I picked up a Reed 204 1/2 on CL a month or so ago for $35. I opened and closed it smoothly about three inches and it didn't have any cracks so I figured what the heck.
Well, it pays to open a vise completely before buying. When I got home I made a shocking discovery-- the screw had had about three inches cut off! As a result the vise only opens a little more than 4.5 inches-- enough to fit a 2x4 in there but nothing wider.
The guy who sold it to me had owned it a year in storage. It was his neighbor's, who had passed away. So I'm positive the seller had no idea the screw had been cut or why. The vise is undamaged otherwise and I can't think of why someone would cut the screw, so it's hard for me to think the screw was bent somehow during use and needed to be trimmed off?
One more thing. The swivel base has a giant screw on the bottom that I cannot get off. I've used PB and let the base sit in an electrolysis tank for three days and no luck. Is there a trick to this? I'm using a slice of sheetmetal and a vise grip as a jerry-rigged screwdriver, the slot is so big.
Well, it pays to open a vise completely before buying. When I got home I made a shocking discovery-- the screw had had about three inches cut off! As a result the vise only opens a little more than 4.5 inches-- enough to fit a 2x4 in there but nothing wider.
The guy who sold it to me had owned it a year in storage. It was his neighbor's, who had passed away. So I'm positive the seller had no idea the screw had been cut or why. The vise is undamaged otherwise and I can't think of why someone would cut the screw, so it's hard for me to think the screw was bent somehow during use and needed to be trimmed off?
One more thing. The swivel base has a giant screw on the bottom that I cannot get off. I've used PB and let the base sit in an electrolysis tank for three days and no luck. Is there a trick to this? I'm using a slice of sheetmetal and a vise grip as a jerry-rigged screwdriver, the slot is so big.
on the screw looking like a break...