Thread: Cross Vice
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Andy Hall Andy Hall is offline
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Default Cross Vice

On 2007-03-24 14:08:33 +0000, Tony Williams said:

In article ,
Andy Hall wrote:

That was one of my concerns - if there is a lot of backlash, or
worse still a tendency to move, it would be a bit useless.
I suppose that some replacement of screws could help.


I have a cheap X-Y vice that was bundled in with
this Warco pillar drill. Faults are......

The clasp nuts are only fixed with nasty little grub
screws going into threads cut in the cast iron.
No matter how much I heave on these screws there
is still a tiny slop in the clasp nuts.

There is a slight slop between the lead screws and
the clasp nuts. There is no means (like a locknut)
to tighten this up.


Not sure what you mean by clasp nuts.. Are these the assemblies
fitted on the outside of the castings through which the lead screws
first pass?




The grub screws that key into grooves in the lead
screws and stop end-end movement need to be very
tight, so much so that movements are hard work.

The jaws of the vice are very slightly off with
respect to the X-Y movement. It means that when
I mill (say) a slot in an aluminium plate then
it is not quite parallel with the edges.

That said, even with all those faults, that X-Y
vice has done some seriously good work, doing
quick rectangular milling jobs, holding-safe
material that can snatch (Brass!), etc.

I've probably knackered the headstock bearings though.


Mmm... OK.

I'm more interested in a quick way to align pieces for drilling a set
of holes without having to completely unclamp the work.
Occasionally I mill plastic...