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Vise Info Thread

KMScott

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Wilton Glisenti W-G. Built in Italy. 5” jaws (125mm) that opens to 6-1/2”. Missing swivel base.
 

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four.cycle

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@CRSINMICH -

"Birtman" is not currently in my list, so this is a new one for me. (I will get it entered.)
Have you sent those screenshots to Mark at ITCL?
Was "Birtman" the OEM manufacturer on those last two "farmer vises", or were they outsourcing those?
 

CRSINMICH

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four.cycle: The 1931 Birtman catalog is already on the ITCL It was archived on February 25, 2025. That's where I got it. I'm fairly certain that ALL the vises were Rock Island.

p.s. The Rock Island story doesn't stop there. Stay tuned.
 

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CRSINMICH

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ATLAS VISES
Atlas Press Company Kalamazoo, Michigan
(Not related to Atlas Vise Company, Lowville, NY)


Atlas released catalogs in 1937 and 1940. There was a number change on Combinations vises by 1940.
Notice that all the model numbers begin with RI as in Rock Island. RIMCO stands for Rock Island Manufacturing Company

1937 1940 Atlas Combination vises.jpg

1940 Atlas vises (RIMCO) p59.jpg

Atlas Press Company was succeeded by Dake Engineering Company of Grand Haven, Michigan
Dake also made presses.
(Grand Haven and Kalamazoo are only 80 miles apart)

Atlas - Dake connection.jpg
 
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Outlawmws

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Atlas Press Company was succeeded by Dake Engineering Company of Grand Haven, Michigan
Dake also made presses.


Did Dake buy Atlas or did Atlas buy Dake? Note that Atlas bought Clausing (Lathes) but kept the Clausing name, and dropped Atlas at some point.
 

Outlawmws

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Man, that Roto-Vise sure looks like the Panavise. These were on the bench of every tech in Silicon Valley, along with a Kennedy 520 7 drawer machinist's box, and sets of Xcelite drivers during the glory days of Silicon Valley's development and manufacturing era.

I wonder if Bulova changed its name, or contracted with Panavise?
 

RTM

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Outlaw: Just judging by dates, I'd say Dake acquired Atlas. I knew about Atlas and Clausing but I stopped rabbit holing before it was too late.
I agree with this. My Dake arbor press has an Atlas number 001, and I deciphered my Atlas number 0 into a later Dake catalog (or something like that). Early Dake catalogs had nothing but hoists, 1944 was dual marked.


The 1937 atlas catalog had an arbor press on the front, and said they sold them, but none inside


1950 Dake has not dual marked.
 
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CRSINMICH

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RTM: I saw that 1950 Dake catalog and noticed that it had been overprinted with 'STERLING MACHINERY EXCHANGE' and it even added www.SterlingMachinery.com. Since there were no dot coms in 1950 I assumed Dake had changed hands again. Notice that the presses have DAKE on them. The information for Dake presses is probably accurate, though. It was at this point that I decided to stop chasing rabbits down holes.​


1950 Dake catalog.jpg
 

RTM

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RTM: I saw that 1950 Dake catalog and noticed that it had been overprinted with 'STERLING MACHINERY EXCHANGE' and it even added www.SterlingMachinery.com. Since there were no dot coms in 1950 I assumed Dake had changed hands again. Notice that the presses have DAKE on them. The information for Dake presses is probably accurate, though.​
Sterling is a reseller of new and used equipment. I suppose Dake gave them a few hundred catalogs with the overprint, to give to their customers. Or Sterling stamped, or had a local shop stamp their logo. And then someone added the .com when they scanned it. Could be Reed G., or Sterling themselves who added it before passing it on to Reed G. Vintage Machinery supplied the catalog to ITCL, and Reed gave it to VM.

 
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twagler

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HECSHARP Model 2-1/2 Clamp-on Hobby Vise
- Jaw Width 2-1/2"
- Opens up to 1-1/4"
- Weighs 2lbs, 2oz
- Country of Origin = Germany
- Stationary jaw at front, dynamic jaw to rear, similar in style to a Boley or Leinin watchmakers' vise but seems rather inexpensively made (minimal machining) so I would place it in the hobby vise category, not jeweler/watchmaker vise quality.

