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Thread: Tail vises

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Aug 2012
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    Missouri
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    Tail vises

    I like tail vises. I had a bench with tail vise that I left behind 20 years ago. Last year I built a new bench with a tail vise. Went back to using a tail once again. Happiness is a tail vise. I do almost all joinery work with a tail vise. Jim Koepke said we needed a tail vise thread so here we go. Good, bad, love, hate all can be here.
    Jim

  2. #2
    I really like tail vises and I think every bench should have one. If not then a wagon vise will work in a pinch. I also prefer a shoulder vise to a leg vise. Shoulder vise hardware from Lee Valley will set on back about $35. I use the same hardware for wagon vises. And for course my leg vise.

    DSC03414.JPG DSC03274.JPG DSC03408.JPG DSC03252.JPG
    Tom

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Mar 2017
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    Forest Lake MN
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    340
    I really like the scandanavian shoulder and tail combo as well.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Sep 2007
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    Longview WA
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    There is wisdom in the idea of keeping things simple. My tail vise is likely one of the simplest to have on a bench. Mine gets used more than my face vise because of the type of work done and the layout of my shop. It works fine for edge planing small pieces, holding a piece to be sawn. It holds many of my small fixtures such as a bird's mouth for a fret saw and a shooing board for squaring stock.

    A wagon vise is likely the bee's knees for those who have chosen that design just as the Scandinavian tail vise works for those who use it in their designs.

    My vises will not hold a drawer for fitting the way Tom's vise can. There are ways around this, but if one is doing a lot of drawer fitting why not use a design that is advantageous for such work than to be constantly having to create an adaptation?

    There will always be different advantages of one vise system over another based on the scope of the work being done.

    Likewise there are many ways to work without a tail vise. Hopefully that will never be my fate. With my vise, when there is an advantage to be had by not having a tail vise, it is easily removed in less than a minute.

    jtk
    "A pessimist sees the difficulty in every opportunity; an optimist sees the opportunity in every difficulty."
    - Sir Winston Churchill (1874-1965)

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Dec 2016
    Location
    South West Ontario
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    1,504
    My tail vise is the most used by far. Unlike a wagon vise you get a pair of jaws to work with as well. The hardware is ultra simple and low cost. I made mine longer than most, it can open 13”. The main motivation was I only had enough black walnut fo make a 7’ bench. The tail vise extends enough I can make a door, it’s like having a bench a foot longer.
    Yes it’s more complicated to make but it’s just a sliding frame.
    For me the hardest part was finding good affordable hardwood for my once in a lifetime bench. I’ve used workarounds, makeshift this and that over the years. They worked in a awkward way and not very well. That is why you build a real bench.
    60196680-116E-4DDA-A53C-227ADEECD07A.jpgC03D8C12-BF66-4BD1-80EB-B4D5E31BCC37.jpg0B6136F5-F046-49A1-90D5-209D26B6B430.jpgEF30F2B1-7C60-4B69-BDED-CF934749F534.jpg
    ​You can do a lot with very little! You can do a little more with a lot!

  6. #6

    Red face

    I like the ability to clamp here also with the tail vise.
    IMG_1800.JPG

    Oops I just saw Williams photo
    Last edited by Robert Engel; 12-16-2021 at 11:10 AM.

  7. #7
    Someday I'm going to get around to installing the Lie-Nielsen tail vise I bought last year. For the time being I get by with my angled leg vise (far superior to the vertical leg vise IMO) and a planing stop.

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Apr 2015
    Location
    New England area
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    588
    Quote Originally Posted by James Pallas View Post
    I like tail vises. I had a bench with tail vise that I left behind 20 years ago. Last year I built a new bench with a tail vise. Went back to using a tail once again. Happiness is a tail vise. I do almost all joinery work with a tail vise. Jim Koepke said we needed a tail vise thread so here we go. Good, bad, love, hate all can be here.
    Jim
    Tail and shoulder vices -- unobstructed clamping all the way to the floor, or the ceiling come to think of it. No screws to work around, no wracking.

