I just bought a very small 0.3 to 4mm drill chuck from Chronos, would be great for a small sensitive drill.
Attachment 21100
I turned mine into a small hand pinvice
Attachment 21099
A few more pictures and details are here: Pinvice – glue-it.com
Printable View
I just bought a very small 0.3 to 4mm drill chuck from Chronos, would be great for a small sensitive drill.
Attachment 21100
I turned mine into a small hand pinvice
Attachment 21099
A few more pictures and details are here: Pinvice – glue-it.com
Very nice and great idea and with the opening of the chuck there is a lot that will fit. Very nice.
Nelson
Nice, Love your chuck key. Also glue-it.com is a great web site! Thanks for posting.
Ralph
If you make one of these think about drilling an axial hole all the way through the handle. This allows you to hold long wires, rods, etc. in order to grind the ends, etc..
Most, though not all, small pin vises have axial holes as described for just this reason.
Another handy bit is to mount a freely turning sleeve on the pin vise handle; I normally mount it right behind the chuck. Then, to grind a point on a rod, grasp the sleeve and spin the pin vise that holds the rod with the other hand. A handle that threads into the sleeve can make this operation easier. In another variation the sleeve can be grasped in the bench vise and the part turned to perform filing operations on it. Other applications will suggest themselves to you.
Many pin vises employ collets or, worse, come in sets, one for each of a selection of sizes. Making a vise with a continuously adjustable chuck as was done by the OP overcomes these limitations very nicely. Very small adjustable chucks can be expensive but the ones made for Dremel tools...
https://www.amazon.com/Dremel-4486-M...justable+chuck
are quite reasonable. I used one of these to make a small pin vise...
Attachment 21125
As suggested, the handle has a through hole. I still wanted a "spinner" on the top to use when drilling with the vise. The spinner shown is restrained by a tiny 0-80 setscrew that fits into a circumferential groove in the brass spinner. This arrangement allows the spinner to be removed easily when holding long objects.
<!-- BEGIN /var/www/html/homemadetools/protected/modules/zeus/views/tool/postUpdate.php -->
Thanks editor@glue-it.com! We've added your Pin Vise to our Workholding category,
as well as to your builder page: editor@glue-it.com's Homemade Tools. Your receipt:
<div id="blocks"> <div class="block b1 pngfix"> <div class="bimg"> <div> <a href="http://www.homemadetools.net/homemade-pin-vise-5"> <img src="/uploads/208551/homemade-pin-vise-5.jpeg"/> </a> </div> </div> <div class="head pngfix"></div> <div class="left pngfix"></div> <div class="right pngfix"></div> <div class="blockover b1 pngfix"> <div class="title"> <a href="http://www.homemadetools.net/homemade-pin-vise-5">Pin Vise</a> <span> by <a href="http://www.homemadetools.net/builder/editor%40glue-it.com">editor@glue-it.com</a></span> </div> <div class="tags">tags: <a href='http://www.homemadetools.net/tag/vise'>vise</a> </div> </div> </div> </div>
<!-- END /var/www/html/homemadetools/protected/modules/zeus/views/tool/postUpdate.php -->