Clamping With Vise Shims - WOOD magazine
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- Опубликовано: 1 июл 2024
- Clamp small pieces securely without racking your bench vise. Jim show you how.
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Instead of that wood stop you attached to the wedge, use metal. Then attach a magnet to the bottom of the vise jaw. Then it is quickly inserted and removed without having to clean up tape each time.
Ad always. WOODmagazine and its "teacher"; showing us simple things that are awesome and helpful. Thanks kind Sirs...
Very smart. Woodworking and engineering, all in one.
Its always a pleasure to watch and learn from the master thanks so much for sharing
Nice tip. That looks like an alternative to using a stack of flat shims held together.
Several very useful tips. Thanks very much. Liked, subscribed, and now commented.
Simple and effective.
I drilled and tapped a hole on each side of my vice, so all I have to do is screw in a dowel rod to the right depth as your wedge would, then unscrew and hang under vice when not in use
Зажимай по середине ближе к центру болта ручки и тогда все будет хорошо.😊
While I don't currently have a functioning wood vise (have to get around to that, on my list), I do have a need for some wedges, and that simple jig is great. I'd been thinking of making something like a tapering jig, with an adjustable board on a hinge, but really don't need anything that elaborate for these wedges.
I was just thinking about making some shims to correct for vise racking. I was thinking about making a set that would be similar to feeler guages and would be attached together, like keys, so you could make different widths by adding two or more together. The method you showed is very clever and has advantages, like continuous variability. I'll have to try both and see which I prefer. I wonder if one could pre-mark the wedges for different widths to get closer to the correct width more easily. Hmm. Good food for thought. Thank You!
Marking the wedges for different widths is also very clever! Nice input thanks!👍
99% of my wood is 1/2", 3/4", 2x4.
So I made angle pieces that have those pieces on them (3-4" per piece) and simple place the size needed on the opposite side.
1/2x3/4 3/4x1-1/2 1-1/2x3-1/2 Notice the overlap. Not exactly necessary as 2 pieces would cover all sizes (I) use.
Nothing fancy but really works well (length of each piece up to you).
If your vise is this cruddy, you would be better off with wood shim pack like feeler gauges. There is another video on utube on how to make some decent ones. I personally would not find that vise usable.