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Vicmarc chucks

Joined
Sep 26, 2025
Messages
50
Likes
18
Location
Fort Lauderdale, FL
Hello friends,

I have compiled a list of Vicmarc chucks/jaws that I'm considering purchasing. I would greatly appreciate your feedback and suggestions on my list before I make any purchases. Thank you
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I would suggest purchasing just the VM120 and the shark jaws to start out with. Unless you are doing very large bowls, the shark jaws and standard jaws the chuck ships with should cover all of your needs for awhile. They can grip small 1x1 inch square stock all the way up to 2x2 inch square stock as well as most round tenons found on small/medium sized bowls. It is very well made, but is heavier then the Oneway Talon, so be aware.

Also I am not sure where you are purchasing from, but the shipping seems way too high. Try Craft Supplies USA, the VM120 and shark jaws are in stock.

 
I have several Vicmark 120s. I think there are multiple reasons why turners like Mike Mahoney and Glenn Lucas use them, other than them being built like tanks. I use a recess 99% of the time on my bowls, so the standard jaws work fine. I drill a recess in the top of the bowl blank, 2 5/8 diameter, and expand into that for mounting the bowl blank to turn the outside. Form the recess, and reverse it and then core and finish turn the inside since I once turn my bowls. This is fine for bowls up to 14 inch or so, and I never turn bigger than that, they just don't sell very well.

robo hippy
 
A couple reasons to buy direct, when I looked no US dealers had direct thread chucks available, you had to use inserts (which for me always unscrew at inopportune moments, even with set screws); even with higher postage and tariffs added the total cost is quite substantially cheaper (like $100 less for a VM120).

I guess I don't see the point of buying chucks of different brands and/or with incompatible jaws. What can you do with a VM100 that you can't do with a VM120? I find it pretty convenient that I can mount any of my jaws on any of my chucks.
 
I second Gabriel's wise response. Buying from a US Distributer will avoid the high shipping and add on tariff charge you show.

Additionally, pick a chuck you like and if you want extras, get one with shared jaws. you will end up with multiple jaws but why buy multiple jaws from several makers? If I am correct, the VM100 is similar to the Talon. Why both?
 
Hi Manny. Remind us again of the lathe it will be used with.

Vicmarc- thumbs up! My 25 year old VM120 is bombproof. (I also have 2 Talon chucks which are great on my 12" lathe.)

Chomping down my lunch and thinking about this, I've boiled down chuck choices this way: 12" swing and smaller, and 1hp and less, and 1" spindle size, go with the smaller VM100 chuck. Over 12" and greater than 1hp, and increased spindle sizes, go with the VM120 chuck. This is the same rationale Oneway had in the later-90s when they introduced the Talon (VM100 competitor), designing it for the mini lathe market. A Stronghold on a Jet Mini lathe was like driving 10d nails with a 4lb maul... Same with a Vic VM120.

The VM120 weighs 8 pounds before jaws, and shark jaws get heavy fast as their size increases. 10-12 pounds total, a lot of rotational weight for the smaller motors, and there's no wood yet. Or tools cutting the wood.

If you've been watching Richard Raffan videos where for the past few years he was turning on the 12" VL150 lathe, he used the smaller VM100 chucks (4'ish pounds for the chuck body). When he stepped up to the larger 16" VL200 lathe and its stronger motor, he also invested in the larger VM120 chucks.

Raffan really shows how to get the best grip performance from the Vicmarc jaw sets. You can't go wrong with Vicmarc.
 
Hi Manny. Remind us again of the lathe it will be used with.

Vicmarc- thumbs up! My 25 year old VM120 is bombproof. (I also have 2 Talon chucks which are great on my 12" lathe.)

Chomping down my lunch and thinking about this, I've boiled down chuck choices this way: 12" swing and smaller, and 1hp and less, and 1" spindle size, go with the smaller VM100 chuck. Over 12" and greater than 1hp, and increased spindle sizes, go with the VM120 chuck. This is the same rationale Oneway had in the later-90s when they introduced the Talon (VM100 competitor), designing it for the mini lathe market. A Stronghold on a Jet Mini lathe was like driving 10d nails with a 4lb maul... Same with a Vic VM120.

The VM120 weighs 8 pounds before jaws, and shark jaws get heavy fast as their size increases. 10-12 pounds total, a lot of rotational weight for the smaller motors, and there's no wood yet. Or tools cutting the wood.

If you've been watching Richard Raffan videos where for the past few years he was turning on the 12" VL150 lathe, he used the smaller VM100 chucks (4'ish pounds for the chuck body). When he stepped up to the larger 16" VL200 lathe and its stronger motor, he also invested in the larger VM120 chucks.

Raffan really shows how to get the best grip performance from the Vicmarc jaw sets. You can't go wrong with Vicmarc.
Hello Steve, I have a Powermatic 4224B
 
Your list looks good to me. Although I don't think the multi purpose jaws are a good idea. I would get the 3 or 4 inch dovetail jaws for the 100 and 6 or 7 inch jaws for the 120. I have a Vl300, and I probably use a the vm100 chuck more often than the vm120. Large chucks with small jaws never made much sense to me.
 
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