<img height="1" width="1" style="display:none" src="https://www.facebook.com/tr?id=376816859356052&amp;ev=PageView&amp;noscript=1">
 In Shop Blog

We may receive a commission when you use our affiliate links. However, this does not impact our recommendations.

I try to stay abreast of the world of workbenches and workholding. But sometimes a place like Evans Wood Screw Co. escapes my eye.

For six years, this Franklin, Ind., enterprise has been cranking out wooden vise screws for workbench builders. You can find the company at TheTraditionalCarpenter.com. The small site offers a good selection of free plans and instructions for incorporating wooden screws into a workbench.

There are plans for a traditional face vise, tail vise, wagon vise, leg vise, twin screw and others. Even if you don’t buy one of their wooden screws, the plans offer a lot of good ideas for how you could adapt a vintage wood screw into your workbench.

There also is a price list, of course. And you’ll find the prices very close to those offered by Lake Erie Toolworks and Big Wood Vise.

I got to chat with Matthew and Micaela Evans during Woodworking in America’s Midwest show. Matthew was showing a variety of vise screws, including some with custom-turned hubs. Matthew said he’s happy to do a custom hub if you are trying to match an old-school design on a workbench – vintage workbenches tend to have far more elaborate hubs than what you see today.

It’s actually remarkable that we now have (at least) three companies to choose from when shopping for a threaded wooden vise screw. When I built my first bench with wooden screws, the Holtzapffel, I bought my screws from some guy who bought them a decade earlier at some California flea market. And I was happy to get them, even though their quality isn’t even close to what you can buy today.

All three of these wooden screw companies are small family-run shops that turn out products that haven’t been on the market for almost a century. So if a workbench is in your future, consider a wooden screw. They are fast, beautiful and durable. I love the one I have on the Roubo bench I built for my daughter.

— Christopher Schwarz

If you are looking for a design for a workbench, you might want to check out “The Workbench Design Book” available through ShopWoodworking.com. It’s a huge American-made book that has several plans for benches incorporating wooden vise screws.


Product Recommendations

Here are some supplies and tools we find essential in our everyday work around the shop. We may receive a commission from sales referred by our links; however, we have carefully selected these products for their usefulness and quality.

Recent Posts
Showing 9 comments
  • hhbeam

    I am building a bench similar the 18th century in your latest book. The end vise on the bench above the tc bench has a great deal of interest to me. Do you have any more photos of it that I may mimic the workings? thanks

    hhbeam

  • AlexChapman

    The Beall Tool Company sells a fixture that you can purchase and make all the wooden screws you will ever want. http://www.bealltool.com
    Based in Newark OH.

  • Lee

    Went to their site but was unable to open their instructions/plans up? Couln’t even leave a post or contact them. If I can open your links, what did they not do to make available to others?

    Lee

  • John Hutchinson

    Beautiful stuff! I love the idea that there are still little companies around the US that do just one thing and then do it very well. Something like the Columbus Whistle Company here in Ohio. Every NBA and NFL referee has one.

  • mysticcarver

    I seen them across from your booth,definately thinking of useing them when I build my bench first of next year!

Start typing and press Enter to search