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Help Identifying a Bench Vise

jeffdan17

Member
Joined
Apr 5, 2022
Messages
22
Location
Indiana
I was hoping to get a little assistance in identifying this vise. As it sits, I can find no markings anywhere on this vise at all. I plan to degrease and clean it to see if there's anything hiding underneath, but it seems a bit odd to me that there's nothing to identify a manufacturer on it. For that reason, my guess is that it's an import of some kind, but I really don't have anything concrete to base that off of. Has anyone seen one of these before? Jaw width is 6", and it opens to about 8".

Thanks for any help. Really appreciate all of the great information that's available here on GJ.
 

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Vwpower

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 12, 2021
Messages
232
Location
Erie PA
I am surprised though I just clicked on another what is this vise thread and it actually was a quality vise.
 

PierceA

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 6, 2020
Messages
471
Location
SE Michigan
Vwpower: Some of the members have VERY dogmatic [either BLACK or WHITE] views about any imported vise. But reality can really differ a LOT from opinion.
I have had an apparently strong vise break like it was glass. I've had a broken vise refuse to die: the crack just never got wider, even when really stressed beyond the limit that cause the crack to first appear.. it must have had some internal stresses?

And there ARE plenty of Good name, old and heavy American made vises that to be honest were just junk.. Poor design, or poor metalurgy, and poor machining. Some real 'gee-wizz' designs that simply do NOT work very well.

And then there are the American made vises that are the standard that we see as 'setting the bar' for what a good vise is.
Reed, C.Parker, Athol, Holland, Yost, Prentiss, American Scale, and others that I just can't think of right now.
And there is the Craftsman 519x series.. a very good, well made vise that only has a very few 'issues'. Craftsman /Sears had these built by probably Rock Island or ?? The design pretty much took all the good ideas and designs, put them together, and made a very good product.

Each of us have our particular favorite makers and model of vise, or we are totally eclectic and like them all.

So the vise in question that the OP showed and asked us to identify, is an imported vise. There are some of that design made that are really not worth much at all. Some might be made with better metal and might work well for decades. But I do not know which is which.

I collect American made vises as an exercise in preserving the history and examples of a major industry in our country during the previous 120 -150 years. I like seeing the difference in quality, changes in design, and finding a pristine virtually unused vise that is 100 years old is exciting.
And I'm also into repairing the vises that have been miss-used and abused. I bring them back to good funtionality again, and sometimes a bit better than they originally were.. Mechanically,, I'm not one to fill old dents and scars with bondo and paint a vise to look like it's made of plastic.. UGH..

PierceA.
 
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