008
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SE Michigan
My favorite drill press vise is an abused 6" Kurt milling vise knockoff. It weighs ~50-60 lbs.

I like the Heinrich for fast clamping but nothing will touch the mass of the Kurt knockoff.
 

tool_scrounge

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Delta Homecraft 11" drill presses are impressively heavy for their size, but the table is not too large. I would get a 3" Palmgren like Davefr showed in the post above.
 
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