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Randy Klein

Triple Screw Curved Vise

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After reading Chris Schwarz's new Workbenches book, I was inspired to make a protortype twin-screw vise. But after having made one and playing with it for a little while, I noticed two deficiencies. One, it is a little overkill (size-wise) for holding drawer components for dovetailing and such. Two, when clamping wide panels, the vise seems to put more pressure on the edges than the middle.

The first problem I solved by turning the twin screw into a triple screw; I added a shoulder vise screw in the middle. Now I have two different ways to dovetail drawer components.

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If I'm only doing one and the vise is already in the twin screw configuration, I can use it in the traditional fashion as shown below:

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But if I'm doing multiple drawers and/or the mood is right, I can thread in the third screw and use it like a shoulder vise.

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The second problem I solved by curving the face of the vise. Now it acts like a curved caul, distributing equal amounts of pressure across a larger portion of a panel. The curve has an added benefit in that it is easier to put in and take out a panel. By holding onto the panel and advancing one screw until it just kisses, there's enough tension to hold the panel in place. Then advance the other screw to lock it all in. An important aspect, though, is to have the curve end at the screws and let the portion outside the screws remain straight. Otherwise it would be difficult to clamp panels that are wider than your between-screws distance.

Here's a pic showing the curved caul distributing pressure from the inside out:

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These modifications are real easy to make.

The third screw can be installed in one of two ways. The first way is shown in the pictures. Bore a through-hole for the screw and use bolts to attach the female threaded portion to the outside of the vise. Just make sure to counter-bore the bolt holes on the interior. The second way is to mortise out a recess for the female threaded portion so that it sits on the inside. This configuration would have a cleaner look, but is more work. A stabilizer dowel must also be added. This dowel, which is glued into the "shoulder vise's" face moves in and out of a through hole in the twin-screw vise. If you don't add this, as you advance the third screw, the face will simply rotate and fall off. (Don't ask me how I know that.) (The pictures don't show this, but I wanted to center the vise over the leg, so that the drawer component piece would have more support. But it was an afterthought.)

The curved face drops off about a 1/4" from center to the screws and then remains 1/4" from the center to the ends of the vise. To mark out the curve, simply draw a mark 1/4" down at the screws and draw a gentle curve by hand or by using one of those sweeping curve templates. Then draw a straight line out to the end. Using a bandsaw, cut just outside the line and then plane cross-grain until you hit the line. I used a scrub plane followed by a block plane. You'll want to use narrow planes to get down in the intersection where it turns from curved to straight.

The last modification I made which I haven't mentioned yet, since it would have made my title longer, is to chamfer (a LARGE chamfer) the front and sides. Not only does this make the vise look a little less clunky, it provides a relief when you are sawing half-blind dovetails at a 45 degree angle.
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Comments

  1. Scott Thy's Avatar
    Nice work. I'm in the process of doing something similar - but I'm sticking to 2 screws (for now)

    Do you think that the wood you used for the jaw may have something to do with having more pressure at the ends then in the middle, when set up as a twin screw?

    Could it also be caused by how you drilled the holes for the screws?
  2. Randy Klein's Avatar
    The SYP probably bends more than a hardwood would. It turns out I have too much curvature in there still. I probably wont' do the curve thing in the real version and just use some leather to take up any unequal pressure.

    But can you elaborate on how you think the drilling screw holes affected it?
  3. Scott Thy's Avatar
    Well, I was thinking that if the holes on the apron are closer together than the holes on the jaw (the outer part), then the whole jaw would bend...Maybe the same thing would happen if the wholes were drilled out of parallel to each other (not sure how to explain this one, but if the holes aren't in the same plane, then when the vise is closed, the jaw may bend too). As I don't have a drill press, I've been thinking about the accuracy of drilling on cheap drill presses...and whether its worth buying one.