Thanks: 0
Likes: 0
Needs Pictures: 0
Picture(s) thanks: 0
Results 1 to 15 of 58
Thread: Best metal work vice
-
18th Feb 2011, 10:43 PM #1Member: Blue and white apron brigade
- Join Date
- Feb 2006
- Location
- Perth
- Posts
- 7,189
Best metal work vice
I'm about to start building a welding table and would like to put a vice on the table.
Questions
1) Is this a good idea or should I not put a vice on the table.
2) If a vice is a good idea what is the best type for welding?
I already have a 4" standard bench vice that I bought 43 years ago and it is still OK but I want to keep that on a small work bench that I use to work on Chainsaws.
What about these Multipurpose Vices - any good?
The other vice I like the look of is an offset fabrication vice like this.
The sort of things I use a welder for are relatively small - ie not trailers or bigger stuff.
Thoughts?
Thanks
-
18th Feb 2011, 11:34 PM #2I break stuff...
- Join Date
- Aug 2010
- Location
- Toorloo Arm, VIC
- Age
- 39
- Posts
- 1,300
What are you actually going to use the vice for? Just holding things at a convenient height for welding? If that is the case, either of those would probably do the job.
If however, you have a tendency like me to put a thick chunk of metal in the vice and then belt the living daylights out of it with a mash hammer to bend it over, or use a 6 foot piece of water pipe to bend it, I'd be looking (like I am at the moment) for a Dawn vice. I prefer cast, not fabricated, someone may disagree (would be interested to know why if so). You can get both the offset style and the regular style in 150mm cast, as well as fabricated.
I have a cheap 100mm cast vice (probably Chinese) that popped the front clean off (straight line down from the jaw, only thing holding it on still was the screw) when I tried to bend a piece of 6mm x 30mm mild steel in it. Welded it back on with the tig, now don't try to bend or lever thick metal with it anymore!
As far as whether you should put the vice on the table or not - that really is up to you. I keep my little one under the bench, and just drag it out and sit it on top when I'm using it to hold stuff for welding. Haven't bolted it down because its more useful having it mobile around the garage and other places (took it to a mates place the other day to fold some 1.6mm sheet), and because the only spot I would put it in is likely to get in the way of other things. However, no reason why you can't bolt yours down, and unbolt it if you need the space...
-
18th Feb 2011, 11:40 PM #3Most Valued Member
- Join Date
- Jun 2007
- Location
- sydney ( st marys )
- Age
- 64
- Posts
- 4,890
Vice Bench All Steel Offset Eng 150mm (eBay item 180602654281 end time 19-Mar-11 13:36:50 AEDST) : Home
I bought one of these recently to replace a similar Dawn ,cant fault it at the moment,after getting it I think their 4" would also be suitable for a welding vice.
-
18th Feb 2011, 11:41 PM #4Member: Blue and white apron brigade
- Join Date
- Feb 2006
- Location
- Perth
- Posts
- 7,189
Thanks for the info J&H.
For that vice it would be mainly holding while welding, cutting and grinding. But the temptation for a bit of light belting will always be there.
I do like the idea of a mobile vice.
-
18th Feb 2011, 11:50 PM #5Dave J Guest
The offset vises are good for holding things vertical for grinding etc. I have had my standard 6 inch fabricated vise for 25 years and am happy with it, but sometimes I wish I never sold my old 8 inch cast offset vise.
Dave
-
19th Feb 2011, 12:32 PM #6
If you are building a steel welding bench think about an extension at the front of the bench big enough to mount the vice on, this gives you better axcess to the vice and allows you to grip longer items easier
Ashore
The trouble with life is there's no background music.
-
19th Feb 2011, 02:30 PM #7
Hi BobL
Vice design and mounting
Its good you are giving thought to the vise abefore the table is built.At some stage for sure, on some applicatiions the vice is going to be in the bloody way of your job. For this reason you might give thought to a demountable jobbie as per as per a Hayman Reese towbar type drawbar connection. Thinking further,if its going to be a fabricating vice its very handy to have an offset jaw .
With this vice one can drop along piece of pipe or tube to the ground and have extra support and stabilty for what ever operation is being being performed.
Another variant is to mount the vice on a post and fit a quadrant arc allowing the jaws to move 90 degrees out of normal plane.
Vice construction material
Cast iron ,fabricated steel, fabricated stainless steel and cast steel are materials vices have and are being built from.
Cast iron is generally fine for fitting type work but won't take to be beat upon and will break ,Chinese ones, sometimes even without being beaten upon. Nothing wrong the fabricated vices at all, the kids at school have made fabricated 5"vices and they are very robust.Fabricated stainleess are available for marine and oil rig work.We DIY mortals coudln't afford even the handle as a spare part -very expensive.
