Most saw makers have a weak point for saw vises. I like to see others and show you mine: I have actually three saw vises: an old ulmia, wich are not longer made. A really good saw vise wich holds the blade tight but is a little short for tenon saws and not deep enough for hand saws: I always found her to short and was happy when Joel from TFWW invited his gramercy vise. It is 14" long and it's clamping mechanism hold the saws chatter free. A good thing is, that you can clamp and release with one hand or even the knee. And there is a lot of space unter the jaws. For handsaws it was allways too short, though you need to reclamp the saws only once. But this is in the middle of the saw where one don't want a break in the filing. So a friend made me a wooden saw vise: He darkened the jaws with dark oil, but the metal shavings allways stuck in the porous oak. I would liked it darker, so I begged him to make me some ebony infills, wich he did now: Now she's perfect! Cheers Pedder Bigger pictures and more saw vises can be found on my blog http://pedder-altedamenauskiel.blogspot.com/search/label/Saegekluppe - Saw vice vise
saw vices hi I to have a wooden saw vice that I have been using for the last 30+ years. It has served me well over this period of time and is now looking a little worse for wear, but it still goes on. I have lost count the number of saws that have passed through its jaws but it must be several hundred, so it owes me nothing and seeing it only cost a very small amount to make it has been excellent value. I must point out that it does need a suitable bench vice to position it, but other than that it works entirely on wedge action. I will at sometime in the future post a picture of this battered old vice that has become a good friend. Incidental have you seen the picture of the saw vice on my thread about Sanderson Brothers and Newbould Ltd., now there's a saw vice! Regards
Nice saw vice Pedder. I also gave up using the short steel vices that require you to reposition the saw blade in mid filing, and have found that a home made full length wooden vice is much more satisfactory. My vice is free standing, with the jaws tightened by sliding a bar [section of broomstick] to lock down against two wedges which squeeze the hinged jaws together. It looks a bit rough but works fine, and can be taken outside into the sunshine if the weather is cooperating. Maybe I could think about adding some ebony to the jaws as a future improvement.
Who's that weird guy who come's crashing in on an 11 year old thread and waves his tool about? Oh wait, it's me So this past week i've been going through my collection of saw vices, cleaning some up ready for sending them off to new homes and weeding out the ones i actually use from the ornaments. I was just scrolling through images trying to identify one that's on the "to be sold" list thinking to myself 'i wander if there's a saw vice page on the forum?' and there it was, a thumbnail tagged 'the saw vise thread' I should have known. I've got one here that i'm struggling to identify. I've actually had a couple of them, they're alright, very light castings, nice if you're only filing backsaws occasionally, nowhere near heavy enough to prevent chatter on larger saws though. They're not one that's entered my keepers collection but nonetheless they're a nice little vice. Just wandering if anybody here recognises it? Part of me thinks it may be an E.C. Stearns design. I'll attach a couple of pics of a Disston No1 and a No2 that i've given a clean up too. In my view they're nice vices if you're a saw user and perhaps use them for a few minutes a week but i'd struggle to use them as my main vice as a saw enthusiast who puts in several hours a week at the vice. My go-to vice is a heavily tweaked Woden. Almost identical to Pedder's Ulmia only bolted to a section of 100mm box section welded to a 300kg steel bench and reinforced with adjustable screw tention on the ends of the back jaw. (i'll try and remember to take some pics when i'm at work tomorrow) The narrow jaws are a pain but the vice has a superb clamping action and really cuts down on chatter. I've been curious about wooden vices for a while, Back in my furniture making days i used a couple of 3/4" strips of beech to hold my saws in the bench vice, It was a faf and always at the wrong height but who cares when it's something you do for a short time once in a blue moon? I'm now wandering if i should have taken the time to make myself a full length wooden vice years ago, It sure sounds like you guys prefer them. Anyway, here's a few pics of the little lightweight one i was talking about. Anyone recognise it? Also a couple of the Disston vices I've cleaned up, just because they're pretty. Cheers Matt PS. Cheers for your help gaining me access to the other side Pedder, I appreciate it.
. . . . thank you for bringing this thread to the fore: didn’t realise Ulmia made a version of the excellent Woden 187/Paramo “1945” 8 ½” saw-vice. Curious to see your mechanical tweak to the ends of the standing jaw. Most of this model saw-vice (that I have seen, during half a century) were originally machined so only the outmost 1” of each end of the jaws actually grip - leaving a (roughly) 1/8” gap along the central 6 ½” of the jaws. If yours is like this (some jaws have been user-filed over the years, to variable effect), suggest you obtain 3mm or (better) 2mm “nitrile bonded cork gasket material” (comes in A4 sheet, in many brands), cut to size & glue to each jaw in the gappy section. Greatly reduces chatter.
I do the bulk of my filing on an ex-mill unit with 16" jaws, but I'd just about kill for an Acme. As long as its solid, I don't care what brand it is. The wider and heavier the better. The small clamp mounted bench models are fine for back saws, especially the tilting models that let you play around with undercut gullets etc if you want to play around with that aspect of filing.
