Absolutely right. Actually, I've become a vice restoration junkie and need help immediately. I'm scouring UA-cam for my daily fix and happen to have come across this. Oh what a rush....
Just came back to this tiny city apartment I'm renting after two weeks in my parent's garage in the country, where I spent most of my time working on a knife made from some old rusted iron I found lying around. It's hard to describe how satisfying it is to watch videos like these and be reminded of that THAT's really the type of life I want. Thanks again Jimmy!
I love seeing that tool from Erie, PA get a new life. My grandfather was a sheet metal fabricator and slate roofer in Erie, PA his whole life. He worked on church steeples installing roofing and the crosses and religious figures he build in his shop. He passed on his Chevy truck to me and I think of him every time I drive it. Thanks for this video, Jimmy!
Another great video by my "old school" hero who has the common sense to use modern technology to enhance his skills. Thanks, Jimmy, for all you have taught us.
You know it's going to be a good day when you find a new Diresta video among the suggestions. Verr impressed with the care and expertise shown restoring this beautiful monster.
Great trick I learned from an old-timer for getting rusted/seized components or bolts lose: With a torch, heat the metal. Rub wax of any kind on the joint. Let cool. The wax will be pulled into the joint/cracks & lubricant the metal as it cools. This works when penetrating oils fail.
Great to see someone restoring a red vise I grew up in Erie I knew people who worked there. Dad worked for national forge and Weill McLane they are all gone now.
Best coop I could imagine - HandToolRescue and DIRESTA!!!! You’re the best!!!!! Love your work and hope that one day I will become one like you are. You both inspired me to start my own channel. I’m working on my first project and you both will be first to see it. Hope you will like it :) All the best to you and your teams!
It was so cool to see this restoration. Erie is my hometown and Reed Manufacturing is a big deal to this area. The people that work in that shop would be proud to see that vice restored.
Pounding wedges in stuck vice jaws is just asking for trouble. I have seen the massive mighty jaws just snap but Im so glad this vise is being restored. I have one just like it.
I was thinking the same thing. what's the alternative? pre-soak in rust remover before working the parts free? edit: I thought you were referring to the base coming off. but still, what other options are there? hydraulic press? soak in oil ore additional rust remover? I liked their heating idea to loosen the grip
@@TomsLife9 50%50% automatic transmission fluid and acetone. Chews up the rust and penetrates deep in the cracks. Freed lots of rusty things up with that mix.
we've got this exact same vise in the barn on family ranch we use daily, just had to repair jam nut on handle it was not letting it loosen anymore. Awesome tool, it lived on a post outside for years until we brought it inside the shop
Thank You Jimmy for sharing this amazing vise restoration with us, It's beautiful!Just a little insight; If water caused the problem, water will fix it(rust). Yes, bathe it in penetrating oil of choice, then let it soak for up to a week in water. A Kiddy pool would work great for something the size of that beautiful vise.Keep making, Jerry
That was a lot of work put into the REED 208 vise! The 208 vise appears in the REED 1916 catalog. It had a list price of $98 and weighed in at 278 lbs. REED vises have outlasted their makers in many cases. Thanks for sharing.
This has been one of my favorite episodes in a long time I really enjoy watching hand tool rescue so to see hand tool rescue on Jimmy diresta is Channel it was pretty awesome
It always pains me to see people try and disassemble the slide.. but don't use a wire wheel to remove the rust and debris.. so they end up beating the hell outta the thing..
I know that just kills me also. If they would stop and think about what they are trying to achieve it would make their life alot easier. Work smarter not harder.
DiResta on Instagram: Tormach Breaks bit, pattern slightly irregular, “.....it’s OK. It’s a vise, not a piece of jewelry.” Puts jaws on vise, looks like effing Crown Jewels! Awesome Rescue!
There is something so satisfying about watching a piece of america history that was discarded and being brought back to life that is amazing. Thank you JImmy.
And to think some people waste money joining gyms, but to get a good workout they should just buy a massive seized up vice! Great restoration, both for the quality of the work and the fact you saved this great piece of engineering.
Made in my hometown Erie PA! Some of the best vises and pipe wrenches!!!! The company is still in business!!!!good stuff!!!!! They also cast pipe wrenches for ridgid.zurn foundry is also in Erie they pour toilet carriers.and other cast plumbing fixtures!!cool to see the vid!!!!! Peace!
I am from Erie PA also. It's great to see these old Reed vises still going strong and it's one of the few of the heavy insustries still operating in Erie. DiResta and his friends did a great job restoring that monster. The patent date on the vise is my birthday except the patent was 47 years earlier! Too bad that many of the old factories lining 12th street are mostly gone, and GE is a shadow of what it once was, there were almost 14,000 employees when I worked there. I grew up on the lake shore between Hammermill Papers and GE.
