KMScott
Well-known member
Charles Parker Semi Steel # 806. 6" jaws that opens to 9-1/2" and weights 159lbs.
, KM

In that era, ridgid had purchased Desmond....
In that era, ridgid had purchased Desmond....
This rigidlumbian had 1983 casting marks on it. It was an M3 style with bolt on jaws instead of pin on, but I also have a 1988 marked 206 that is the M2 style with pin on “tee” jaws so it’s hard to say for certain. Reed ran the N/S series until 83 (last dated catalog to surface so far) before switching to columbian made vises.
![]()
Great info, thanks! I wonder why they outsourced production to Columbian rather than continue with the Desmond factory, unless Desmond didn’t make their own vise?
Ridgid Simplex vises......(1964-1979)
Ridgid Columbian vises...(1980-1998)
Hey gang, while actually looking at the spreadsheet on a computer where it was easy to view, I found that Sargent is very poorly represented. Not that I have any, I just have a 1911 catalog reprint with a few pages of them, thought I'd offer them up here.
Thanks for sharing. Going by the illustrations, they are just Parker rebrands.
Hey gang, while actually looking at the spreadsheet on a computer where it was easy to view, I found that Sargent is very poorly represented. Not that I have any, I just have a 1911 catalog reprint with a few pages of them, thought I'd offer them up here. There is a few other catalogs I have to poke through, from 1894, 1910 and 1922. The 1894 has a different numbering for the oval slide vises. They are also the only ones to survive into the 1922 catalog. There were some fractional inch differences in the jaw dimensions between the catalogs.
They can be found here and following
https://kirkhmb.smugmug.com/Mechanic-Tools/Mechanics-Tools/i-jDW3QjZ
1 cover page, and 5 photos of catalog pages
Hopefully by the time you get to them, they will all be rotated upright.
The full list of their catalogs is here
https://archive.org/search.php?query=sargent tool
Here is the 1911 1st page
https://archive.org/details/SargentToolBook1911Catalog/page/n57/mode/2up
![]()

Howard Iron Works Vise - 5” jaws, 80 lbs.
Pexto #23. No spec:s yet.
Stephens Coachmaker's vise. 3-1/2" jaws that opens to 10" and weights 38-1/2lbs.
KMS, the Pexto resembles a Stanley Sweetheart bench vise.
And the Stevens, just WOW.
Pexto #23. No spec:s yet.
I believe this to be a Swindens #2. 2"jaws that opens to 2" and weights 8-1/2 lbs. Pipe jaws are 1-1/2" wide. If anyone can verify the thanks in advance.
I'm pretty sure the Howard Iron Works vise originally had 4-1/2" jaws before the weld job, making it a model #103.
It's always good to see the old double-swivel vises, especially the rare ones.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Is that the one that I see for sale on eBay?---Nice rotator.
Is that the one that I see for sale on eBay?---Nice rotator.


I can't remember where I got this catalog scan from or if it's even the correct model of the above vise, but the weight listed is considerably more than the Prentiss 58 or Columbian 108-1/2 chipping vises.
Another "never seen by me before" vise.
![]()




