Damn dude!!! I've never seen any other restoration video where this kind of work out was shown. That is a heavy-duty vise. You have a great deal of tenacity for sure. You should be awarded a plaque for hardest working man on you tube. I subbed you.
Thanks for sharing your struggles. It turned out beautiful. The slides looked like they were floating on air. I echo others about some type of bath to soak instead of a sledge. My vote is no music. Beautiful Vice with many more yrs of service!👍🏼🤜
You could have chosen to use your brain, but successfully resisted the temptation. So congratulation on working yourself into exhaustion. This is why I love watching people struggle. As a clue, I offer this: Next time don't be so eager to remove the handle and lead screw. Next consider the advantages of soaking first next time. But I agree with you - that's your style....
That's a very old pre WW2 Boley vise. I have a very old Bruno Mädler catalog where these are sold as "Original Boley", with exactly this shape. I have a picture of a different Bruno Mädler catalog where they especially mention the circular groove in the jaw inserts. There is also an old auction on ricardo, so if you google: boley schraubstock 100mm ricardo, you will find it. The pictures show the exactly same shape as your vise and the special jaw insert key system. It also shows the "G Boley" stamped in in front of the front jaw inserts, at it was usually done on these very old vises. Maybe yours had the stamping, too. If it's not so old, then somebody used the Boley patterns to cast new vises, and went the full mile with the jaw inserts, but I very much doubt it.
An old tugboat i used to work on had an extremely beat up one of these exact vises in the engine room. The owner used to travel the world doing odd jobs with his little boat so no telling where he got it from.
Well, I think it might be wise to put this vice to a tank with rust remover for 24 hrs instead of trying open by "hammering". Also heating one of the part might help. Brute force can damage sliding surfaces so such approach looks risky. Other than that, restoration looks good, attention to the details and accuracy.
Dat Dingen ist aus den frühen Siebzigerjahren, BAUHAUS-Hausmarke. Man munkelt, dass das damals ein grauer DDR-Export von SZ (Spannwerkzeuge Zeulenroda) war..
Hallo und danke für das Video! Konntest du inzwischen noch etwas über den Hersteller herausfinden? Ich bin nämlich auch an solch einen Schraubstock gekommen, nur kleiner (120mm Backen), aber vom Aufbau und Formgebung exakt gleich 😊
Legen Sie beim nächsten Mal den rostigen Schraubstock oder was Sie sonst noch restaurieren in Essig und 3-5 Esslöffel Salz, lassen Sie es 24-48 Stunden einwirken und sehen Sie, wie es sich auflöst.
For future reference cheap automatic transmission fluid works well as a penetrating oil. Heat it up and put atf on it and itll suck into the joint thats siezed and make it easier to break loose.
What the fuck is with every single restoration channel with no talking just silence who likes that I can’t stand it I wanna watch these amazing tools be restored but just with no talking no nothing I don’t understand you people who like this
NUEVAMENTE, MUCHA HERRAMIENTA PERO CERO DE CONOCIMIENTO PARA REALIZAR UNA RESTAURACION, OJALA LO HUBIERA ENCONTRADO, PARA PODER HACER LO QUE SE DEBE LASTIMA
Damn dude!!! I've never seen any other restoration video where this kind of work out was shown. That is a heavy-duty vise. You have a great deal of tenacity for sure. You should be awarded a plaque for hardest working man on you tube. I subbed you.
Thanks
Thanks for sharing your struggles. It turned out beautiful. The slides looked like they were floating on air. I echo others about some type of bath to soak instead of a sledge. My vote is no music.
Beautiful Vice with many more yrs of service!👍🏼🤜
Thanks for the tips!
Given the tools you had available to use on this project, you were determined, and in the end you gave this vise many more years of life. Well done.
Thanks! And now I have one tool more - the Vice ;-)
You could have chosen to use your brain, but successfully resisted the temptation. So congratulation on working yourself into exhaustion. This is why I love watching people struggle.
As a clue, I offer this: Next time don't be so eager to remove the handle and lead screw. Next consider the advantages of soaking first next time. But I agree with you - that's your style....
That was hard work, but it’s a masterpiece! Well done JoLi! 👏🏻
Thank you! 😊
That's a very old pre WW2 Boley vise. I have a very old Bruno Mädler catalog where these are sold as "Original Boley", with exactly this shape. I have a picture of a different Bruno Mädler catalog where they especially mention the circular groove in the jaw inserts.
There is also an old auction on ricardo, so if you google: boley schraubstock 100mm ricardo, you will find it. The pictures show the exactly same shape as your vise and the special jaw insert key system. It also shows the "G Boley" stamped in in front of the front jaw inserts, at it was usually done on these very old vises. Maybe yours had the stamping, too.
If it's not so old, then somebody used the Boley patterns to cast new vises, and went the full mile with the jaw inserts, but I very much doubt it.