The cast steel ones were available from the very early auto supply stores. Mine's a Russian jobbie built like a brick out house yet can rotate on a plate for 90 degrees.I can beat the snot out of whatever I like and suffer no damage.Cast steel behaves like fabricated steel.One could possibily bent given you were big and stupid enough,but it still would take a real effort.
For welding I would make it a fabbed vice ,I have drawings but they don't scan well as the linework is to feint.
Basically there are 75 x 40 x5 mm channel x 300L using 10mm thick side plates,12 mm jaw supports mounted on a 150 x 160 x 10 base plate.
I am hoping to get better drawings complted soon ,but could do some hand sketches.if needed.
Multi purpose vices look ok for pipe and r bar work but I have no experience on them.
Grahame
-
19th Feb 2011, 04:38 PM #8Member: Blue and white apron brigade
- Join Date
- Feb 2006
- Location
- Perth
- Posts
- 7,189
Thanks Grahame, some very useful ideas there. I like the idea of the removable vice very much.
-
19th Feb 2011, 05:42 PM #9
Hi BobL,
Grahame's idea of a removable vise would be handy if you are fabricating something that needs the whole table surface to set up. Nothing worse than having the vise sticking up and getting in the way!.. Being able to remove the vise and keep it out of the weather would be a handy thing too.
Good idea!
For that vice it would be mainly holding while welding, cutting and grinding. But the temptation for a bit of light belting will always be there.
Regards
Ray
-
19th Feb 2011, 06:03 PM #10Member
- Join Date
- Dec 2010
- Location
- nsw
- Posts
- 51
If its going on a welding table I'd go for a cheaper fabricated one preferably an off set type, the towbar idea for mounting is a good idea.
-
19th Feb 2011, 07:14 PM #11Andy Mac Guest
I agree the offset vice is probably the most versatile, and can take some punishment. The vice on the welding bench at work needs to hit with the grinder on a regular basis, to cleanup the jaws, especially after accidently welding stuff to it!! I also have made three of these holding devices, which aren't always the first choice, but often the best option! The last one I made is removable, so leaves a clear work space.
Now I can't find the post I made about that
Cheers
-
19th Feb 2011, 07:20 PM #12Member: Blue and white apron brigade
- Join Date
- Feb 2006
- Location
- Perth
- Posts
- 7,189
Weather won't be a problem as the welding table is going to be inside (under a vented hood connected to my new 3HP DC with a suitable spark arrestor in line). Table is going to be relatively small - maybe 1.0 x 0.5 m. - I'm thinking of having the removable vise able to be located either L or R hand side, and maybe also in the middle, of the table. I'm also thinking of fold out/away steel panels/wings that can come out from the wall to reduce spark/filings/slag spatter spraying too far around the shed. Also am install a sink nearby to have ready access to cooling. I've always wanted something like this and this will be my first chance to build something that incorporates all these ideas from scratch. Any ideas and criticisms welcome .
I realize that you're not necessarily going to be hammering on this vise a lot, but this is a good time to mention the blacksmith's style leg vise, as far as I know it's the best choice when you plan on whacking stuff with a heavy hammer.. I think it's the only vise that's designed to take that kind of punishment.
-
19th Feb 2011, 07:31 PM #13
To paraphrase someone we all know.
Those are not vices this is a VICE.
150mm jaw width
125 x 75 channel slide x 450 long
one of my students made for his dad who drives his own truck.
The vices in the shed were not big enough tohold stuff for repair.
Grahame
-
19th Feb 2011, 08:17 PM #14Pink 10EE owner
- Join Date
- Aug 2008
- Location
- near Rockhampton
- Posts
- 6,218
I think you need a couple..... I have a commercial fabricated one very similar to the one Graham has a photo of above.... It is old and probably a Dawn...
also have one that you can flip upside down and spin around for holding pipe.. Got it cheap at an auction.. like this http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/...500_AA300_.jpg
-
19th Feb 2011, 09:08 PM #15Member: Blue and white apron brigade
- Join Date
- Feb 2006
- Location
- Perth
- Posts
- 7,189
My 43 yr old 4" bench vice is a "Joplin" and it is still good despite a regular belting.
also have one that you can flip upside down and spin around for holding pipe.. Got it cheap at an auction.. like this http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/...500_AA300_.jpg
I have 3 wood working vices so I should have at least 3 metal working vices
Wait . . . . I also have a little machinists vice that I inherited from FIL.
Similar Threads
-
SOLD: 6 inch metal working bench vice
By Sanity in forum METALWORK - Machinery, Equipment, MARKETReplies: 4Last Post: 28th Feb 2011, 03:18 PM -
looking for a metal work course after woodwork
By euphorbia in forum METALWORK GENERALReplies: 3Last Post: 28th May 2007, 06:28 PM -
How to make a metal vice
By Unit_01 in forum METALWORK GENERALReplies: 23Last Post: 26th May 2007, 09:11 PM