Cool old vise! I had a vise close to that size that I mounted on a plate on top of 4" pipe welded to a 18 wheeler truck rim for a base. That was the most useful but heavy piece of equipment I had. It was semi portable but very stable, so I could move it around. Being able to work all the way around the vise and not having it be hampered by being bolted to a bench was a boon for welding and doing heavy work. Unfortunately I needed the space more and don't do that much of that kind of work so hauled it off to my brother. It is the perfect companion to an anvil. That's why you see that kind of setup in so many blacksmith shops.
rendoman (Jul 19, 2017)
Hi rendoman
That’s a nice heavy duty vice but I think that your asking the question if 3mm plate is enough support means you probably know the answer (no is isn’t).
A sub base would need to span the depth of your worktop to be effective, for my money I would weld supports front to back with angle or square tube under the worktop and bolt through that, I know its a pain but its worth it and would keep your workspace clear.
rendoman (Jul 19, 2017)
Hi all!
Thanks! Yes, you're right! I have many doubts about my table, for sure it's not a fast and easy job, but I've noticed that the Surface is not planar and it bends with weight at the center. I was thinking about placing a large steel square (10mm thick) on the Surface, 4 times larger than the base of the vise. Working under the top plate of table is hard, more there are the drawers and the legs. i have to check if I have enough space to put square tube or angle, your advise is good!
Pedestal or bench mounted, be sure stationary jaw is on a vertical plane to the edge of the clamping surface. Otherwise you restrict the vise capacity of length and trying to work the end of a bar or other stock. Below is link to other conditions of mounting vises.
Thread: Obliged to post; Mounting of bench vises.
Some reason link is inoperative, so...
Copy and paste
Thread: Obliged to post; Mounting of bench vises.
But Wow! THAT is a vise. I give up any one of my vices for a vise like that, Lol. The horn supporting moving jaw looks very serious.
I know you'll tear it down and renovate it some. Best trick I know is to count how much backlash there is between screw and jaw movement. Turn a spacer of equivalent thickness and add a coil spring; not too heavy, just enough to make the handle park at whatever angle you place it. It will hold it open when two hands are required to load the workpiece.
Last edited by Toolmaker51; Jul 19, 2017 at 04:51 PM. Reason: Link iffy so copy/ paste
Sincerely,
Toolmaker51
...we'll learn more by wandering than searching...
If you have the space pedestal mount it. I have a 6" swivel vise mounted on heavy pipe Dynabolted to the floor 30" from wall and end of bench by door and the top is 4" above the bench top. Rock solid and allows full use of the bench. The only bench vise I like now on a bench is a woodworking vise as being flush to the top they don't get in the way when you desperately need 'that' corner of the bench and are fine mounted away from a corner.
rendoman (Jul 19, 2017)
Hi all!
I just finished, the position is pretty good for my purpose, I added a welded plate on the table, fast and clean. I Put some molykote inside the screw of the vise and now it's ready!
I'm thinking about your advice to make a floor stand, but for the blacksmith vise, I want to free the middle space of the table
NortonDommi (Aug 12, 2017), Toolmaker51 (Aug 11, 2017)
Great job Stefano. That vise still astounds me, especially design that supports moving jaw from underneath. That's no Asian knockoff, for sure. I'd wager the housing has a fit bored to diameter of screw enclosure too.
What a find.
Sincerely,
Toolmaker51
...we'll learn more by wandering than searching...
rendoman (Aug 12, 2017)
rendoman (Aug 12, 2017)
Thank you very much!
The housing hole is pretty tight, it's bored to match the shield of screw. Everything is massive, in steel, not cast iron, and imho very well made.
Unluckily i'm not able (like the anvil) to find the name of builder, it can be an italian product, but internet lacks of info about old equipment
I'm thinking about the floor support for the blacksmith vise, I have a round hollow large disck ( about 16" ) that can be a good base, but i'm not sure about size, type of locking vise
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