Hi, thanks for the Information. Can you send me some pictures of these catalog images? That would be great. You can mail me them to vice @ j.ull.at
I am so glad you didn’t take apart the handle. Excellent job!!!
Thanks 👍
An old tugboat i used to work on had an extremely beat up one of these exact vises in the engine room. The owner used to travel the world doing odd jobs with his little boat so no telling where he got it from.
Big, beautiful and totally badass! Wow. 👌
Glad you like it!
Dovetail vices are amazing until they are seized up then they are a waking nightmare....
Excellent!
Glad you liked it!
Well, I think it might be wise to put this vice to a tank with rust remover for 24 hrs instead of trying open by "hammering". Also heating one of the part might help. Brute force can damage sliding surfaces so such approach looks risky.
Other than that, restoration looks good, attention to the details and accuracy.
Smooth as silk
It still is, thanks ;-)
Very nice! 👏👏
Poctivy kus liatiny a ocele exelentntna praca bud zdravy pozdravujem zo slovenska🇸🇰🇸🇰🇸🇰💯%
Thanks!
Quite a fight with disassembly but well done.
Dat Dingen ist aus den frühen Siebzigerjahren, BAUHAUS-Hausmarke. Man munkelt, dass das damals ein grauer DDR-Export von SZ (Spannwerkzeuge Zeulenroda) war..
Danke für die Info
Stimmt leider nicht, ist ein ganz alter Boley. Vermutlich Vorkriegszeit
Certainly not a Gressel vice, it is a copy of a Leinen vice, there are small differences.
Do you have some more information about this vice?
mine also had the same orange paint with blue underneath
If you like you can send a picture.
Hallo und danke für das Video!
Konntest du inzwischen noch etwas über den Hersteller herausfinden? Ich bin nämlich auch an solch einen Schraubstock gekommen, nur kleiner (120mm Backen), aber vom Aufbau und Formgebung exakt gleich 😊
Hi, leider nein. Freut mich, dass es dir gefallen hat.
I too have a 115 mm version, only markings are “LL” on the nose and 21 stamped on both main parts, did you ever find out the maker,?
Boley, aber sehr alt, vermutlich vor 1950
Legen Sie beim nächsten Mal den rostigen Schraubstock oder was Sie sonst noch restaurieren in Essig und 3-5 Esslöffel Salz, lassen Sie es 24-48 Stunden einwirken und sehen Sie, wie es sich auflöst.
Danke für den Tipp, Essig funktioniert wirklich gut.
im sorry i only speak english i have the exact vise and dont know who made it, im thinking east german, did you find out anything about the maker
No, so far I got no more information about it.
@@Joliull the vice has many similarities with Eikar made by Breitenfeld and scholz
For future reference cheap automatic transmission fluid works well as a penetrating oil. Heat it up and put atf on it and itll suck into the joint thats siezed and make it easier to break loose.
Thanks for the info, I will try it.
@@Joliull look up atf penetrating oil to be sure but i think people will mix it 5050 with acetone to thin it out a bit more and make it better.
@@Joliull kejjejjsjejdjrhruu
Belíssimo trabalho .
Por favor , no próximo vídeo coloque uma música mais agradável ou deixe o som ambiente .
Parabéns.
Thanks for the feedback.
Use some break free or wd 40 spray on the parts , even if you have to wait till the next day, rather than forcing the parts.
I used a lot of MoS2 oil but that didn't work.
Good video. Job well done. Really annoying music.
Sorry about that
Wouldn't sandblasting be better
Maybe but I don't had one
Wie heißt das Lied oder die Lieder die spielen?
The first song is from me: t1p.de/88ld8, the rest is various youtube music.
What the fuck is with every single restoration channel with no talking just silence who likes that I can’t stand it I wanna watch these amazing tools be restored but just with no talking no nothing I don’t understand you people who like this
Too bad then.
iyi güzel de böylesine kirli bir iş evin içinde nasıl olur
Bodrumda bir atölyem var.
That vise looks like a Gressel vise.
Great restoration, but the music was repetitive, annoying and off putting. Had to mute it.
Thanks for the feedback, I will consider it future videos.
YOU LOST ME WITH THE SLEDGE HAMMER POUNDING ON THE VISE. DON'T YOU THINK THAT DAMAGED THE THREADS EVEN MORE? I HATE SEEING TOOLS ABUSED LIKE THIS.
The spindle was not engaged at the threads. I put some aluminum block in between, you can see it at 9:30min.
Should have used a hydraulic jack to open jaws
Do you know one that fits in this small gap?
@@Joliull either a bottle jack, hand jack or scissor jack
You missed a spot.
NUEVAMENTE, MUCHA HERRAMIENTA PERO CERO DE CONOCIMIENTO PARA REALIZAR UNA RESTAURACION, OJALA LO HUBIERA ENCONTRADO, PARA PODER HACER LO QUE SE DEBE
LASTIMA
Die Musik nervt einfach nur.
Sagt meine Frau auch ;-)
Isso não é uma restauração é uma reforma muito ruim...