Vise Clamping Force Calculator

Dial in vise grip for delicate plant fixtures. Model screw mechanics, torque, and losses accurately. Download a table for your shop log today easily.

Calculator

Used to suggest starting efficiency and jaw area.
Handle mode matches common shop practice.
Includes thread friction, collar loss, and jaw slip.
Force you apply on the handle end.
Distance from screw center to your hand.
Longer handles raise torque fast. Use steady force for repeatable results.
If measured with a torque wrench, enter here.
Use realistic torque for your vise size. Over-tightening can crack cast jaws.
Tip: Lubricated screws often increase efficiency.
Lead is travel per full turn.
Common bench vises: about 2–6 mm/rev.
Measure jaw travel after one full handle turn.
Pitch is distance between thread peaks.
Single-start is typical. Multi-start moves faster.
Lead = pitch × starts. Higher lead lowers force.
Approximate contact patch, not jaw size.
Use 1.3–2.0 for delicate garden parts.
Presets are starting points, not guarantees.
Reset

Disclaimer: Results are estimates for planning. Actual clamping depends on jaw alignment, wear, lubrication, and material crush limits.

Formula used

This calculator models a vise as a power screw. Applied torque is converted into axial clamping force.

How to use this calculator

  1. Select your vise type to load practical starting values.
  2. Choose handle mode or direct torque mode.
  3. Enter lead, or enter pitch and thread starts.
  4. Set efficiency and a safety factor for your task.
  5. Optionally enter jaw contact area for pressure estimates.
  6. Press Calculate and review force and pressure outputs.
  7. Use CSV or PDF to record setups for repeatability.

Example data table

Scenario Torque mode Lead Efficiency Safety factor Estimated clamp force Usable force
Grafting jig hold Handle: 120 N, 18 cm 2.0 mm/rev 35% 1.8 ~ 23,700 N ~ 13,200 N
Stake bracket bend Direct: 10 N·m 4.0 mm/rev 30% 1.5 ~ 4,712 N ~ 3,141 N
Softwood clamp pad Handle: 80 N, 20 cm 3.0 mm/rev 28% 2.0 ~ 9,378 N ~ 4,689 N

Examples are illustrative. Measure your lead and adjust efficiency to match your vise condition.

Technical article

Clamp force and garden fabrication tasks

Garden jigs, trellis brackets, and irrigation fixtures often need repeatable holding without crushing soft stock. A vise behaves like a power screw, multiplying modest hand torque into large axial force. For thin aluminum or mild steel, consistent clamping improves drilling accuracy and reduces bit chatter. For wood dowels, grafting jigs, and plant-support hardware, limit force and increase contact area using pads.

How screw lead drives mechanical advantage

Lead is jaw travel per full turn. Lower lead increases mechanical advantage, so force rises quickly for the same torque. As a rule, halving the lead roughly doubles calculated clamping force, assuming the same efficiency. Multi-start screws move faster because lead equals pitch times thread starts, but the higher lead reduces force. Measuring one-turn jaw travel is the fastest way to capture lead for your vise.

Efficiency is the real-world correction

Efficiency captures friction in threads and thrust surfaces plus small losses from jaw alignment. Dry, worn screws can run near 20–30% efficiency, while clean lubrication can push 35–45% in practical use. If your calculated force seems high, reduce efficiency and compare against how easily the handle turns. Using consistent lubrication and cleaning improves repeatability across seasonal workshop conditions.

Jaw pressure, material damage, and pads

Force alone does not predict damage; pressure equals usable force divided by the contact patch. Doubling the contact area halves pressure and helps prevent bark bruising, stem crushing, and imprinting on soft metals. When clamping coated parts, use smooth pads and avoid serrated jaws. Track pressure values to standardize delicate operations like grafting fixtures or thin-wall tubing bends.

Safety factor and practical validation

A safety factor reduces calculated force to a conservative working level. Values of 1.3–2.0 are common when the consequence is part damage or slippage. Validate by tightening to the usable-force target, then applying a controlled pull test on the workpiece. Record torque, lead, and efficiency in exported reports to build a reliable shop baseline over time.

FAQs

1) What efficiency should I use if I do not know it?

Start with 30–35% for a typical bench vise. If the handle turns very smoothly with lubrication, try 40%. If it feels gritty or stiff, use 20–25% for safer estimates.

2) How can I measure screw lead quickly?

Mark the handle position, then turn it exactly one full revolution. Measure the jaw travel using a ruler or caliper. That travel distance is the lead per revolution for the calculator.

3) Why does a higher lead reduce clamping force?

Higher lead means the screw advances farther per turn, so the same torque is spread over more travel. Mechanical advantage drops, so axial force decreases, even if your hand effort feels similar.

4) What jaw area should I enter for pressure?

Enter the estimated contact patch between jaws and workpiece, not the full jaw face. For padded jaws, use the pad imprint size. For round parts, use the flattened contact band estimate.

5) Is the usable force the maximum I should apply?

Usable force is a conservative planning value after the safety factor. You may exceed it, but risk of slipping, crushing, or tool damage rises. For delicate garden fixtures, stay near usable force.

6) Can I use this for clamp selection or only vises?

The model is for screw-driven clamping where torque produces axial force. It can approximate screw clamps if you know lead and efficiency, but quick clamps and cam clamps need different assumptions.

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Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.