With the vise nuts installed and the bench milled to accept the vise, it was time to work on the outer jaw.
![]() |
The benchtop, ready for the vise. |
Millers original features a 45° bevel on the top, outside face of the outer vise jaw. Ive seen the bevel before on many Moxon Vises. It provides clearance to hold a saw and chisel at an angle. To cut my bevel, I eyed about how big I thought it should be, set my table saw to 45° and cut achoice.
Unfortunately, Once I put the vise jaw in place, I quickly realized that the big bevel Id cut did not leave enough flat surface on the top for a bench dog hole. Rather than have the awkward hole which would have resulted, I flipped the front vise jaw around, and cut a much smaller bevel on the new top edge. This left the big bevel on the bottom, which Ive grown to like the look of.
![]() |
If Id left the big bevel on the top, I wouldnt have been able to drill (route) for dog. |
To attach the vise I took the back jaw of the vise and set it upside down on my table saw. I also set the bench top upside down on my table saw. I used the saw as a reference surface to ensure that they were aligned, and then I clamped them together with parallel clamps. To fasten them, I simply used screws. I pre-drilled the holes and staggered the pattern to prevent splitting.
![]() |
Fastening the rear vise jaw. |
I installed the legs in a similar manner. I held them in place with parallel clamps and then screwed them to the top. Since the legs were slightly out of square, I was sure they were clamped extra tight to the top before I screwed them on.
Once I took the clamps off and flipped the bench over, I found that that screwing the legs to the perfectly flat 3 thick top was all it took to pull them into alignment. The feet sit perfectly flat on my tablesaw.
![]() |
Assembling the legs to the top. |
0 comments:
Post a Comment