Low-profile two-piece vises for the CNC router

I replaced the little 5-axis mill with a router recently, and needed a low-profile vise system for holding large workpieces. I’ve heard good things about the SMW Mod Vise, but they are designed for fixture plates, not 100mm pitch t-slots like the router has. And 3 sets to cover the hole table with serrated inserts would be pretty pricey.

I came up with a simple design that uses these Mitee-bite Talon Grip style inserts on the fixed jaw, and Pitbull-style inserts on the moving jaw. Parts are clamped by pushing the moving jaw up against the stock, tightening down the t-slot bolts, and then tightening down the Pitbull clamps to grab the stock. CAD

I made the parts from an ebay pile of 4140 HT (pre-hardened to ~32HRC). Op 1 was decking off one side and adding some M8 taps so I could bolt the parts to a 123 block for the second op Second operation setup First operation

For op 2, I clamped the 123 block in my little self-centering vise, so I could access all sides. After finishing op 2: Second operation done And a pile of chips after machining 3 of them in a row: Potato

This was my first time machining steel on this router, and it did admirably. Finishes turned out excellent: Chips Shiny parts

A pair with hardware installed. I could populate any of the insert locations, depending on if I’m holding small parts or need more holding force: Pair with inserts

And here’s an example of using one pair to clamp a 340x220x19mm aluminum plate: Clampy clamp Clampy clamp

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Comments

Landon — April 20, 2026 at 5:56 PM
What made you switch away from the 5-axis mill?
Ben — April 21, 2026 at 2:29 AM
I have space for a slightly bigger machine now, and was often at the limits of what the little 5-axis could do, both size & stiffness wise
Anonymous — April 21, 2026 at 1:54 AM
Nice to see you are going well. What router did you get? Do you think you will miss the extra axes of the 5-axis?
Ben — April 21, 2026 at 2:32 AM
I got a Shapeoko HDM and swapped the spindle for an ISO20 ATC spindle. Was pretty tempted by these frame kits as an alternative: https://minimonster.ca/ I'll miss the 5-axis a bit, but most of the stuff I did was 3+2, not simultaneous 5-axis, and I can replicate that workflow fairly well with good indexing fixtures, e.g. https://robot-daycare.com/posts/zipp_saddle_clamp/
Engine — April 21, 2026 at 5:05 AM
Beautiful :))
Fan of your Work Ben — May 4, 2026 at 4:41 AM
Hello Ben, I hope you’re doing well. I wanted to kindly request that you keep your blog links as they are. Currently, when clicking on links in the BuildIts Progress Blogspot, they are automatically redirecting to Robot-Daycare. In one of your blog posts, in the comments section where someone asked about your favorite blogs, you shared a few links. When I explored them, I found a deep rabbit hole of technical content that is truly valuable and not easy to find through Google these days. I’ve learned a lot from them and really appreciate the effort behind maintaining such resources. For this reason, I would sincerely request that the original blog links remain accessible without redirection. Thank you for your time and consideration.
Ben — May 4, 2026 at 5:34 AM
Thanks for the feedback. I'll consider it. The redirects can be disabled in your browser. E.g. in Chrome, go to Settings>JavaScript>Not allowed to use JavaScript and enter the root URL's for the old blogger blog (build-its.blogspot.com, build-its-inprogress.blogspot.com, build-its-feed.blogspot.com) Also, all comments from the old blogger site should have been ported over to the new site. I haven't cross-compared every single page (there are a lot) but if you notice any broken links, broken images, missing comments, etc. please let me know and I'll fix them! I've found a few issues like that already.
Anonymous — May 4, 2026 at 4:20 PM
The finished product looks great very aesthetic. I used to search the internet for instrument teardowns just to admire their design. The shiny, beautifully polished metal reminds me of teardown videos of vintage gyroscopes (IMUs) used in missiles. I wish I had this level of machining skill. You consistently create some of the highest-quality information on the internet. Please consider sharing your new articles on Hacker News.

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