Vises: Difference between revisions
m typo, also spelled with a 'c' sometimes |
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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 | |
|---|---|
| |
| 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).
