Vise (tool)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A vise (American and Canadian English) or vice (British English) is a mechanical screw apparatus used for holding or clamping a work piece to allow work to be performed on it using other tools, such as saws, planes, drills, mills, screwdrivers, sandpaper, etc. In general, vises have a fixed jaw with another moved in relation to it by the use of the screw.
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[edit] Varieties of vise or vice
Without qualification, "vise" usually refers to a bench vise with flat, parallel jaws, attached to a workbench.
- A woodworker's bench vice is a more or less integral part of the bench.
- An engineer's bench vise is bolted onto the top of the bench.
Other kinds of vise include:
- hand vises (hand-held),
- machine vises - drill vises (lie flat on a drill press bed). Vises of the same general form are used also on milling machines and grinding machines.
- compound slide vises are more complex machine vises. They allow speed and precision in the placement of the work.
- off-center vises,
- angle vises,
- sine vises, which use solving triangles and gauge blocks to set up a highly accurate angle,
- rotary vises,
- diemakers' vises,
- table vises,
- pin vises (for holding thin, long cylindrical objects by one end),
- jewellers' vises and by contrast,
- leg vises, which are attached to a bench but also supported from the ground so as to be stable under the very heavy use imposed by a blacksmith's work.
[edit] Woodworking vises
For woodworking, the jaws are made of wood, plastic or from metal, in the latter case they are usually faced with wood to avoid marring the work piece. The top edges of the jaws are typically brought flush with the bench top by the extension of the wooden face above the top of the iron moveable jaw. This jaw may include a dog hole to hold a bench dog. In modern metal woodworkers' vises, a split nut is almost universally used. The nut in which the screw turns is in two parts so that, by means of a lever, it can be removed from the screw and the screw and moveable jaw quickly slid into a suitable position at which point the nut is again closed onto the screw so that the vise may be closed firmly onto the work.
[edit] Metalworkers' vises
For metalworking, the jaws are made of metal which may be hardened steel with a coarse gripping finish. Removable soft jaws are usually kept for use where appropriate, to protect the work from damage.
Metalworking bench vises, known as engineers' or fitters' vises, are bolted onto the top surface of the bench with the face of the fixed jaws just forward of the front edge of the bench. The bench height should be such that the top of the vise jaws is at or just below the elbow height of the user when standing upright. Were several people use the one vise, this is a counsel of perfection but is still a good guide.
The nut in which the screw turns may be split so that, by means of a lever, it can be removed from the screw and the screw and moveable jaw quickly slid into a suitable position at which point the nut is again closed onto the screw. Many fitters prefer to use the greater precision available from a plain screw vise. The vise may include other features such as a small anvil on the back of its body but it is in general, better to separate the functions of the various tools.
Vise screws are usually either of an Acme thread form or a buttress thread. Those with a quick-release nut use a buttress thread.
The word 'vise' comes ultimately, from the Latin word vitis (vine), referring to the helical tendrils of the vine. The more direct source is the French vis, screw.
[edit] Metalworking Vises in Machine Shops
In high production machine work, work must be held in the same location with great accuracy so CNC machines may perform operations on an array of vises. To assist this, there are several machine-shop specific vises and vise accessories.
Hard and soft machine jaws have a very important difference between other metalworking vise jaws. The jaws are precision ground to a very flat and smooth surface for accuracy. These rely on mechanical pressure for gripping, instead of a rough surface. An unskilled operator has the tendency to over-tighten jaws, leading to part deformation and error in the finished workpiece. The jaws themselves come in a variety of hard and soft jaw profiles, for various work needs. One can purchase machinable soft jaws, and mill the profile of the part into them to speed part set-up and eliminate measurement. This is most commonly done in gang operations, discussed below. For rectangular parts being worked at 45 degree angles, prismatic hard jaws exist with V grooves cut into them to hold the part. Some vises have a hydraulic or pneumatic screw, making setup not only faster, but more accurate as human error is removed.
For large parts, an array of regular machine vises may be set up to hold a part that is too long for one vise to hold. The vises' fixed jaws are aligned by means of a dial indicator so that there is a common reference plane for the CNC machine.
For multiple parts, several options exist, and all machine vise manufacturers have lines of vises available for high production work.
- The first step is a two clamp vise, where the fixed jaw is in the center of the vise and movable jaws ride on the same screw to the outside.
- The next step up is the modular vise. Modular vises can be arranged and bolted together in a grid, with no space between them. This allows the greatest density of vises on a given work surface. This style vise also comes in a two clamp variety.
- Tower vises are vertical vises used in horizontal machining centers. They have one vise per side, and come in single or dual clamping station varieties. A dual clamping tower vise, for example, will hold eight relatively large parts without the need for a tool change.
- Tombstone fixtures follow the same theory as a tower vise. Tombstones allow four surfaces of vises to be worked on one rotary table pallet. A tombstone is a large, accurate, hardened block of metal that is bolted to the CNC pallet. The surface of the tombstone has holes to accommodate modular vises across all four faces on a pallet that can rotate to expose those faces to the machine spindle.
- New workholding fixtures are becoming available for five-axis machining centers. These specialty vises allow the machine to work on surfaces that would normally be obscured when mounted in a traditional or tombstone vise setup.
Engineer's bench vise or fitter's vise - image inset shows soft jaws |
Metalworking:
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Ball-peen hammer | Combination square | Drift pin | File | File card | Hammer | Hand scraper | Machinist square | Magnetic base | Peening | Pliers | Power tool | Punch | Rotary tool | Scriber | Throatless shear | Tongs | Tool | Vise | Workbench | Wrench |
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