The Gramercy holdfasts from ToolsForWorkingWood.com (Brokline, NY) are great. They are not cast, but made from 3/4" steel "wire". Unbreakable.
Shipping cost to Austrailia is always a fright.
Shipping cost to Austrailia is always a fright.
Ah, that's a great idea.Maybe check Etsy? Quite a few homemade versions by home Blacksmiths that are everywhere since Forged In Fire. Maybe one that is nearby or is used to shipping there? Or maybe find/put out an ad in Craigslist? Its pretty easy for any amateur blacksmith to make, to bend a round bar and flatten the end.
- SMP
I've heard Gramercy mentioned before, they sound reliable at least(as opposed to the cheap cast ones which I assume are too brittle for heavy or prolonged use).The Gramercy holdfasts from ToolsForWorkingWood.com (Brokline, NY) are great. They are not cast, but made from 3/4" steel "wire". Unbreakable.
Shipping cost to Austrailia is always a fright.
- Ocelot
Naturally I would match the hole size but thanks for clarifying.The diameter is more to do with the holes you make. In the US, its common to use 3/4" holes for holdfasts and bench dogs. 19mm is like .7486 inches so very close, whereas 15mm is closer to .59 inches. So a 15mm holdfast would need to have a 15mm hole, or maybe a 16mm hole.
- SMP
Keep in mind another key point of holdfasts is the thickness of the surface you are using it on. There is a sweet spot, usually a range. If its too thin it won't hold, if too thick it won't hold either. I have the Gramercy ones, my bench is about 1 7/8" thick and my saw bench is 1 7/8" thick and they work well in either.The smaller size is probably more proportionate to the functional sawbench I m going to build anyway.
- LumberZac