Fly tying vice base.

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MikeJhn

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I am looking for ideas to make a decent size Fly Tying vice base, most are about 190mm x 75mm or thereabouts, I'm thinking a large piece of Oak bottom recessed and lead inserted, I can then rout whatever I want on top, any better ideas?

Fly vice base.jpeg
 
Sounds like a great idea.
You'll be routing etc so any hard, close grain wood would be ideal.
As a kid, I remember melting lead off old lead sheathed electrical wires with my dad. Old saucepan on a gas burner outside, and pouring weights for beachcasting. You could cast an insert for the base of your block.
On the top, the plate you picture above could be secured to your stand using that high performance pressure sensitive adhesive used for fixing dashcams and the like to the inside of windscreens.
 
Looking for an off-cut from a Granite worktop at the moment.
It's a shame you're at the other end of the country I probably have a bit of granite and definitely have 25mm thick solid surface kitchen worktop which is almost as heavy and easier to work with.

I'm a fly fisherman and tyer as well an have a tying station I lift on to my desk. The amount of tying materials I've collected over the years is, in my wife's words " ......... crazy" :ROFLMAO:
 
Looking for an off-cut from a granite worktop at the moment.

That might be a little thin.

Worktop suppliers might give you the sink cut out for nothing.

An alternative could be a granite pastry or food-prep board (Buy and Queue £20). Also sold as chapatti boards.

Or, dare I say, do you know any monumental masons?

With the routed, lead-filled base, maybe the underside perimeter would benefit from a sort of half dovetail, so even if the lead shrinks, it cannot drop out
 
@Lons Ditto with amount of materials, what I find most annoying is the amount of thread reels I never use, but make space for them on bits of dowel glued into my station.

@ChaiLatte Granite worktop come in at up too 40mm thick.

Worktop suppliers generally sell on sink cut outs as cutting boards.

Monumental masons chip the off cuts to spread on monuments.

Any Lead filled grove on the base will have a metal cover with a felt/cork bottom to prevent scratching the worktop surface of my bench.
 
@Lons Ditto with amount of materials, what I find most annoying is the amount of thread reels I never use, but make space for them on bits of dowel glued into my station.

@ChaiLatte Granite worktop come in at up too 40mm thick.

Worktop suppliers generally sell on sink cut outs as cutting boards.

Monumental masons chip the off cuts to spread on monuments.

Any Lead filled grove on the base will have a metal cover with a felt/cork bottom to prevent scratching the worktop surface of my bench.
I used to fit a lot of kitchens as part of my business Mike. Didn't keep much granite but the solid surface material is useful for all sorts of projects and turns nicely. That's my excuse anyway. :ROFLMAO:

If you have any industrial estates nearby have a drive around looking for any kitchen companies as they throw smaller bits in the skip, usually bigger than you need. Skips cost a lot of money and a nice smiley ask to a receptionist will get you something suitable FOC
 
Recycle shops at council tips usually have weights and fitness equipment for next to nothing. Those big round ones screwed onto bars are useful for all sorts of stuff! Not pretty but plenty weight.
 
It's a shame you're at the other end of the country I probably have a bit of granite and definitely have 25mm thick solid surface kitchen worktop which is almost as heavy and easier to work with.

I'm a fly fisherman and tyer as well an have a tying station I lift on to my desk. The amount of tying materials I've collected over the years is, in my wife's words " ......... crazy" :ROFLMAO:
I used to tie flies and fly fish, I made a fly materials and tying bench from an article in Trout and Salmon in about 1987. It was a multi drawer filing cabinet with a ply top and a lift up flap on the side, served me for years, didn’t hold all the gear of course because I’m like you, I had too much !
Still got the magazine somewhere.
 
It is the golden rule of fly tying that no matter how many materials you have, you never have an exact match of material for the fly you have seen and want to make.
 
It is the golden rule of fly tying that no matter how many materials you have, you never have an exact match of material for the fly you have seen and want to make.
Something I have often said to others is that most flies in shops are designed to catch fly fisherman not fish.

Salmon..jpeg
 
I was up in Northumberland for a weeks holiday back in Sept 2023.
My mate and I booked a days fishing on a beat on the Upper Tyne.
When we turned up and met with the "Ghillie", he said all the flies we had with us were not suitable for catching there.....He then promptly sold us the "correct" flies at, what we both felt were exorbitant prices........We didnt catch anything, but still had a good day in the river....👍👍
 

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