Roberts210
Well-known member
I saw a CL ad on Monday night. "Old Vise, $25." No picture.
Reading the poorly written ad, it went on to say the seller had other vises to sell. Reading his other CL ads I saw ads for a C-man and a Morgan Milwaukee 38A--he wanted $125 for the Morgan.
But what intrigued me is on the "Old Vise, $25" ad is he said it was a WWII vise that the original owner had welded it so it wouldn't swivel anymore, and... "It used to be a Wilton" He'd had the ad up for awhile. But I drove 7 miles to take a look at it. Here's what I found.
Not only had the base been welded, but one jaw had been welded also--top and bottom.
No "Wilton" was cast into the body.
That jaw tho. OUCH!!
I think these are Wilton numbers:
It's got a date of 10 - 4_ Something is after the 4 but I can't make it out.
The story as told to me is that the original owner couldn't get the proper parts for the swivel base, so he just welded 'em up.
That he did!
On both sides:
So the first thing I did was to cut out the welded-in jaw. I used my Milwaukee angle grinder with a 40 thou wheel and cut a long rectangular slab out of the jaw he had welded in. I left just enough clinging to the vise, so that I could later chisel it out after I had removed the rectangular piece.
Here is the rectangular piece I cut out, and you can also how I'm starting to peel away the thin pieces that are left.
Here is the jaw I removed--in two pieces.
Here's what the jaw bed looked like after I got the welded piece out.
Wouldn't you know... the one picture I wanted to come out is out of focus. Sorry. But I ground back the weld even with the cast... iron? Steel? I don't know if Wiltons were made with malleable cast iron or cast steel.
Reading the poorly written ad, it went on to say the seller had other vises to sell. Reading his other CL ads I saw ads for a C-man and a Morgan Milwaukee 38A--he wanted $125 for the Morgan.
But what intrigued me is on the "Old Vise, $25" ad is he said it was a WWII vise that the original owner had welded it so it wouldn't swivel anymore, and... "It used to be a Wilton" He'd had the ad up for awhile. But I drove 7 miles to take a look at it. Here's what I found.
Not only had the base been welded, but one jaw had been welded also--top and bottom.
No "Wilton" was cast into the body.
That jaw tho. OUCH!!
I think these are Wilton numbers:
It's got a date of 10 - 4_ Something is after the 4 but I can't make it out.
The story as told to me is that the original owner couldn't get the proper parts for the swivel base, so he just welded 'em up.
That he did!
On both sides:
So the first thing I did was to cut out the welded-in jaw. I used my Milwaukee angle grinder with a 40 thou wheel and cut a long rectangular slab out of the jaw he had welded in. I left just enough clinging to the vise, so that I could later chisel it out after I had removed the rectangular piece.
Here is the rectangular piece I cut out, and you can also how I'm starting to peel away the thin pieces that are left.
Here is the jaw I removed--in two pieces.
Here's what the jaw bed looked like after I got the welded piece out.
Wouldn't you know... the one picture I wanted to come out is out of focus. Sorry. But I ground back the weld even with the cast... iron? Steel? I don't know if Wiltons were made with malleable cast iron or cast steel.