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Aug 2012
    Location
    Missouri
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    I use a tail vise most of the time. Not having one for many years had me exploring many creative ways for work holding. That was probably a good thing. Having a tail vise sent me back to my old ways. I also put an angled leg vise on the bench. I haven’t experimented with it much never having much experience with one. Besides having too much fun with my beloved tail vise. One good thing I remembered was making a lynch pin type handle that I can just slip out so it doesn’t interfere with work. Most of the time I don’t use the handle anyway. Maybe that cold weather has come I’ll finish the detailing of the bench.
    Jim
    Attached Images Attached Images
    Last edited by James Pallas; 12-17-2021 at 7:21 AM.

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Jan 2019
    Location
    Fairbanks AK
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    1,566
    Please do keep posting here, I need this thread for ideas. No tail vise for me yet, but there are times, usually when working the faces of boards, when I think a row of dogholes and some kind of end vise could work well for me. I have pretty well decided to take a class in a shop with a bunch of different end vises on the various benches before I build my next bench, but whether I will be able to travel before I build my next bench is starting to look like a toss up.

    Good idea Jim and James.

  11. #11
    This is my solution. I like to butt boards against a planing stop, but with longer, wider pieces a tail vise offers the best solution. This design works with an end vise. In my case, it is a twin-screw vise. I had several iterations of this but opted for this version as it has a small footprint and works well. Have been using it for 2 years now and am enjoying it. I don't even think of getting another tail vise any longer. So they are set up on opposite sides of the workbench to be able to use both left-handed and right-handed specialty planes, as well as providing more versatility. It is removable and the narrow profile allows me to use the almost full width of the end vise for panel work.

    IMG_0100-1600.jpg IMG_0086-1600-1.jpg

  12. #12
    Join Date
    Aug 2012
    Location
    Missouri
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    2,152
    Quote Originally Posted by Norman Pirollo View Post
    This is my solution. I like to butt boards against a planing stop, but with longer, wider pieces a tail vise offers the best solution. This design works with an end vise. In my case, it is a twin-screw vise. I had several iterations of this but opted for this version as it has a small footprint and works well. Have been using it for 2 years now and am enjoying it. I don't even think of getting another tail vise any longer. So they are set up on opposite sides of the workbench to be able to use both left-handed and right-handed specialty planes, as well as providing more versatility. It is removable and the narrow profile allows me to use the almost full width of the end vise for panel work.

    IMG_0100-1600.jpg IMG_0086-1600-1.jpg
    I have something similar on my Noden bench. I call it my “wannabe” moxon. I use two face vises. It works very well and the vises can work independently. A tail vise it is not however.
    Jim
    Attached Images Attached Images

  13. #13
    You are going to enjoy the LN tail vise: well worth the effort.

    [IMG][/IMG]

    Quote Originally Posted by Joshua Lucas View Post
    Someday I'm going to get around to installing the Lie-Nielsen tail vise I bought last year. For the time being I get by with my angled leg vise (far superior to the vertical leg vise IMO) and a planing stop.

  14. #14
    I have the hadware for a tail vise. It looks like the green one shown in the LV catalogue. I have no idea how to costruct the entire vise. A brief search wasn't very helpful. I'm interested in the sliding single screw type like the beautiful examples shown nearby. Any recommendation for plans?

    Thanks for the timely thread. I am always grateful for the knowledge and generosity I find on this forum.

  15. #15
    Here is a nice FWW article on the subject:

    https://www.finewoodworking.com/proj...duty-workbench

    Quote Originally Posted by Dan Sheehan View Post
    I have the hadware for a tail vise. It looks like the green one shown in the LV catalogue. I have no idea how to costruct the entire vise. A brief search wasn't very helpful. I'm interested in the sliding single screw type like the beautiful examples shown nearby. Any recommendation for plans?

    Thanks for the timely thread. I am always grateful for the knowledge and generosity I find on this forum.

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