I have already contacted Vintage Machinery... on one there knows what the story of this vise is...
Much more likely to be fishing - as already posted Thompson made a wide range of fly tying visesIt looks to be a substantial casting. How about gun stock manufacturing to allow both woodworking and work on decorative inlays without marring the other side?
My/our initial thought was that it came out of a WWI or WWII factory working on the Thompson sub-machine gun. Sadly, that lead was not fruitful. I consulted experienced persons on the "Vintage Machinery" website. They have seen one other example, but have no idea what it was used for. I wonder also about bicycle tires, as one end is rounded.It looks to be a substantial casting. How about gun stock manufacturing to allow both woodworking and work on decorative inlays without marring the other side?
That might have been me...Only reference to a thompson V - 500 vise I could find was on the thompson sub machine gun forum, someone else had one and was looking for info, trail goes a bit cold after that but conclusion there was it was a vise for tyre fitting
Good point! Any ideas?I don't think it's bike wheel related, you would expect the vice bit to accommodate an axle not be flat jawed. Also there are loads of bike wheel diameters so a fixed length is pretty unuseful in any kind of bike workshop. And there would also need to be a fair bit of height difference to each end.
However, it DOES look like some sort of seating tool on the handwheel end.
Roughly, yes...does the fixed length match that of a violin?
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