Those Paramo vices with the gappy jaws. What are they all about! did they have rubber / cork / leather inserts from new? I've had a few over the years and moved them on asap, they're unuseable as they are, I guess it would make sense that they were intended to have something in the gaps, why else would they be there? I had one of a similar design but minus the gaps and with a channel under one of the jaws with a section of 5/16" ish round rubber glued into it so that it compressed the rubber as you closed it, that one worked well to cut the chatter, I think i gave it to a friend for his birthday. I keep forgetting to take a picture of my funny little setup, I'll try and remember tomorrow. I'd originally sourced the vice for a customer but knocked it off the bench whilst disposing of the packaging materials 5 minutes after it arrived. Cast iron vs concrete floor rarely goes well does it! If nothing else it gave me a chance to whip out the nickel welding rods and hone my cast welding skills, it came out ok, the jaws needed milling anyway so making a slight adjustment for the repair was no big deal. Either way it was a keeper, the customer bought another that i had found and it's been on the bench ever since. It'd be nice if it were twice the size though.
I'm with you there! It'd be quicker to write a list of things i wouldn't do to get my hands on an Acme. They're beautiful great things aren't they. Have you guys seen the vice in this video? Skip to about 3 minutes in...
I finaly remembered. Sorry about the crappy picture quality, my phone's not very good at pictures. It ain't a particularly pretty setup but it works well. I had to shim the bit the cam lever touches with some 3mm Aluminium sheet to gain the extra squeeze needed after milling the jaws.
. . . . similar to a Stearns #3; but later in style (esp. the butterfly nuts) than the images from a 1924 catalogue - mebbe a knock-off? I like the Stearns #0 a lot as a dovetail-saw vise - lots of clearance adjacent the saw-handle, & rigid enough - mostly due to being screwed to the bench (am *not* a fan of cramped-on saw-vices, esp. those with ball-'n-socket folderols) . . . .
On a slight tangent . . . has anyone here experience with the delightfully Heath Robinson Disston saw-filing guide/jig/thingie, specifically when used with short files? I am restoring a Disston 3D saw-vice, plus its guide, but am backsaw-focused - have little interest in handsaws - so my hoard of NOS files is principally STUBS 4 & 4 ½" . . . .
Sorry for the tardy reply pal, I've been working in the field for a few weeks building stages for a big music festival, only just got back to the workshop. Which one is the #0? is that the one with the 4 screw holes that mounts to a vertical surface and a sideways clamping lever? looks a bit like my Woden but nicer? Regarding the Disston guide frame doo-dad, i'd never owned a complete one until the other day when i picked up a really clean No.1 with the frame and guide, i gave it a quick go just out of curiosity. I'm struggling to think of something nice to say about the experience.... it kinda sucks, just got in the way and slowed me down, ended up double filing teeth and all sorts. I'm glad i finally manage to track down a clean, complete example of one but i can't honestly say i see much milage in using it. I'll put a small file in it when i have a chance and see if it's any less clumsy, I guess the No. 3 may be less clumsy as it's a much more solid vice to start with. I'll let you know how it acts with a short file as soon as i get a chance. Cheers Matt
Pedder, I find humor in this thread you created more than 11 years ago. To share the humor, Pedder had posted on another forum that he was looking for a Acme vise 3-4 months ago, and there was some discussion and Ron Bontz showed one he had restored, it was gorgeous. Pretty hard to find these vises, and many people are not after the filer, but it is not a bad filer, IMO, the seller showed me how to use it. Unrelated, a guy posted an Acme Saw Filer in the classified on the same forum (Woodnet) which had the vise, and low and behold it was only about an hour drive from me, a guy had a shop he had worked in as a kid, and bought the company when the owner retired and now he's retiring. He had some pretty expensive sharpening equipment in there, but used the Acme for all the handsaws they sharpened. It really is quite the filer and can handle any size saw file, the depth is controlled by the operator. The guy was even willing to crate it up and ship it to Pedder, but he passed. In lieu of that, I bought it. I got some accessories, a couple heavy duty jointers, a couple Disston sets, and he had a bunch of NOS Simonds files I got. What is pretty nice about the Acme is that you don't need to flip the saw plate to the other side, you can pivot the file from one side to the other and set the angle. I normally sharpen my saws by hand and wasn't looking for the filer, just really wanted the vise. It's not very hard to put a saw in the vise and adjust the filer to the teeth on the saw, matching the rake and fleam. I haven't used it, I'm waiting to take it to it's new home to a shop I'm building for my retirement. I have space in the basement I plan to use for hand tool work, and working on getting the detached shop in so I can move my machines up there. In my retirement I plan to revisit saw making, but first I have a log home and shop to finish. Getting a quote for the septic tank this weekend hopefully and ready to move forward with it. There is a bathroom in the shop, so will get that in with machines hooked up before I work on the house. This machine is in really nice shape, it's entirely original.
Alan - Hi - so nice to find a filer with a more-or-less full & local history & in such condition. Very best of good fortune with it.
