Vice breaking takes me back to about six months into my apprenticeship in a Power Station back in the early ’50’s (not 1850’s).
All fitters benches were fitted with 6″ wide jaws heavy duty vices (can’t remember the make)
I was given the task of making some joggle brackets out of 2″ x 1/4″ black mild steel.
The blank was about 10″ long and the centre joggle about 2″ wide.
I had made about 50 of these brackets using a small sledge hammer when crash, I broke the back of the vice and the front fell onto the floor just missing my foot, safety boots weren’t around in those days.
The foreman came rushing out of his office wondering what all the noise was about, it was probably all the other fitters laughing their socks off, they would have known it was bound to happen but kept shtum.
What are you going to do about that then? he said.
Pay for a new one, I said?
No he said, you’re going to make another identical one out of steel.
This I did and was I proud of the finished article.
I did finish the rest of the brackets off in the new vice and it was “steel” working well when I left many years later.
What smashing days they were in the ’50’s.
Len. P.
Sorry to get a bit maudling, it comes with old age.