How the wheels turn! Heritage, History and Conservation are a really big deal thesedays, think this is maybe linked to a disillusionement with the modern world and the apparent lose of things from the past (like practical skills). I notice modern tool companys will really make a deal out of tradition and heritage, to link themselves to a past commonly assocaited with superior practical arts possibly.AndyT":49dskqtm said:I do think that those cosmetic changes were important at the time, when it really did matter that things should look modern, not old-fashioned. I can remember how as a teenager I looked down on the old wooden handles on my dad's tools and wanted all of mine to have superior plastic...
If I had been buying a vice in the 70s I would have wanted a new one.
nabs":oh46hj62 said:I had a closer look at the rods on mine and the first thing I noticed is that they are not flush with the surface - one is slightly recessed and there is a thin edge of steel that seems to have been raised along one side of the hole which might be an indication that it was somehow peened to fit. I suppose they must have had some clever way to stop the rods bending/case cracking when they did this.
squib":2v9k0g7e said:Fascinating thread, thank you for posting your research.
A quick pic of my instanteneous vice, no makers name but patented..
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