Hi Alan, indeed funny to read and see pictures here. Who says a slow forum is a bad one? I still would like the vise, but I can't afford shipping the whole Saw filer. Cheers Pedder
It wasn't cheap, but I'm at the point that I just wanted to have one, it is classic. I didn't really need it. I had bought a 3D vise I ended up giving to a guy over on Woodnet with a bunch of other tools, I hope he learns to use it...I gave him everything he needed to learn to sharpen and maintain his saws, as well as a saw plate and slotted back w/split-nuts to build his own saw. I may build handsaws in the future, but far from that point and more so want to use the saws I have already built to finish my home. Gotta give Ray some credit for keeping it going for all these years...there always seems to be folks interested in making handsaws... Currently applying my handsaw skills to making a Bob Loveless style drop point hunting knife. I am using Bronze hardware with copper/brass/bronze tones, and burl. I have 2 split-nuts I plan to use on one blade, I have 2 blanks. And honestly, I'm not making the blade, just grinding it and will send it out for heat treating. My plan is to use ebony for one with the split-nuts, having the washer slot filled with black epoxy to match the handle scales. I know you wanted it and I tried my best to convince you to buy it, but in the end I guess it was meant to be for me. I still have it sitting outside under a tarp, dare I say...and it's gonna be there for another 4 months at least. Luckily I'm back to work, but I need to watch myself...I'm a sucker for old tools...and this vise was no different. I need to really pull back the reins to get my shop in...that will be key for my retirement.
Hi Alan, My search for the ACME has ended. The prices have become ridiculous. The last one on ebay 1500 USD for the vise only. In the meantime I found out that there is a german vise that closes very good. The Ulmia bandsaw vise The one I giot for about 60 € to my dorstep closes very firm and filing is completly shatterfree since. Take care, Pedder
That's ridiculous! As you know, I paid $800 for the one I got, it is in good shape, but $800 to get a vise is a LOT of coin, just saying. I still have it tarped out in my driveway...but I have axles and even a Delta scroll saw, so the tarped Acme is the least of the neighbors concerns...Oh yeah, cars all over the street until I can move a couple to the lake. LOL Honestly, that vise is as useful as the Acme, and way smaller and easier to store. Looks like they took the Acme design with the cam lever and it operates like the Acme as far as I can tell. Albeit, my Acme is under the tarp...so I couldn't say for sure without looking at it...:-/ Now you're making me feel small...that's a way better deal than the Acme and takes way less space. I know, I know...the Acme is more well known, but Ultima is a well respected tool company. I have 2 x 3D vises and those are pretty heavy, but not as heavy, nor as long as that Ultima. Looks like you have more than 40", I only have 27" with 2 x 3D vises and the Acme may be longer, but I only have 2 full size hand saws, all of my saws that I have made to date are backsaws. Everything I have can be sharpened with a single 3D. BTW, that was a beautiful 3D vise I sent to Arlin. I have so many tools, I really am being very picky about what I buy. My life is coming down on me, I've been fighting with the County and Water District over my driveway, I was laid off, my mom is in ICU with cancer, my daughter's engine blew up on her car, etc...but I don't want or need any pity. Waiting for a quote from my contractor to build shop and he will help me get my machines and logs up on the property. It's a long legal stories over Express Easment vs Easment of Necessity. Might not make sense to you, as you're a lawyer in Germany, but here's a good read on the topic. https://dirtlaw.typepad.com/blog/2009/08/easements-what-are-they-and-how-are-the-created.html (the laws I mention on the easements have to do with the servitude laws in America) EDIT: you probably are familiar with my water rights which come from England, they are Riparian Rights. I have 90' of lakefront which provide me Riparian Rights to the watershed. (hopefully Ray doesn't mind, there is so little traffic here I doubt too many people will even see it, most go in the general forum here)
Hi Alan, the Ulmia is 42 cm or about 16 inch. And because of the limited depth, it is for dovetailsaws and sash saws. No big tenon saws or hand saws on this vise. Sorry to hear about your Mother! I don't know any about english water rights, sorry Cheers Pedder
Pedder, As you may know, 04/04/2023 was a historical day in America, a former US President was indicted. It is really a sad day in America that this would even happen, but it did. Today I pulled the trigger on my shop. Weather tight, sans the rollup doors. The contractor is going to help me get my machines up into the shop. Windows and doors have a big lead time since the pandemic. My goal is to get the shop and home dried in. http://traditionaltoolworks.com/images/duboff-shop-proposal.jpg After I get my machines moved, I can finish a couple saws I plan to use for the home build. I have a lot of cabinets to make, and have a couple benches to make. The Acme will end up in the basement shop, which will be for hand tools only, and most likely where I will do most of my sawing. We are entering into a world economical crisis, if we aren't in one already. I'd rather have my shop that watch the banks go down the toilet with my shop/retirement money. Supposedly the banks are federally insured up to $250k, but color me a skeptic. I trust the current administration about as far as I can throw the bank. I digress...but I think it makes sense to be able to have a nice shop to be able to do crafting, rather than useless paper that is worth less and less every day. I'm really excited to get the shop so I can start spending more time up there. That way I'll have more space and time to do more toolmaking and woodworking, both. I have a few things to weld also.