Agreed, but they're too damn heavy! It's worth having a few 'T' bars to put on the bench, but you can also get so much pressure behind them that the job will distort alarmingly...I've witnessed it happening!!thetyreman":2v333cob said:I like heavy duty sash cramps, they're pretty bomb proof, rutlands did make some good ones but haven't tried their latest ones, get those or vintage record and they'll last forever.
woodbloke66":14vqhlsp said:Agreed, but they're too damn heavy! It's worth having a few 'T' bars to put on the bench, but you can also get so much pressure behind them that the job will distort alarmingly...I've witnessed it happening!!thetyreman":14vqhlsp said:I like heavy duty sash cramps, they're pretty bomb proof, rutlands did make some good ones but haven't tried their latest ones, get those or vintage record and they'll last forever.
I have a couple of single handed Ax cramps and the same in the Bessey variety, both of which are excellent, but these single handed things simply don't give enough pressure (as David Charlesworth demonstrated some years ago). I use the lighter duty, normal Record (or the Ax equivalent) steel sash cramps; to date I think I've got around twenty - Rob
Trainee neophyte":3ldosqcy said:The answer is "Yes!"
You need all of the clamps. Everything mentioned, and more besides. Not mentioned are little spring clamps like this:which can be substituted by cutting short lengths of drainpipe:
And don't forget gravity - they even leave it on over the weekends (points if you know who's joke that is). Weights, bricks, tools, water (1litre =1kg), rocks etc. Anything heavy.
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