When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: american made bench drill press

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Black & Decker Workmate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_&_Decker_Workmate

    It can be used as a bench vice to hold wood, metal and other parts, either clamped between the jaws or, using supplied bench dogs, clamped on the table top. The jaws are wide enough to hold most bench top tools, such as a drill press, planer, miter saw, etc. [1]

  3. Atlas Press (tool company) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atlas_Press_(tool_company)

    Atlas Press Co. was a tool company that manufactured popular brands of metalworking tools from 1920 to the mid-1970s. Many of their products received wide coverage in Popular Mechanics and Popular Science at the time.

  4. Walker-Turner - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walker-Turner

    Benchtop Walker-Turner Drill Press. Walker-Turner Co. was founded around the end of the 1920s by Ernest T. Walker and William Brewer Turner, who built machines for home and light industrial use. It was acquired by Rockwell Manufacturing Co. in 1956 and Walker-Turner branded machines continued to be sold into the 1960s.

  5. Drill press - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drill_press

    Benchtop drill press (left) and floor-standing drill press (right) A drill press is a drilling machine suitable for quick and easy drilling of straight holes, countersinking or counterboring that are perpendicular to both directions of a table surface. In comparison, it is more difficult and less repeatable to drill perpendicularly with a hand ...

  6. Vise - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vise

    A bench vise, B machine vise, C hand vise. A vise or vice (British English) is a mechanical apparatus used to secure an object to allow work to be performed on it.Vises have two parallel jaws, one fixed and the other movable, threaded in and out by a screw and lever.

  7. Drill - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drill

    A drill press Drill press (then called a boring machine) boring wooden reels for winding barbed wire, 1917. A drill press (also known as a pedestal drill, pillar drill, or bench drill) is a style of drill that may be mounted on a stand or bolted to the floor or workbench. Portable models are made, some including a magnetic base.