News:

  " There are no strangers here; Only friends you haven't yet met." -William Butler Yeats

Main Menu

Defiance Wedge vise 1240

Started by skipskip, November 02, 2020, 11:12:21 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

skipskip

Looks like a gift the wife got  for Willie,  Christmastime.

actually kind of neat toy

sadly Mickey got to the box on this one

nov004 by Skip Albright, on Flickr
A place for everything and everything on the floor

lptools

Member of PHARTS-  Perfect Handle Admiration, Restoration and Torturing Society

coolford

Something I have never seen before, did you try it out?

Bill Houghton

I had a similar one, two aluminum castings, but the wedge tended to lift out.  If you look at the homegrown ones, you'll notice the wedge and the angled board the wedge operates against tend to be beveled to mate with each other.  Search on "sliding wedge board clamp" on the interweb for examples.

That is, though, a cool find.

Jim C.

#4
Quote from: coolford on November 03, 2020, 07:17:40 AM
Something I have never seen before, did you try it out?

You know, I thought I had one of those somewhere, but I never tried it out.  I dug it out of a drawer.  I'll report back.   :grin:

Jim C.
Our Go-To Type Study Member

Jim C.

Yes, when firmly screwed to a solid, heavy surface, the wedge vise holds a workpiece tightly.  I just planed a cut-off scrap of brick molding with no problem.  For small work, I'd say it's functional.

Jim C.
Our Go-To Type Study Member

Jim C.

Yeah, it's a handy little jig as long as you have something to secure it to.

Jim C.
Our Go-To Type Study Member

lptools

Thanks for the demo!! And for showing us your Shoulder Plane, and, is the other one a Bedrock??
Member of PHARTS-  Perfect Handle Admiration, Restoration and Torturing Society

Jim C.

Quote from: lptools on November 04, 2020, 07:27:36 PM
Thanks for the demo!! And for showing us your Shoulder Plane, and, is the other one a Bedrock??

No problem.  The shoulder plane is a #92, and you're correct, the bench plane is a #604 bedrock. Good eye!

Jim C.


Our Go-To Type Study Member

Bill Houghton

Interesting; the one I recently gave to the Habitat ReStore looks very like yours but never worked well for me.

I've seen pictures of people fastening those to a board and then fastening the board to the bench, so it doesn't need to be permanently on the bench.

Some of the pictures I've seen also suggest a board support that's the thickness of the base of the wedge device, so that the board comes into the slot level.

Jim C.

#10
Hey Bill,

I don't actually use the thing.  I had to dig it out from the bottom of drawer that holds small clamps.  I have no clue where I got it.   Like I said, it's functional and it needs to be firmly secured.  It works okay on short boards standing on edge and short thick stock.  Longer, thinner stock is a little less easy to work for the reason you mentioned.  The thickness of the wedge base raises the workpiece just enough to create airspace under the center.  That creates a bow when you're pushing a plane across it.  As the plane goes forward, once it gets to that unsupported section of the workpiece it bows down and the plane stops cutting.  Consequently one would need to shim the center of the workpiece to avoid that bowing action.  That's a hassle.  But like I said, when comes to short stock, it works okay.  Keeping it permanently screwed to my main (and only) big work surface doesn't make sense either.  I can't even imagine how many times I'd curse it as it got in the way of something else I was trying to do.  I have since relegated it back to the bottom of my small clamp drawer.

Jim C.
Our Go-To Type Study Member