dr_clyde
Well-known member
The thread on the Fireball vise got me looking into the actual, factual logistics of making a USA bench vise at a price that is not complete highway robbery.
This is primarily an exercise in cost research and design, as well as manufacturing logistics for me at my shop, but if there's enough interest I might take it farther.
If this works out to be cost prohibitive or there isn't nearly the interest that seems so readily apparent, I'll probably just chalk it up to a fun research project, but if the stars align and we can make it happen, I'll make some vises and put them up for sale.
I have a couple questions for the vise nerds of GJ.
Let's assume the following. As much USA made as possible. Highest available workmanship and quality of materials. Well designed and ergonomic. Aesthetically pleasing and nice to use. Let's assume I can make a good product.
First, what size vise is the most useful for you and the most likely you'd buy?
What price point would you be willing to pay for a 3" vise, 4.5" vise, and a 6" vise?
Does material of the vise matter to you? Like ductile cast iron vs cast alloy steel vs machined wrought stock?
How important is the anvil surface of the vise? Do you use it regularly enough to warrant it being larger or more durable?
How often do you change the jaws? Would there be interest in different jaw shapes, materials or configs? Some easy ones that come to mind would be soft copper or aluminum, vee jaws for grabbing round stock, brake jaws for bending small sheet metal brackets, jaws with cutouts for A/N fittings or similar, or maybe hard plastic jaws like Delrin or UHMW for soft stuff.
Do you prefer hard jaws or soft? Serrated or smooth?
Would jaws that interchange with a Kurt style mill vise be a selling point or a feature for you?
How often do you use a swivel base? Is that something you would like to have as an option or come as a completely separate vise? Like, you can buy a swivel later if you want to or save the money and skip it if you don't use them.
Would a hex shape on the spindle be something you'd use? Like, you can use breaker bars or ratchets on it or maybe use a speed handle or torque wrench or something. I dunno. Just spitballing ideas.
How about an offset vise? The ability to hold stock vertically without interfering with the spindle or screw, much like the old Dawn vises from Down Under.
Are pipe jaws something anyone actually uses?
What about throat depth? How deep is useful enough without being excessive. I personally like a larger throat on my vises, but it comes with cost usually.
Is weight a concern? Would a 200+ pound vise be an issue to where you'd not buy it due to the size?
Let me know your thoughts.
This is primarily an exercise in cost research and design, as well as manufacturing logistics for me at my shop, but if there's enough interest I might take it farther.
If this works out to be cost prohibitive or there isn't nearly the interest that seems so readily apparent, I'll probably just chalk it up to a fun research project, but if the stars align and we can make it happen, I'll make some vises and put them up for sale.
I have a couple questions for the vise nerds of GJ.
Let's assume the following. As much USA made as possible. Highest available workmanship and quality of materials. Well designed and ergonomic. Aesthetically pleasing and nice to use. Let's assume I can make a good product.
First, what size vise is the most useful for you and the most likely you'd buy?
What price point would you be willing to pay for a 3" vise, 4.5" vise, and a 6" vise?
Does material of the vise matter to you? Like ductile cast iron vs cast alloy steel vs machined wrought stock?
How important is the anvil surface of the vise? Do you use it regularly enough to warrant it being larger or more durable?
How often do you change the jaws? Would there be interest in different jaw shapes, materials or configs? Some easy ones that come to mind would be soft copper or aluminum, vee jaws for grabbing round stock, brake jaws for bending small sheet metal brackets, jaws with cutouts for A/N fittings or similar, or maybe hard plastic jaws like Delrin or UHMW for soft stuff.
Do you prefer hard jaws or soft? Serrated or smooth?
Would jaws that interchange with a Kurt style mill vise be a selling point or a feature for you?
How often do you use a swivel base? Is that something you would like to have as an option or come as a completely separate vise? Like, you can buy a swivel later if you want to or save the money and skip it if you don't use them.
Would a hex shape on the spindle be something you'd use? Like, you can use breaker bars or ratchets on it or maybe use a speed handle or torque wrench or something. I dunno. Just spitballing ideas.
How about an offset vise? The ability to hold stock vertically without interfering with the spindle or screw, much like the old Dawn vises from Down Under.
Are pipe jaws something anyone actually uses?
What about throat depth? How deep is useful enough without being excessive. I personally like a larger throat on my vises, but it comes with cost usually.
Is weight a concern? Would a 200+ pound vise be an issue to where you'd not buy it due to the size?
Let me know your thoughts.






