I Steampunked My Twin Turbo Bench Vice From Andy Klein
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- čas přidán 16. 04. 2023
- In this video, I Build the chop for the Andy Kleins Twin Turbo vise for my workbench. Then go off the rails and add a patination to the gears to give it a steampunk feel.
Here is the link to the vice I went with
www.in-kleind.com/store/24-Tw...
I also upgraded the swivel mount system
www.in-kleind.com/store/Twin-...
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somehow I missed this video when it came out, really great work and I love how it turned out!
That turned out incredible but i would be terrified to do that to my new tool! Thanks for sharing your process of putting Andy's vice together.
Very very nice. That adjustable pinion is awesome. Congrats
cool
Looks SICK!!!
Awesome Vice!! Well done Mr. Benham
Simple but so nice.
Turned out amazing
Looks awesome. Great job.
Very nice I love your channel you make very beautiful furniture and the new vice is sick
Bravo!!
Good for you bro. Great job
Looks Beautiful. Worth the extra effort to get that unique look. My Roubo is 100mm thick. I hope when you get around to it, you take the thickness into consideration when mounting the new work of art you have just installed.
I may end up building a new chop, just because I think it would look cool with walnut accents. Lol, but we will see what happens when the time comes
Very cool, Brian! I can't wait to order one of Andy's vises for my bench build. Nothing steam punked planned but I'd better be careful or my girls might want to paint those gears pink! LOL oh who knows. Maybe an old school 80s BMX neon theme of some sort? 🤔
Florescent pinks and purples, and illuminate it with a blacklight!
Really cool. I wish you would have explained all the chemicals you were using to get that effect.
i wanna know more about that copper solution, that looks all kinds a useful
Maybe someday I'll do a course on it.
Great work customizing the vise! I know I'm late to the game in discovering this video, but if you have a few minutes, I'd love to know which chemicals you used to add the patina
People keep asking me what chemicals I use to copper plate the steel. It doesn't matter; Google will tell you which ones will copper plate steel, and there are several different ways to do it, and they all work. However, to get cool results, it is the application process that matters, and that comes with practice.
@Brian Benham Can you make an inhome steampunk sliding door for your next project?
I'll put it on the list for consideration. The key to that one is getting the wife to greenlight the project 😜
I am building a roubo right now and am putting the 20" version on with the swivel mount. How much room did you need from the edge to use the swivel base?
I flushed it to the front of the bench, and used the spacing Andy gave for how far apart to place them. It's my understanding that each size has a different spacing.
Was the metal template plate included with the vise kit? Never mind, I see it's part of the assembly. Nice touch adding the patina
It's part of the vise itself, I put it to work as a template as well.
I'm not a fan if steampunk...but it is the healthiest way to prepare punk.
😂
Hello, is the vice any good?
Best one I've ever used
you're right handed. why did you, after all that effort, put the vise in the wrong place of the bench? silly.
What is silly is how closed minded people are to alternative ways of doing things. The purpose of having the vise in the left for a right handed person primarily was determined by hand planning. So you could joint a board comfortably. I have a jointer so I don't typically use my vise for that.
For the type of work I do and my personal body mechanics, I find the vise on the right, to be more useful and comfortable to use.