Vises: Difference between revisions
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Machine vises look very different from bench vises but serve the same purpose: making sure your workpiece doesn't go flying when you apply force to it. | Machine vises look very different from bench vises but serve the same purpose: making sure your workpiece doesn't go flying when you apply force to it. They are designed to hold the workpiece without damaging it and have usually a low profile to allow machining a large portion without remounting. | ||
They may be secured by the user's hand (e.g. on a [[Drill Press|drill press]]) or bolted to the machine table (e.g. for [[milling]]). | They may be secured by the user's hand (e.g. on a [[Drill Press|drill press]]) or bolted to the machine table (e.g. for [[milling]]). |
Revision as of 17:41, 9 September 2017
Vises (or vices in British English) are auxiliary tools to hold your workpiece, e.g. when you want to saw or drill through it. They have a fixed and a moving jaw which grip stuff when you turn the handle.
We don't have machine or woodworking vises (DE: Spannzangen) yet!
Bench Vises
ToolInfoBox Bench Vises | |
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Synonyms: | mechanic's vises, machinist's vises; DE: Schraubstöcke |
Type: | auxiliary tool |
Material: | anything solid |
Bench vises are the "typical" vises you've probably seen on "universal" workbenches. The front jaw is often the moving one but some vises have a fixed front jaw.
Besides holding stuff, they are useful for bending metal pieces or tightening rivet connections (e.g. in some scissors) with great force and control.
Machine Vises
ToolInfoBox Machine Vises | |
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Synonyms: | "machining vises"; DE: Maschinenschraubstöcke |
Type: | auxiliary tool |
Material: | anything solid |
Machine vises look very different from bench vises but serve the same purpose: making sure your workpiece doesn't go flying when you apply force to it. They are designed to hold the workpiece without damaging it and have usually a low profile to allow machining a large portion without remounting.
They may be secured by the user's hand (e.g. on a drill press) or bolted to the machine table (e.g. for milling).