![]() |
Is there a Parker Bros. hammergun here?
https://static.mfah.com/collection/2...jpg&quality=90
Maybe the one on the back wall, far right, next to the window? In the collection of (but not on display) The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston Artist -- Edgar Melville Ward, American, 1839–1915 Title -- The Gunsmith Shop Date -- c. 1890–1895 Medium -- Oil on canvas Dimensions -- 24 × 20 in. (61 × 50.8 cm) Frame: 35 3/8 × 31 3/8 × 4 in. (89.9 × 79.7 × 10.2 cm) Credit Line -- Museum purchase funded by "One Great Night in November, 1995" Current Location -- Not on view https://static.mfah.com/collection/2...jpg&quality=90 |
Man, I would love to have a print of that to hang in my shop.
SRH |
Stan,
I just googled The gunsmith Shop. Fine art America sells prints of it. |
Interesting way to mount a post vice. A blacksmith would attach the post to the ground or to a block of wood on the ground so that it would absorb heavy hammer blows. That's the purpose of the leg. I suppose a repair gunsmith wouldn't need the vice for that purpose -- and back in the day you used what you had.
|
i have seen a post vice mounted like that in a gunsmith shop -
i do like the center hole creel on the wall - that is an early design which fits the time period of the village out the window |
I have a post vise mounted much like that in my shop. Many post vises are still in use by fine craftsmen.
Here's a couple links to Marcello Giuilani working on Perazzis, using a post vise. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g_6jzMl8kDA https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RudIDm41-ao SRH |
I'm not a total idiot, and haven't worked as a machinist for fifty years, but my 130 pound Parker vise is mounted to a wooden bench as are a couple of lesser ones. "To each his own". Post mounted vises are for those who need them.
|
Quote:
Thank you, Jeff. I will look into that now. Best, SRH |
I have one that still needs to be mounted
I went to a flea market a couple years ago with one of the top modern longrifle makers and he spotted one for sale, and told me I’d not see a better one at that price - so I hauled it home |
Quote:
SRH |
John, Thanks for bringing this to our attention. In spite of our various "vices," I'd also like to think that the gun you speculate is a Parker is indeed an "Old Reliable." Thanks for posting.
|
I just ordered a print,when the dogsled gets it here in spring ill let you all know if there's a Parker there or not.
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
Check out the description of this blacksmith vice for sale: https://www.blacksmithsdepot.com/post-leg-vise |
That leg vise for sale looks pretty flimsy by my standards. I'm guessing it was made in China or India. Many years ago I saw new ones for sale in a homesteader catalog for $1200. They looked to have been made the proper stout way. I have two vintage leg vises and have seen many more up here in remote abandoned gold mine sites. One of mine is ~120# and very stout and was completely hand blacksmithed. It was made for larger work as the jaws become parallel at ~3-4". I had it mounted for some years on a stout bench with the leg countersunk into a timber on the floor. I could really crank on that thing without stressing the bench. I liked the leg for both beating whatever pc of metal needed beating and for cranking it hard. Generally from what I've seen most of these get supported on the floor by a timber capped with a pc of plate steel of 1/2" or more that had a hole for the tip of the leg, and if they aren't, such as in a dirt floored blacksmith shop, the vise would be mounted in front of a bench leg and maybe have a heavy home made steel bracket securing the vise leg to the bench leg, allowing the smith to at least crank hard on the vise. My other vise is a real treasure and ~75#. It was sticking out of the tundra about 60mi north of Nome. It was also made by a blacksmith and the teeth on the jaws were hand-cut and are as sharp today as when it was made in 1899, which is stamped on it and was the year that the gold rush in Nome kicked off. I don't think it was ever really used - though the leg is bent a bit so I'm guessing that someone cranked on it a bit too hard - and I've never mounted it myself. Were I to build a garage here, I'd build a stout timber bench that would accommodate both of them.
|
I hadn't thought about the advantage of a post vise in being able to walk around it. My big Parker is not a swivel base and I had jobs I couldn't do on it in my old shop. I just finished mounting it in my new shop and will have the same limitations. However, I have vises on every bench and the big Bertha is mostly for effect anyway.
|
Quote:
Its in the friggen front im going bald , the damned receding hair line -bain of all Dawe men . I feel horrible ,I'm going to my safe place |
Quote:
Being able to work around it is a big advantage for me. Other vises in the shop fill in for other jobs. Found mine in an old abandoned shop many years ago. SRH |
1 Attachment(s)
This gets the picture into the thread. The link is not working.
|
Thanks for posting the picture, John.
|
Thanks for the picture. Notice that the shotgun is closest to the window. Our gunsmith must be expecting "trouble", like from a groundhog or such.
|
For those quibbling about vises, the post vice did have the advantage of isolating the shock from the screw such that over time the screw wasnt damaged, this has been mentioned but its not just used for hot forging, or even heavy forging. Cold punching, drifting pins etc. Post vises mounted at filing height for bench work ( as in the photo) are faster to use and faster to adjust than an machinist vise because the jaw is spring loaded and there is no backlash in the screw.
|
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 12:46 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright © 1998 - 2025, Parkerguns.org