Everytime I see Jimmy's shop I think of how fun it would be to make something there. Literally have every tool you need and tools you didnt even know existed.
We used to have the equivalent Sheffield made vice at the Pit 'I worked at. I think it was called a Record chipping vice and it weighed in about 2 1/2 hundredweight. When the pit closed one of the blacksmiths made off with it [and a load of other stuff] in the back of his car - looked like concord taking off with his front wheels barely touching the ground
I found an old Athol 5-6 last week for 10 bucks at the skimpiest garage sale you’ve ever seen- no more than 10 items for sale on an old cardboard folding table- and there on the ground is a 100 lb Athol. This Reed puts it to shame and I prolly can’t get Hand tool Rescue out to my garage to mix up an Evaporust cocktail - but I’ll shine it up nonetheless. Can’t wait for the vid when you mount this Giant.
When things are stuck try a solution of 50% acetone, 50% automatic transmission fluid, also know as Fagen's Brew. Mechanics workshop did a torque test; Nothing 516, WD40 238, PBBlaster 214, Liquid Wrench 214, Kano Kroil 106, Fagen's Brew 53
IMHO acetone and ATF is fine for a small glass jar (or perhaps a quart) of parts, but the flammability risk is too great when using a larger quantity of acetone. A saner (and safer, cheaper) "solution" 😆is diesel mixed with about 30% ATF. Very old and proven mixture. Just did a large industrial chain at work a few weeks ago using 3 gallons of this very mix. Very successful as always.
Nice vice. I hope y'all get many years service from it. (and maintain it better than the former owner(s) did, so you don't have to restore it a second time. :) )
thank you jimmy, i really thought this a perfect representation of what we should show our youth. i love all your videos and really appreciate what you do.
Soak it in a barrel for a week. Nothing is more like fingers in a blackboard than watching someone go at something all dry and rusty. I never, if I can help it, put a wrench or screwdriver on a dry nut bolt or screw... never
I havent gotten to jimmy's video yet, still watching the St. Jude's commercial and trying not to cry in the auto dealership waiting room! (Oil change) OMG, I cant skip it, for both Jimmy and St Jude! I'm sure the vice restore will be a good video, but I doubt it will make me cry. Gonna make a donation, I challenge all the Diresta fan's to match my $10 donation to St. Jude's! Think of the impact we would have!
man missed opportunity you should have called jackmanworks in just for that big flat head screw on the bottom. been like "man i finally found a use for that giant screw driver you made"
I've used similar rust removers and they tend to leave a black residue that washes or wipes off. I'm guessing Jimmy used a wire wheel on the angle grinder to get that surface on the metal
Hi Jimmy, A great re-construction of that vice, very well done. I am so jealous of all your beautiful tools, especially the ones I don't have, I suppose I will just have to cry myself to sleep (again).
“No rookies here” just as I guy awkwardly picks up a sledgehammer to hit the vise looking like someone that’s never held a sledgehammer before. Nice save and persistence paid off with a little help from your friends, especially once that Canadian guy with “the voice” showed up.
I love watching a bunch of grown men experience child like joy fixing up an old vise. It's great .
Absolutely right. Actually, I've become a vice restoration junkie and need help immediately. I'm scouring UA-cam for my daily fix and happen to have come across this. Oh what a rush....
@@simonacuthbert1you’re stealing my thoughts - I like it when they sand blast to de rust them (not sure if that make me a sad case but hey)
Just came back to this tiny city apartment I'm renting after two weeks in my parent's garage in the country, where I spent most of my time working on a knife made from some old rusted iron I found lying around. It's hard to describe how satisfying it is to watch videos like these and be reminded of that THAT's really the type of life I want. Thanks again Jimmy!
Shoot this into my veins.
Lol
I see you !
Your face at 2:03 is everything. :P
Lol
The smell of fresh EvapORust lol!
Why am I just now watching this? Best resto yet and with hand tool rescue and others there.... This is RESTO GOLD!
I love seeing that tool from Erie, PA get a new life. My grandfather was a sheet metal fabricator and slate roofer in Erie, PA his whole life. He worked on church steeples installing roofing and the crosses and religious figures he build in his shop. He passed on his Chevy truck to me and I think of him every time I drive it. Thanks for this video, Jimmy!
Wow , what a workout for 3 guy for 3 days to get it apart . Beautiful piece . With love it will last another 100 years . Thank you Jimmy and crew .
