Dave Bonzo
Member
- Joined
- Jul 11, 2017
- Messages
- 23
First things first: I'm somewhat new here - hi! - and still learning the search function (I think it dislikes me, to be honest) so please don't vivisect me if I've missed an obvious thread/answer regarding my question. That being said...
I picked up a little 6" Speed Vise, yesterday. I probably paid too much for it - a few hundred - but it came with a free Powermatic 1200 so I think I'm ahead in the deal, overall.
Pictured: The dingus in question.

As best I can tell, the vise is in decent shape; it feels reasonably tight, the screw looks good, and although it could use a really good cleaning and a new set of jaws, it's functional as-is. The problem is that I'm a rather annoying sort of person, so the fact that someone managed to perforate portions of the base is driving me slowly insane.
Pictured: I haven't slept in three days.

I'm honestly not sure how this got mangled quite so badly, but that's water under the bridge; what I would like to know - $20 says that this is the part where I get vivisected - is what this portion of the vise is actually made from, and how to fix it. I assumed that the base was either grey or ductile iron, but upon using The Google, I found that Penn Tool describes it as a "semi-steel casting" which is not only a bit confusing, but outside the realm of my meager knowledge. As best I can tell from further usage of The Googling, semi-steel is kind of like iron and kind of like steel, but not really either one...so, I'm a bit stuck.
To clarify: I think I understand cast iron repairs (which means I probably don't understand them at all) and I'm reasonably sure that I can figure out a way to repair divots in steel (which means that I definitely don't know what I'm doing and haven't realized it yet) but how do I repair semi-steel when I'm not really sure what it actually is? Do I need to try to drill it a bit more to see what the metal looks like and then either braze or weld depending on results, or is there another method, aside from offering a fattened calf to The Old Gods and waiting for enlightenment? Should I just take it to someone who actually knows what they're doing?
Again, I know I can just use it as-is (and I probably should do that, since the drill press is ready to run, excepting the fact that it has exactly two too many phases listed on its motor plate, but that's a problem for another day) but I'd like to fix it...so any insight from here would be helpful. I mean, I don't want to waste an entire cow if I don't have to: those things are expensive.
I picked up a little 6" Speed Vise, yesterday. I probably paid too much for it - a few hundred - but it came with a free Powermatic 1200 so I think I'm ahead in the deal, overall.
Pictured: The dingus in question.

As best I can tell, the vise is in decent shape; it feels reasonably tight, the screw looks good, and although it could use a really good cleaning and a new set of jaws, it's functional as-is. The problem is that I'm a rather annoying sort of person, so the fact that someone managed to perforate portions of the base is driving me slowly insane.
Pictured: I haven't slept in three days.

I'm honestly not sure how this got mangled quite so badly, but that's water under the bridge; what I would like to know - $20 says that this is the part where I get vivisected - is what this portion of the vise is actually made from, and how to fix it. I assumed that the base was either grey or ductile iron, but upon using The Google, I found that Penn Tool describes it as a "semi-steel casting" which is not only a bit confusing, but outside the realm of my meager knowledge. As best I can tell from further usage of The Googling, semi-steel is kind of like iron and kind of like steel, but not really either one...so, I'm a bit stuck.
To clarify: I think I understand cast iron repairs (which means I probably don't understand them at all) and I'm reasonably sure that I can figure out a way to repair divots in steel (which means that I definitely don't know what I'm doing and haven't realized it yet) but how do I repair semi-steel when I'm not really sure what it actually is? Do I need to try to drill it a bit more to see what the metal looks like and then either braze or weld depending on results, or is there another method, aside from offering a fattened calf to The Old Gods and waiting for enlightenment? Should I just take it to someone who actually knows what they're doing?
Again, I know I can just use it as-is (and I probably should do that, since the drill press is ready to run, excepting the fact that it has exactly two too many phases listed on its motor plate, but that's a problem for another day) but I'd like to fix it...so any insight from here would be helpful. I mean, I don't want to waste an entire cow if I don't have to: those things are expensive.


