TinkTinkForge
Well-known member
Rarest vise in your collection?
Some might argue that it's the Reed 102-1/2 that I just aquired, or my Reed 3C, or the Bonney Champion 129. But they'd all be wrong. My most rare and prized vises are my 2 Columbian 804 steel plate vises.
The first one was my grandfather's, and is still sitting on his workbench because I haven't the heart to remove it yet. He bought it used in 1958/9. My grandfather (in his late eighties when he told the story) told me that he bought it from "an Old Man". That story still makes me giggle when I think of it.
The second is one I finally found after a 30yr search about a year before he passed. At $50, I over-paid for it because it's the only one I've seen outside three others on this forum, and the only other one I've ever seen in person.
I was finally able to find a copy of a 1949 ad on eBay with this vise listed. Columbian only offered this style vise for a short time after the war, and only in a 4" size. It took this forum several years to determine who made it, and eventually what the model number it was. I still haven't determined the start or end dates for its run.
This isn't a heavy duty vise, but the first one served a 57yr second life and is still going. The second also has plenty of life left in it. Not bad for an economy vise.
Some might argue that it's the Reed 102-1/2 that I just aquired, or my Reed 3C, or the Bonney Champion 129. But they'd all be wrong. My most rare and prized vises are my 2 Columbian 804 steel plate vises.
The first one was my grandfather's, and is still sitting on his workbench because I haven't the heart to remove it yet. He bought it used in 1958/9. My grandfather (in his late eighties when he told the story) told me that he bought it from "an Old Man". That story still makes me giggle when I think of it.
The second is one I finally found after a 30yr search about a year before he passed. At $50, I over-paid for it because it's the only one I've seen outside three others on this forum, and the only other one I've ever seen in person.
I was finally able to find a copy of a 1949 ad on eBay with this vise listed. Columbian only offered this style vise for a short time after the war, and only in a 4" size. It took this forum several years to determine who made it, and eventually what the model number it was. I still haven't determined the start or end dates for its run.
This isn't a heavy duty vise, but the first one served a 57yr second life and is still going. The second also has plenty of life left in it. Not bad for an economy vise.
Jake, you having two of them makes you rare!
But, because you have 2, you definitely would be the best to say. I am thinking that if it is forged steel plates and welded together, it could be a wolf in sheep's clothing, something like a Milhoff...more solid than an expected from an "economy" vise.

IIRC, Dawn had one that looked identical.
This swivel Jaw parkinson
View media item 61580The only one in existence that I am aware of, though there probably is a few about somewhere.


Have to be this Jacobson for me. Haven't seen many around like this one.
Heres a few of mine
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I found this one in my "pile". Not sure where I acquired it. Columbian pat pending on side. All welded plate, no castings.I'm sure I have rarer models of vises, but this is probably my rarest vise given its near pristine condition, with box and instruction sheet. It's available for sale/trade - who likes PK?
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