That is one hell of a vice. Any machinist worth his salt would be proud to own it. Great job gentlemen!
If that old vise could talk, it would be thanking you from the bottom of its' heart.
Good for at least another 100 years!
Love & respect brother.
now ya need to make a 20 foot bench to mount it on,
The montage of beating on this old vise made me unreasonably happy. It’s nice to see other people patiently beating on old iron. Thanks!
Another great video by my "old school" hero who has the common sense to use modern technology to enhance his skills. Thanks, Jimmy, for all you have taught us.
I was fortunate to find your channel. The world needs more people like you. Helpful teachers who willfully give their knowledge to others.
A DiResta video, sigh - it's my biggest vise.
I see what you did there... Every Dad in this room applauds ;)
I have 3 vices in my shop, named them Sex, Drugs and Rock 'n Roll
@@dustysparks this dad giggled like an idiot.
That's a beautiful beast of an old Vise and I like how you stopped at putting it back in service instead of polishing and painting it and stuff.
I’ve got over a hundred vises. Reeds being some of my favorites. I’m still looking for a a Reed 209. Nice job on getting it back in service.
If u ever need a good home where one of those vises will b well looked after I will pay shipping lol
Hu...so it's your fault I can't find any.
Do you have any Wiltons? What models? I just picked one up
You know it's going to be a good day when you find a new Diresta video among the suggestions. Verr impressed with the care and expertise shown restoring this beautiful monster.
Outstanding find! And with Handtool Rescue none the less... you spoil us Mr. Diresta. Thank you.
There's little more joyful than giving a second life to an old tool. Something you seem to do in abundance JD. Thanks for sharing.
I love the fact that you are saving some of those GREATold tools and the chickens now have a vise
That is a thing of beauty. Cheers Jimmy for giving it at least another 100 years of life!
That tape measure action at the end was hilarious! Seriously nice vice and restoration! Thanks for sharing guys!
the vise would still be kinda big if that were cm...
A good soak in a 50\50 mix of acetone and automatic trans fluid works great for freeing up things like this.
Great trick I learned from an old-timer for getting rusted/seized components or bolts lose:
With a torch, heat the metal.
Rub wax of any kind on the joint.
Let cool.
The wax will be pulled into the joint/cracks & lubricant the metal as it cools. This works when penetrating oils fail.
Huh... gonna try it this weekend :)
Great to see someone restoring a red vise I grew up in Erie I knew people who worked there. Dad worked for national forge and Weill McLane they are all gone now.
Best coop I could imagine -
HandToolRescue and DIRESTA!!!!
You’re the best!!!!!
Love your work and hope that one day I will become one like you are. You both inspired me to start my own channel.
I’m working on my first project and you both will be first to see it. Hope you will like it :)
All the best to you and your teams!
It was so cool to see this restoration. Erie is my hometown and Reed Manufacturing is a big deal to this area. The people that work in that shop would be proud to see that vice restored.
Pounding wedges in stuck vice jaws is just asking for trouble. I have seen the massive mighty jaws just snap but Im so glad this vise is being restored. I have one just like it.
I was thinking the same thing. what's the alternative? pre-soak in rust remover before working the parts free?
edit: I thought you were referring to the base coming off. but still, what other options are there? hydraulic press? soak in oil ore additional rust remover? I liked their heating idea to loosen the grip
@@TomsLife9 50%50% automatic transmission fluid and acetone. Chews up the rust and penetrates deep in the cracks. Freed lots of rusty things up with that mix.
we've got this exact same vise in the barn on family ranch we use daily, just had to repair jam nut on handle it was not letting it loosen anymore. Awesome tool, it lived on a post outside for years until we brought it inside the shop
“Evapo-trust me on this.” 😂😂😂
You better!
It's great to see something so lovingly restored despite all the work it took to do it.
Of course Hand Tool Rescue shows up with the Evaporust.
I still can't get over Spike's passing away :(. That cat, Jimmy! That cat, was like the coolest cat in the world!
Good to see your truck rear tub slider being used love it, love the videos
Good on you jimmy
Thank You Jimmy for sharing this amazing vise restoration with us, It's beautiful!Just a little insight; If water caused the problem, water will fix it(rust). Yes, bathe it in penetrating oil of choice, then let it soak for up to a week in water. A Kiddy pool would work great for something the size of that beautiful vise.Keep making, Jerry
The one guy looks like the Hand Tool Rescue guy... EvapoRust furthered that connection.
Wow.. what a monster of a vise. Did a great job on bringing it back to life!
