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12-06-2019, 08:22 AM | #13 | ||||||
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As you were likely the model used for the painting ( I could tell by the small bald patch atop your head) I should think you'd already have a copy.
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The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to edgarspencer For Your Post: |
12-06-2019, 09:11 AM | #14 | |||||||
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Check out the description of this blacksmith vice for sale: https://www.blacksmithsdepot.com/post-leg-vise
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We lose ourselves in the things we love; we find ourselves there too. -Fred Bear |
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The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to Ronald Scott For Your Post: |
12-06-2019, 10:51 AM | #15 | ||||||
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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.
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The Following 3 Users Say Thank You to Richard Flanders For Your Post: |
12-06-2019, 11:04 AM | #16 | ||||||
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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.
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The Following 3 Users Say Thank You to Bill Murphy For Your Post: |
12-06-2019, 02:37 PM | #17 | |||||||
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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 |
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The Following 9 Users Say Thank You to chris dawe For Your Post: |
12-06-2019, 11:09 PM | #18 | |||||||
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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 |
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The Following 3 Users Say Thank You to Stan Hillis For Your Post: |
03-29-2023, 09:26 AM | #19 | ||||||
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This gets the picture into the thread. The link is not working.
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” It's amazing the things people will post when ignorance is celebrated on the internet.” — Meghan Superczynski, for Boss Shotshells, Bridgman, Michigan |
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The Following 8 Users Say Thank You to John Knobelsdorf II For Your Post: |
03-29-2023, 09:39 AM | #20 | ||||||
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Thanks for posting the picture, John.
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"Doubtless the good Lord could have made a better game bird than bobwhite, and better country to hunt him in...but equally doubtless, he never did." -- Guy de la Valdene (from A Handful of Feathers ) "'I promise you,' he said, 'on my word of honor, I won't die on the opening of the bird season.'" -- Robert Ruark (from The Old Man and the Boy) |
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