Patrickm82
Well-known member
Very nice @MushCreek !
My Italian born mechanic back then was actually named “Tony”I'll bet the Miata spent a lot more time on the road and much less time in the shop!
Fix It Again, 'Tonio.My Italian born mechanic back then was actually named “Tony”![]()
I have a Wilton C3 that is frozen and missing some parts ...my new year's resolution is to restore it and if unsuccessful then sell it!
Vise history: It is missing the pipe jaws and the inner ring for swivel, and has a broken ear on the outer ring. I removed the spindle assembly but I am struggling to remove the pins in the end cap assembly (I think it has two pins, one from each side).
My next step: use a carbide bit and drill to remove pins. If successful removing both pins, I will continue to restore the vise and try to break it loose with heat and many tons of force. However, if unsuccessful on removing the pins then I will likely throw in the towel and sell this behemoth of a vise!
Looks great! Where did you source the handle bumpers?
I made the handle bumpers out of some round stock rubber of some kind. Not easy to drill or cut off cleanly. Time will tell if they will hold up.
Doesn't you Parker have the keeper in the screw to hold the handle in place?I use fat O-rings, the set on my Parker 974 have been there about 40 years.
Doesn't you Parker have the keeper in the screw to hold the handle in place?
I bought a sheet of ~1/4" thick rubber, punched out a washer shape with a pair of hole punches. Punching oversized on the ID was key, as I needed the clearance to stretch over the ball, and the punch did not cut quite the correct ID in rubber, so it puckered on the shaft and looked bad. The larger ID went on much easier.Looks great! Where did you source the handle bumpers?
I find the sound of the handle slapping down into the collar strangely satisfying.
A few of us old timers have. Rubber bumpers are good additions to prevent that from happening.Never caught a blood blister that way, have you?