That was a lot of work put into the REED 208 vise! The 208 vise appears in the REED 1916 catalog. It had a list price of $98 and weighed in at 278 lbs. REED vises have outlasted their makers in many cases. Thanks for sharing.
just $98?
98 dollars in 2016? I'm not too sure about that folks :)
@@thomaaz My mistake - 1916 price was $98. Sorry! It's from the 1916 catalog and then the 1916 price.
You know anything about the Reed 224 1/2 R? Google doesn’t know anything about it.
@@ReedPipeTools thought so :), amazing tools, they last 2 lifetimes.
I wish Andrew had a channel. I love that Dallas-style trash talk.
"Every man needs a vice" .. yours just so happens to be vices, much love brutha. T
Thank you for breathing life back into this beautiful old vise.
before watching this I didn't know that vise-envy was a thing. Nice work, gentlemen.
This has been one of my favorite episodes in a long time I really enjoy watching hand tool rescue so to see hand tool rescue on Jimmy diresta is Channel it was pretty awesome
It always pains me to see people try and disassemble the slide.. but don't use a wire wheel to remove the rust and debris.. so they end up beating the hell outta the thing..
Or adding some penetrating oil, works wonders.
Carl
Yup. Amateur hour.
I know that just kills me also. If they would stop and think about what they are trying to achieve it would make their life alot easier. Work smarter not harder.
I will never restore tools but your videos on the process are fascinating ! Thank you for sharing !
DiResta on Instagram: Tormach Breaks bit, pattern slightly irregular, “.....it’s OK. It’s a vise, not a piece of jewelry.” Puts jaws on vise, looks like effing Crown Jewels! Awesome Rescue!
There is something so satisfying about watching a piece of america history that was discarded and being brought back to life that is amazing. Thank you JImmy.
FINALLY!! HEAT! YAY! And then the millwork was especially nice - pretty jaws again.
And to think some people waste money joining gyms, but to get a good workout they should just buy a massive seized up vice! Great restoration, both for the quality of the work and the fact you saved this great piece of engineering.
That sonic boom you heard was Abom79 breaking the sound barrier coming up from Pensacola. (and yay Hand Tool Rescue!)
I like these people. I haven't seen a Diresta video in what feels like forever.
Made in my hometown Erie PA! Some of the best vises and pipe wrenches!!!! The company is still in business!!!!good stuff!!!!! They also cast pipe wrenches for ridgid.zurn foundry is also in Erie they pour toilet carriers.and other cast plumbing fixtures!!cool to see the vid!!!!! Peace!
I am from Erie PA also. It's great to see these old Reed vises still going strong and it's one of the few of the heavy insustries still operating in Erie. DiResta and his friends did a great job restoring that monster. The patent date on the vise is my birthday except the patent was 47 years earlier! Too bad that many of the old factories lining 12th street are mostly gone, and GE is a shadow of what it once was, there were almost 14,000 employees when I worked there. I grew up on the lake shore between Hammermill Papers and GE.
Everytime I see Jimmy's shop I think of how fun it would be to make something there. Literally have every tool you need and tools you didnt even know existed.
Age-old vice got jaws made with a CNC. Old meets new in a great way.
Adam Booth is going to be so envious! His very favorite vises. You say only 35 were built? Wow.
I love to see older stuff re machined.
Adam Booth aka Abom 79, would approve of this rescue. Great job. Having vise envy.
And yet I didn't know you made a video with hand tool rescue. I love his channel too, so funny
We used to have the equivalent Sheffield made vice at the Pit 'I worked at. I think it was called a Record chipping vice and it weighed in about 2 1/2 hundredweight. When the pit closed one of the blacksmiths made off with it [and a load of other stuff] in the back of his car - looked like concord taking off with his front wheels barely touching the ground
And a huge thank you for dropping Hand Tool Resque's name 🙂🙂🙂🙂👍👍👍👍👍🙂🙂🙂🙂
Surprising how stuff that was well made in the first place always stands the test of time...🇬🇧👍
Hi, Mr Diresta.
Glad for new vid. 😊
Wow. That's a vice and half. Good work in putting in the effort to get that beauty back and up and clamping!
DiResta 1 : Vise 0
THAT was a lot of rust.
14:20, thats how hands should look like at the end of a day.
Incredible vise.
Very enjoyable watching the restoration of it.
"One of 30!"
Hand tool rescue cameo!
Oh ya noticed that too eh bud?
There is something so satisfying about bringing this back to life. thanks for sharing it with us.
“Evapotrust Me” ~ Hand Tool Rescue 😂
I found an old Athol 5-6 last week for 10 bucks at the skimpiest garage sale you’ve ever seen- no more than 10 items for sale on an old cardboard folding table- and there on the ground is a 100 lb Athol.
