So I've had this Wilton bench vise sitting in my shop for a couple of years now waiting for a home. Today I decided to build the stand I've been planning in my head for awhile using an old skidsteer wheel as the base. I burned the round base and square mounting plate on my plasma table a couple nights ago and today cut my pipe to length. After drilling my mounting holes in both the base and plate, I welded all those together and hit everything with primer. Tomorrow I'll add my favorite Rustoleum color, sunburst yellow, and that'll finish the project.
The vise has a cool story behind it, too. My brother in law works in a coal mine and saw the vise in a dumpster. Knowing I like restoring tools, he dumpster dove and got it out for me. The handle was bent in several directions, the rotating base was welded into a fixed position, and the dynamic jaw was seized. A nice bath in Evaporust (that stuff is amazing!) got everything freed up and cleaned enough that I could get it apart and work through the weld on the swivel base. After that, cleanup, another Evaporust bath, a little work with a wire wheel and flap disc, and straightening the handle in a press, and it was ready for paint and reassembly, I did have to buy two new lock bolts and nuts as those couldn't be freed up and had to be cut off. I love how it came together and the fact that it now has a brand new start on a second life is just a really cool thing to me.
Anyway, that was today's shop project.
The vise has a cool story behind it, too. My brother in law works in a coal mine and saw the vise in a dumpster. Knowing I like restoring tools, he dumpster dove and got it out for me. The handle was bent in several directions, the rotating base was welded into a fixed position, and the dynamic jaw was seized. A nice bath in Evaporust (that stuff is amazing!) got everything freed up and cleaned enough that I could get it apart and work through the weld on the swivel base. After that, cleanup, another Evaporust bath, a little work with a wire wheel and flap disc, and straightening the handle in a press, and it was ready for paint and reassembly, I did have to buy two new lock bolts and nuts as those couldn't be freed up and had to be cut off. I love how it came together and the fact that it now has a brand new start on a second life is just a really cool thing to me.
Anyway, that was today's shop project.