The 1942 Delta 17” Drill Press might be my favorite machine, but don’t tell the others. lol
When I got this drill press it was in bad shape cosmetically- a piece of rust and overpaint, but it was mechanically sound. It even had the wide production table! I stripped and painted every part, polished every nut and bolt, replaced all the bearings, and restored the badges and decals. (Yes, that’s a reproduction patent decal I made, and yes all the patent numbers are correct.

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I can date it to 1942 because it still has the cardboard serial number plate. Delta used those during the war when metal was in short supply and it’s pretty rare for them to survive.
I managed to find a stub spindle assembly and J33 chuck, which are themselves kind of rare, and cobble together a full foot feed assembly. All told there are pieces from 6 different drill presses in this machine.
The original motor was 3-phase, which I didn’t (don’t) have, and so I found a period 120 v Delta to replace it with. I think if I did it again I would keep the 3-phase motor and run a variable phase converter, but the motor I have is still plenty more than I need. It’s a 1/2 HP repulsion induction motor. I had to swap a coil in the Cutler-Hammer switch to get it to work again, but luckily I was able to find a NOS part. I originally mounted the switch on the right because there was a pipe on the other side in my old shop, but now I just kind of like it on this side.
The story of the foot feed-
So, having acquired the drill press, I knew the one accessory I really wanted was the foot feed. I had a homemade foot feed involving rope and pulleys on my previous drill press, and I loved the idea of being able to have both my hands on the work, especially for some of the fragile violin and cello parts I work on this is really helpful.
But, they are not exactly thick on the ground. They are not unobtanium, but nearly so.
I watched ebay relentlessly to see if one came up and posted numerous want to buy ads on a old machine forum. Nothing. Then I saw a blurry picture of a Delta drill press for sale in Cleveland. I could just make out that it had the upper part of the foot feed- the half-moon gear and maybe the lever. This is really the heart of the foot feed and I figured I could Jerry-rig something that would work if only I had those parts.
I called and pleaded with the guy at the warehouse. He wasn’t interested. They didn’t ship parts and he wanted to sell the drill press. He wasn’t even sure what I wanted. Then he named a price in an attempt, I assume, to get me to go away, and I said ok.
So he pulled it off the machine and “helpfully” spray painted the entire thing-assembled.
Having found the upper parts, I redoubled my efforts to find the lower casting. They often get cracks in the casting and there’s a huge spring in there that is impossible to replace if it’s broken. I almost bought a casting that had been repaired, but I ended up getting one from a guy in Maryland who bought a drill press that only had the lower foot feed casting.
Then I had to fabricate all the linkage and stuff, but that was no big deal.
The final piece was the actual foot pedal. I ended up borrowing an original from a friend on the forum, shipping it to an Amish foundry in PA, and having them make like a dozen copies that I distributed to other folks in a big group order. The foundry doesn’t have email, obviously, so you ship them your part and write a letter explaining what you want.
The reproductions turned out beautifully. They are indistinguishable from the originals.
A little paint and some polishing and we had ourselves a working foot feed!
Originally the press had a M2 taper spindle. I never liked how far it stuck down from the body. If there is a flaw in the Delta 17” presses is that they’re a bit short, and that just compounds it by putting the work farther away. As I mentioned, I replaced it with a JT33 stub spindle that worked well for many years, but then I had an issue with the chuck jaws getting bell-mouthed and not holding small bits any more. After trying to rebuild the chuck, I decided to replace the spindle with a Hammerscale J3 stub spindle and a vintage Jacob’s 14M Superchuck.
She’s smooth as silk and the runout is about .002” at 6”- plenty good enough for my purposes.
These were really metal working drill presses, so it has an easy life with me in the violin shop.






