This junkyard bench vise gets cleaned, repaired, and restored into a fully functional workshop tool. Proof that old tools ...
There is nothing like experience. As contractors, one of thelessons we learned over years is that hard work pays off. However,as you may have discovered, hard work alone doesn’t always yielddesired ...
A bench vice can be one of the most used tools in your workshop. For those that don’t have a workshop [Matt] built a vice that clamps to a table. He used scrap wood, MDF, threaded rod, washers, nuts, ...
A bench vise rescued from the scrap pile undergoes a complete restoration to become a reliable and eye-catching workshop ...
A vise isn't the first thing you buy when setting up your workshop, but maybe it should be. They aren't the sexiest tools and the basic designs haven't changed in centuries, but when you need a solid ...
For most of us, a vise is the sort of thing you clamp onto the edge of a workbench and crank down by hand. It might even be made of plastic, depending on the kind of work you find yourself doing with ...
And, like a larger traditional bench vise, it has two jaws – one fixed, one moveable – between which the object in question gets clamped. Whereas the jaws on a conventional bench vise are just flat ...
Every good workshop has a good vise. But the need clamp things may arise when you are on the trail or at a job site and nowhere near a vise and workbench. For these scenarios, there's the Wilton ...