Hecsharp is already listed in the spreadsheet with a single entry showing a smaller model with 1-1/8" jaw width but thought that I would show off and document my recent acquisition of a larger model. It still has a good amount of its original paint, a rather nice green "hammered" finish.

1. Right side 1.jpg

2. Left side 2.jpg

3. Left rear iso 2.jpg

HECSHARP appears to have been an American-based import company only. The true manufacturing company within Germany is unknown. This same inexpensive hobby vise was brought to North America by other importers and sold branded as Strong Boy, Steelcraft, and Betterbuilt. In fact, my vise has no sticker left on it, so I'm calling it a HECSHARP just because that is the most commonly found version.
4. montage.jpg

From a Google search I found pictures of a wide variety of tools branded as HECSHARP, including pliers, axes, wrenches, socket sets, hand planes, etc., but nothing about the company itself. I then used Google Books to do a bit of deeper research and found out that HECSHARP is a USA trademark granted to the H.C. Schaerf Corp., so it would appear that the name is a bit of a play on words on the initials and last name of the company owner. The H.C. Schaerf Corp. was strictly an import company, with a Manhattan address, and never an actual manufacturer. The trademark was listed as first being used in 1951 and then cancelled in 2001. The company was listed as "Hand Tools - Europe, Asia" which matches well with what type of things that have been branded as Hecsharp and country of origin (Germany most common, then Japan, and others. H.C. Schaerf was listed as the President and Head Buyer. It would appear that they just sourced tools from many manufacturers and imported them into the USA via New York, although I found my vise in Ottawa, Canada.

The name H.C. Schaerf pops up again in the 1983 edition of the California Who's Who book, so it would appear that after his career as a successful importer and businessman, he likely retired to California.

Parent company executivesDirectory of United States ImportersPage6351978‎Snippet view.jpg
Trademark Registration.jpg
 

CRSINMICH

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WARE'S 1903 patent has detailed information about manufacturing the Steel Yoke Vise
 

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four.cycle

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Ware's vise was manufactured by Smart in Ontario:

Was it also being manufactured by Ware here in the U.S. ? :unsure:
 

1Bad55Chevy

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Man, getting that U bend bent accurately to fit both the vise body and D-jaw must have been a MFG nightmare to get done properly.

That leg stand is cool though.

I wonder how many got tweaked with regular use making them difficult (or impossible) to open and close!
 

TheRealZeus

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The U form was the achieved before the casting process even starts. That is quite a unique patent as the patent itself gives a glimpse into the casting process, since inclusive as the patent a ‘was method of manufacturing vises.’
 

four.cycle

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Okay, but....
What I was trying to ascertain was whether Joseph Lemuel Ware actually hung out a shingle in Minneapolis.

patent 673228 is shown on datamp.org as only having been manufactured by Smart in Ontario.
patent 745746 is shown on datamp.org has only having been manufactured by Smart in Ontario.

Note the "news announcement" (post #4465) states the vise is being "manufactured under contract for".

Collectively, that leads me to believe Ware himself wan't necessarily making anything in Minneapolis.
 

neophyte

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Man, getting that U bend bent accurately to fit both the vise body and D-jaw must have been a MFG nightmare to get done properly.

That leg stand is cool though.
I would presume they bent the rod, with somewhat equidistant ends,
Then, used a press with dies with top and bottom grooves to match the rid diameter, and pressed the u-bent rod down till the parallelism was the correct distance, even after springback.
Only once the dimensions were correct, would the rod ends be cut be cut and threaded, for the dynamic jaw.
At least, this would be my guess.
 

TheRealZeus

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I spoke too soon.
This 1907 item in The Iron Age clearly states that The Steel Yoke Vises were manufactured by JL Ware.
Plus, it adds some details not mentioned in other ads

1907 Ware item.jpg

These journal items from 1910 and 1912 show that Ware was very much invested in manufacturing

1910 & 1912 Ware factory items.jpg
Nice find Man. This is the only equipment I found for how they manufactured the U in the round stock, prior to casting.. More of a working theory…
IMG_2822.gif
 
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