This Reed puts it to shame and I prolly can’t get Hand tool Rescue out to my garage to mix up an Evaporust cocktail - but I’ll shine it up nonetheless.
Can’t wait for the vid when you mount this Giant.
When things are stuck try a solution of 50% acetone, 50% automatic transmission fluid, also know as Fagen's Brew. Mechanics workshop did a torque test; Nothing 516, WD40 238, PBBlaster 214, Liquid Wrench 214, Kano Kroil 106, Fagen's Brew 53
IMHO acetone and ATF is fine for a small glass jar (or perhaps a quart) of parts, but the flammability risk is too great when using a larger quantity of acetone. A saner (and safer, cheaper) "solution" 😆is diesel mixed with about 30% ATF. Very old and proven mixture. Just did a large industrial chain at work a few weeks ago using 3 gallons of this very mix. Very successful as always.
That old vise deserves a name.
Good get!
But whew, anxiety filled episode!
Especially that front part!
Thought for sure we was gonna see something break
A thing of beauty! Love seeing it come back to life, and those Jaws! Great job Jimmy D!
Wut was the spray they used to make it look black
What a beautiful piece of craftsmanship! 😍😍😍
Hand tool rescue was on there what a legend
Just going back to watch older videos and was pleasantly surprised to see this :)
Love seeing old work horses brought back to life!
Nice vice. I hope y'all get many years service from it. (and maintain it better than the former owner(s) did, so you don't have to restore it a second time. :) )
Wow! Excellent job! I've got a big vise similar to this , but mine is still operable.Great dedication to tradition! Thanks for the video.
The fact you sound like minions is so fitting. Mad genius at work.
WeI Will never what Mr. Diresta Will to do about the things. His videos is always a new surprise.
Ending scene is just fowl.
thank you jimmy, i really thought this a perfect representation of what we should show our youth. i love all your videos and really appreciate what you do.
'This is not the rookie corner over here'. Proceeds to hit the lock nut pin with a sledgehammer held at the head...
I like how the super crisp plates contrast with the weathered vise. Nice design.
I bet we'll be hearing from abom79 about this one.
I love the replies from Abom that are sourced into a video that are simply expressions of "WTF"
@@ytwdh Tony uses that to great effect :D hehehehe
That’s a real nice Reed! I have a nice Reed 204 1/2 vice I’ve used throughout my entire career as a blacksmith and custom knife maker.
How is it that there are still rusty vices in the world? Every youtube shop channel has a "Rusty Vice Restoration" video!
(Vice is the UK spelling).
I wasn't expecting the egg at the end!
Thank you for posting Mr Diresta.
That is awesome vice..and as I’m watching ...I wonder..you guys never thought of using a penetrating oil?
Soak it in a barrel for a week. Nothing is more like fingers in a blackboard than watching someone go at something all dry and rusty.
I never, if I can help it, put a wrench or screwdriver on a dry nut bolt or screw... never
I havent gotten to jimmy's video yet, still watching the St. Jude's commercial and trying not to cry in the auto dealership waiting room! (Oil change) OMG, I cant skip it, for both Jimmy and St Jude! I'm sure the vice restore will be a good video, but I doubt it will make me cry. Gonna make a donation, I challenge all the Diresta fan's to match my $10 donation to St. Jude's! Think of the impact we would have!
man missed opportunity you should have called jackmanworks in just for that big flat head screw on the bottom. been like "man i finally found a use for that giant screw driver you made"
You're right, these always look great on camera!
Does anyone know what Jimmy used to get the raw metal shiny look? Glad he didn't paint it...
I've used similar rust removers and they tend to leave a black residue that washes or wipes off. I'm guessing Jimmy used a wire wheel on the angle grinder to get that surface on the metal
Never seen someone hammer so fast and accurately. Almost looked like a cartoon. Very skillful.
What was the name of the song that started at 7:38? I think it helped them stay in the groove.
Hi Jimmy, A great re-construction of that vice, very well done. I am so jealous of all your beautiful tools, especially the ones I don't have, I suppose I will just have to cry myself to sleep (again).
6:55 you sound like minions trying to build a bomb
Best video i have seen in weeks! This vice gets me weak in the knees!
“No rookies here” just as I guy awkwardly picks up a sledgehammer to hit the vise looking like someone that’s never held a sledgehammer before.
Nice save and persistence paid off with a little help from your friends, especially once that Canadian guy with “the voice” showed up.
Hand Tool Rescue is like looking at the EvapoRust pour like Ansley Harriot being "YEAH BOY"
Hahaha