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"Bruce E. Harang II"

25/02/2005 12:12 AM

Wooden Vise Screw

Hello all,

I am planning my workbench and would like to know if anyone can help me find
a threadbox and tap to make 2" diameter screws for a tail and shoulder vise.
The closest I can find anywhere online is 1 1/2" and I really want the extra
1/2". I have seen many pictures of old workbenches with 2" or larger screws
and would like to know how I can make them for my own bench.

Any information would be greatly appreciated.

Thank you,
Bruce


This topic has 6 replies

ma

max

in reply to "Bruce E. Harang II" on 25/02/2005 12:12 AM

25/02/2005 1:32 PM

A machinist can just make the wooden screw and you would be done with it.
max

>
>> I found this site a while ago when I was looking for a dowel maker for a
>> project I was working on. Has what you want but they are in Europe (should
>> be no problem) and the prices seem extremely high.
>> For the 2" version, you could buy a decent bench if I read it correctly.
>> http://www.fine-tools.com/gewind.htm
>> Good luck
>> David
>
>
> Cripes, it would be cheaper to go to a machinist and have the thread cutting
> parts made!

Dr

"DL"

in reply to "Bruce E. Harang II" on 25/02/2005 12:12 AM

25/02/2005 12:53 AM

I found this site a while ago when I was looking for a dowel maker for a
project I was working on. Has what you want but they are in Europe (should
be no problem) and the prices seem extremely high. For the 2" version, you
could buy a decent bench if I read it correctly.

http://www.fine-tools.com/gewind.htm

Good luck

David

"Bruce E. Harang II" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Hello all,
>
> I am planning my workbench and would like to know if anyone can help me
> find a threadbox and tap to make 2" diameter screws for a tail and
> shoulder vise. The closest I can find anywhere online is 1 1/2" and I
> really want the extra 1/2". I have seen many pictures of old workbenches
> with 2" or larger screws and would like to know how I can make them for my
> own bench.
>
> Any information would be greatly appreciated.
>
> Thank you,
> Bruce
>

AD

Andy Dingley

in reply to "Bruce E. Harang II" on 25/02/2005 12:12 AM

25/02/2005 12:50 PM

It was somewhere outside Barstow when "Bruce E. Harang II"
<[email protected]> wrote:

>I am planning my workbench and would like to know if anyone can help me find
>a threadbox and tap to make 2" diameter screws for a tail and shoulder vise.

Never seen one - and if you did try to use a standard threadbox and
tap for those sizes, it wouldn't work too well. You need a single
point cutting tool and an edge grind that's more like a turning chisel
than a blunt tap edge.

It's not that hard to make the screw by hand carving, if you read a
few 18th century guides on how to do it. You can also use something
like the Trend routerlathe to hog off a lot of timber, but they make a
lousy thread profile - finsih it with a chisel.

All the modern >= 2" thread cutting I've seen has involved making the
screw by hand, then making a nut-cutting tool that ran on the thread
itself. You'll need a bit of metalworking knowledge, but it's not
hard.

Another technique is to cast the nut in lead around the screw.

LJ

Larry Jaques

in reply to "Bruce E. Harang II" on 25/02/2005 12:12 AM

25/02/2005 8:25 AM

On Fri, 25 Feb 2005 00:12:22 -0500, the inscrutable "Bruce E. Harang
II" <[email protected]> spake:

>Hello all,
>
>I am planning my workbench and would like to know if anyone can help me find
>a threadbox and tap to make 2" diameter screws for a tail and shoulder vise.
>The closest I can find anywhere online is 1 1/2" and I really want the extra
>1/2". I have seen many pictures of old workbenches with 2" or larger screws
>and would like to know how I can make them for my own bench.
>
>Any information would be greatly appreciated.

Pick up a copy of Roy Underhill's book at your library or bookshop,
then make your own tools and screws.

The Woodwright's Workbook
Further Explorations in Traditional Woodcraft
by Roy Underhill
259 pp., 81/2 x 11, 239 illus.
$18.95 paper ISBN 0-8078-4157-9

Table of Contents for The Woodwright's Workbook

Annotated Text of The Debate of the Carpenter's Tools
Making Workbenches
Making Screwboxes and Taps for Wood Threading *****************
Constructing Springpole and Treadle Lathes
Building a Carpenter's Tool Chest
Rustic Chairs
Hickory-Bark Chair Bottoms
Turned High Chair
Weaving a Cattail Reed Chair Seat
A Loom-Back Chair
Ladders, Folding Bookstands, Eggbeaters, and Music Mills
Making a Rowboat
A Field Guide to American Tool Marks
Building a Colonial Fort, a Barn, and a Blacksmith Shop

---
- Sarcasm is just one more service we offer. -
http://diversify.com Web Applications

Aa

"AAvK"

in reply to "Bruce E. Harang II" on 25/02/2005 12:12 AM

25/02/2005 12:21 AM


>I found this site a while ago when I was looking for a dowel maker for a
> project I was working on. Has what you want but they are in Europe (should be no problem) and the prices seem extremely high.
> For the 2" version, you could buy a decent bench if I read it correctly.
> http://www.fine-tools.com/gewind.htm
> Good luck
> David


Cripes, it would be cheaper to go to a machinist and have the thread cutting
parts made!

--
Alex
cravdraa_at-yahoo_dot-com
not my site: http://www.e-sword.net/

Aa

"AAvK"

in reply to "Bruce E. Harang II" on 25/02/2005 12:12 AM

25/02/2005 12:31 AM


> Hello all,
> I am planning my workbench and would like to know if anyone can help me find a threadbox and tap to make 2" diameter screws for a
> tail and shoulder vise. The closest I can find anywhere online is 1 1/2" and I really want the extra 1/2". I have seen many
> pictures of old workbenches with 2" or larger screws and would like to know how I can make them for my own bench.
> Any information would be greatly appreciated.
> Thank you,
> Bruce
>
You could do the threading on the wood itself (or "have done") on a metal
lathe because it has a lead screw and gears to control the speed at which the
threads are cut, governing the resulting threads per inch as well. It's merely
the cutter to come up with...

http://www.bealltool.com/ has threading tools that work with a router but I
don't think they go up to 2". They probably would make a 2" outfit for you.

Also, Scott Landis' "The Bench Book" shows how large threading apperatus
were made and used. You could have those metal parts made and do the rest
yourself.

--
Alex
cravdraa_at-yahoo_dot-com
not my site: http://www.e-sword.net/


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