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Can anyone tell me what this is please? http://rypn.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=1&t=48056 |
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Author: | Bob D. [ Tue Apr 23, 2024 1:34 pm ] |
Post subject: | Re: Can anyone tell me what this is please? |
It is a blacksmith's post vice. There should be a leaf spring to separate the jaws, there is a piece of it on yours under the clamp with the wedge retainer. The bracket screws to a bench top. The fixed jaw leg goes into a pocket in the floor. Makes for a very rugged vise. The key you see keeps the nut from turning. The screw is probably locked up. Size of the vise is determined by the jaw length. |
Author: | Bob D. [ Tue Apr 23, 2024 1:39 pm ] | ||
Post subject: | Re: Can anyone tell me what this is please? | ||
You can see mine in this shot of my blacksmith shop.
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Author: | John Risley [ Tue Apr 23, 2024 3:09 pm ] |
Post subject: | Re: Can anyone tell me what this is please? |
Agree, blacksmith vice. But I must say you have a super cool garden. I dread having to get mine ready for this growing season. But if I had old vices and railway platforms in my garden I might enjoy it more. Cool post by the way, out of the ordinary. Regards, John. |
Author: | PMC [ Tue Apr 23, 2024 4:09 pm ] |
Post subject: | Re: Can anyone tell me what this is please? |
Would one of these have been found in a steam shop, and if so what would it have been used for? I could see it being useful for bending a long piece at its midpoint, say a hand rail or pipe of some sort. |
Author: | LVRR2095 [ Tue Apr 23, 2024 7:38 pm ] |
Post subject: | Re: Can anyone tell me what this is please? |
I think you will find it is a blacksmith’s vise not a blacksmith’s vice…which would be something like intoxicating drink to excess. Keith |
Author: | Trainlawyer [ Tue Apr 23, 2024 9:23 pm ] |
Post subject: | Re: Can anyone tell me what this is please? |
LVRR2095 wrote: I think you will find it is a blacksmith’s vise not a blacksmith’s vice…which would be something like intoxicating drink to excess. I believe that it was Mr. Churchill who once said that the Americans and the British were two peoples separated by a common language. As the artifact was found in Shropshire it is indeed a 'vice' rather than a 'vise'. Nothing in this comment is intended to imply that the smith might in fact have more than one.Keith GME |
Author: | Bob D. [ Tue Apr 23, 2024 11:37 pm ] |
Post subject: | Re: Can anyone tell me what this is please? |
Keith, I have a whole bunch of different vises and admittedly a couple of vices…. I think auto spell tom-foolery came into play on my first post. Got it right half the time! |
Author: | Overmod [ Wed Apr 24, 2024 8:16 am ] |
Post subject: | Re: Can anyone tell me what this is please? |
The design uses the long lower 'lever arms' to increase the clamping force and eliminate the need for carefully-machined (and perhaps difficult to maintain) slideways for the movable jaw. I've always looked at this grammar matter as perhaps related to something the British practice: for example 'license' as a verb, but 'licence' as the paper or card that results from the process. (We still have it in our 'advise' and 'advice', which no one here would likely ever confuse!) When I learned Standard Written English it was made very clear to me that the thing that did the clamping and holding was a 'vise', not a 'vice'. It turns out (no pun intended) that the word derives directly from the French 'vis', in the sense of a screw like 'tournevis', which is from the Latin for exerting a force. So using the word 'vice' for this device is simply... "Vice" is similarly from the French, where it is spelt that way as early as the 12th Century, and it has the same root as the English 'vitiate' meaning to weaken through introduction of a fault. |
Author: | Larry Lovejoy [ Wed Apr 24, 2024 11:31 am ] |
Post subject: | Re: Can anyone tell me what this is please? |
Next up: The difference between "loose" and "lose", which are frequently confused on this forum. /s/ Larry Lawrence G. Lovejoy, P.E. (who, as the son and grandson of three proofreaders, is particularly sensitive to such things.) |
Author: | philip.marshall [ Wed Apr 24, 2024 1:52 pm ] |
Post subject: | Re: Can anyone tell me what this is please? |
