SlowSteve
Established Member
Hello all.
This may sound daft, but it's a genuine question.
On my bench I have a standard face vice ( no 52.5) and also a big long reach engineers vice ( number 23). which I have fitted with leather wrapped wooden jaws - which is a 2 minute job to change.
Maybe because I have previously focused on metalwork and it's just habit, but the big engineers vice gets a LOT more work than my face vice in my workshop - perhaps 5 times as much. I think I could "make do" without the face vice - although in it's place it is really useful - but I can't imagine not having the engineers vice.
However, they don't seem very common in "proper" woodworkers shops - i.e. "people better than me" - which is pretty much everyone in the world.
I was wondering why they seem to get so much less use - Am i majorly under-estimating the value of a face vice, or is it more about habit and tradition?
Thanks
Steve
This may sound daft, but it's a genuine question.
On my bench I have a standard face vice ( no 52.5) and also a big long reach engineers vice ( number 23). which I have fitted with leather wrapped wooden jaws - which is a 2 minute job to change.
Maybe because I have previously focused on metalwork and it's just habit, but the big engineers vice gets a LOT more work than my face vice in my workshop - perhaps 5 times as much. I think I could "make do" without the face vice - although in it's place it is really useful - but I can't imagine not having the engineers vice.
However, they don't seem very common in "proper" woodworkers shops - i.e. "people better than me" - which is pretty much everyone in the world.
I was wondering why they seem to get so much less use - Am i majorly under-estimating the value of a face vice, or is it more about habit and tradition?
Thanks
Steve