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Can anyone date this old Milwaukee bench grinder?

Roman G

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Jan 17, 2011
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Albany, Oregon
Found this on Facebook, their asking 200.
Seems to be a beast of a bench grinder, but can't find a model number or age for it.
Thanks
 

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desertdog256

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There are some photos of similar grinders on vintagemachinery.org that suggest your grinder may go back to at least 1949.

Milwaukee Electric Tool Corp was founded in 1924. The fact that the number plate on your grinder simply says “Milwaukee, Wisconsin” suggests a date before zip codes were a thing in the early 1960s. So, somewhere between 1924 and 1960s?

Apparently Milwaukee has sold various grinders with model number 5051 over the years.
 
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R

Roman G

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Joined
Jan 17, 2011
Messages
120
Location
Albany, Oregon
There are some photos of similar grinders on vintagemachinery.org that suggest your grinder may go back to at least 1949.

Milwaukee Electric Tool Corp was founded in 1924. The fact that the number plate on your grinder simply says “Milwaukee, Wisconsin” suggests a date before zip codes were a thing in the early 1960s. So, somewhere between 1924 and 1960s?

Apparently Milwaukee has sold various grinders with model number 5051 over the years.
I did notice the 5051 in the serial number. I need to get a right side wheel guard.
 

desertdog256

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Nov 22, 2015
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It may be manufactured by Loefler Electric of Toledo, Ohio for Milwaukee. It may be the equivalent of Loefler’s model 3B125. It’s in the Loefler 1952 catalog. Image at vintagemachinery.org website. Note the LE in the middle of the serial number. I suggest that stands for Loefler Electric.
 
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seber

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May 31, 2016
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Deep East Tx.
I did notice the 5051 in the serial number. I need to get a right side wheel guard.
Probably not going to happen. 1/8" plate with a hole to clear the shaft will make it safe. Or maybe I should say as safe as a bench grinder can get. You also need spark guards. They get tossed by almost everyone, but they serve a double purpose. They keep the sparks and grit from hitting your face and add protection from an exploding wheel.
 

NoahG

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Feb 24, 2013
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Location
Detroit, MI
Picked this up at a flea market last year. It’s the perfect grinder for my home use, it purrs. I think it had the original wheel.
 

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1982fxr

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Phoenix
Sometimes that happens with these. Did you follow the clue from post #9 above? That's the best bet so far...
 

ALLFAST

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Northern California
Found this on Facebook, their asking 200.
Seems to be a beast of a bench grinder, but can't find a model number or age for it.
Thanks
Dude!

I just picked up the twin to your grinder . Kingston Conley made these for Skil, Atlas , Milwaukee, and others. We have 1HP, 10 inch , 1725 RPM “Slow Speed” grinders.

Mine weighs 140# and it’s missing the original heavy plate side covers. They are beastly, but the king of the beasts is the late 1930s Baldors…I had the same spec grinder in a 1937/1939 Baldor and it weighed 175#.

Kingston Conleys are of outstanding quality and you did good with yours ! It’s a GREAT unit.

From my reading, our grinder’s body style can be dated from around 1948 to 1954.

Here’s mine. I’m working on getting proper and era appropriate side covers fabbed up, and am getting her gussied up. The two odd pictures i included are not mine, but depict what the OEM side covers should look like.

Keep us updated on your progress.
 

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Roman G

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Joined
Jan 17, 2011
Messages
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Location
Albany, Oregon
Dude!

I just picked up the twin to your grinder . Kingston Conley made these for Skil, Atlas , Milwaukee, and others. We have 1HP, 10 inch , 1725 RPM “Slow Speed” grinders.

Mine weighs 140# and it’s missing the original heavy plate side covers. They are beastly, but the king of the beasts is the late 1930s Baldors…I had the same spec grinder in a 1937/1939 Baldor and it weighed 175#.

Kingston Conleys are of outstanding quality and you did good with yours ! It’s a GREAT unit.

From my reading, our grinder’s body style can be dated from around 1948 to 1954.

Here’s mine. I’m working on getting proper and era appropriate side covers fabbed up, and am getting her gussied up. The two odd pictures i included are not mine, but depict what the OEM side covers should look like.

Keep us updated on your progress.
That is awesome. Looks just like mine. Let me know on the side cover fabbing. I would be down for a right side.
 
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