I bought an old mini bench vise, it is not an antique, but it is not very common.
I restore it,And made a little modification.
Attachment 24720
Attachment 24721
video in here
https://youtu.be/FrKVEBYXGuw
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I bought an old mini bench vise, it is not an antique, but it is not very common.
I restore it,And made a little modification.
Attachment 24720
Attachment 24721
video in here
https://youtu.be/FrKVEBYXGuw
Nice. But two possible improvements.
Why use a wire brush when it actually removes metal?
A heat gun would remove the paint/putty with out removing metal.
Also, chemical rust removal leaves rust in any cracks whilst electrolysis removes every single molecule of corrosion.
Over all though, a wonderful restoration.
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Thanks Make Everything! We've added your Vise Restoration to our Vises category,
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Well Done, Make Everything! That is a fine little vice and like the tiny anvil on the back. Looks to have a substantial carrier for a small vice and adding the brass washers is something I do also. A trick I use on stuck flat heads is to heat it slightly and use a Hand Impact driver...hasn't failed me yet. Don't know if you have them in CN but they've been around for 50 years, and pretty reasonably priced. You could also save the table mount by creating a washer on the lathe with a loose clearance hole for the screw tip and then pein it over. That way you could use it if you need to.
Thanks for sharing the restoration with us. I love saving these types of tools...a shop can not have too many vices! :p
PJ
Chelating is a lot slower but also works fine instead of the wire brush on rusty areas : use 10 parts of water to one part molasses. will not remove sound painted paint (without rust under). Parts must be quickly cleaned after removal or rust is accelerated..Lovely little vice.
Nice work, good use for cleanroom floor tiles too.