PMC wrote: Would one of these have been found in a steam shop, and if so what would it have been used for? I could see it being useful for bending a long piece at its midpoint, say a hand rail or pipe of some sort. For sure, especially in earlier eras. Blacksmith's vises were commonly found in machine shops in the 19th century, prior to the advent of the parallel-jaw machinist's vise. The great utility of a blacksmith's vise is that it's designed to be hammered on. The jaws are solid forgings, not castings, and the leg (typically set into a wooden block in the floor) holds it vertically rigid and transmits the force to the ground. This means you can pound away without causing damage. -Philip Marshall |
Author: | Alexander D. Mitchell IV [ Wed Apr 24, 2024 2:01 pm ] |
Post subject: | Re: Can anyone tell me what this is please? |
The first thing I said when I saw the photos was "take that damn thing back to my father-in-law's shop and clean up the rust you put on it........." It's a dead ringer for a well-used, well-abused, and probably-salvaged-ages-ago blacksmith vise in his shop. |
Author: | the Cannon [ Wed Apr 24, 2024 3:01 pm ] |
Post subject: | Re: Can anyone tell me what this is please? |
Hi Everyone, A big and sincere thank you to everyone who replied to my post and gave me information about my find. I really appreciate it. I guess I should keep digging to see what else is there, especially in light of the gold nugget that was found not far from where I live, again on a former railway site near a place called 'Much Wenlock'. We have some great old place names in the UK... If you Google 'gold nugget found in Much Wenlock' you'll soon find the report. According to the local newspaper, the discovery was made with a faulty metal detector on a site believed to have been an old track or road with railway lines running through, containing stone possibly distributed from Wales, where gold was once mined. As far as the differences between spelling of the word 'vice/vise' goes, I lived in the USA for a year and fully appreciate the differences between the language that we have in common. Made me smile, because it never really mattered... Thanks again, everyone! |
Author: | Trainlawyer [ Thu Apr 25, 2024 1:39 am ] |
Post subject: | Re: Can anyone tell me what this is please? |
Overmod wrote: ...I've always looked at this grammar matter as perhaps related to something the British practice: for example 'license' as a verb, but 'licence' as the paper or card that results from the process. (We still have it in our 'advise' and 'advice', which no one here would likely ever confuse!) When I learned Standard Written English it was made very clear to me that the thing that did the clamping and holding was a 'vise', not a 'vice'. It turns out (no pun intended) that the word derives directly from the French 'vis', in the sense of a screw like 'tournevis', which is from the Latin for exerting a force. So using the word 'vice' for this device is simply... "Vice" is similarly from the French, where it is spelt that way as early as the 12th Century, and it has the same root as the English 'vitiate' meaning to weaken through introduction of a fault. While we colonists might follow the French lead, the idea of the English, never mind my Scotts ancestors, doing as the French tell them boggles the imagination. Merriam-Webster wrote: vice 2 of 4 chiefly British spelling of vise https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/vice the Cannon wrote: As far as the differences between spelling of the word 'vice/vise' goes, I lived in the USA for a year and fully appreciate the differences between the language that we have in common. Made me smile, because it never really mattered... The Cannon is absolutely correct. If my Scotts father and upper crust Boston Mother could communicate successfully for half a century (almost half of which was spent in a yet another country which speaks an almost alien version of the language with some indigenous words and phrases muddled in) then the differences should be enjoyed rather then forcing the language into premature homogeneity. The more words you have the more ideas you can express. As a side note my son claims that on a multi-lingual lobby directory in the main police station of a major South American city the English column read 'Vise Squad'. Apparently the policy was to use the Norte Americano spellings...GME |
Author: | Dave [ Thu Apr 25, 2024 8:12 am ] |
Post subject: | Re: Can anyone tell me what this is please? |
No, they are the specialists that use them in productive interrogation techniques. |
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