MikeyMakey
Active member
I bought a Craftsman 150 drill press at an online auction. I won it for $27 and happily drove the 45 minutes away to pick it up, only to find that the auction photos did not really tell the condition. When I arrived, I found that it had been stored since time immemorial in an open barn on that white powdery compacted gravel type floor. It's filthy and covered in rust. I loaded it up and brought it home, with my excitement draining away. I had assumed I'd want to do some cleanup and refurbishing, but this was a bit extreme. When my teenage son saw it, he said, "Why did you buy it?"
After exploring it further at home, the bad news is that the quill is siezed and won't travel up and down (no, it's not locked). The lock handle to move the head up and down is also stuck. And the chuck itself is seized. The good news - it seems to be 100% complete, including chuck key. The drill and pulleys turn. The depth stop works (not that you can lower the quill). The table unlocks and moves fairly easily. And, surprise, surprise, the motor works, although the power cord needs replaced at minimum because the insulation is cracked in several places.
I've eventually come back around from excitement in buying a cool old drill press, to disappointment that it's essentially unusable without significant work, and now back around to excitement again at the prospect of refurbishing it. It'll be quite a transformation if I can get the siezed parts freed up and proceed with a full tear down, cleanup, and repaint.
BTW it's a '64-'66 model, from what I've read in these forums.
Anyway, this got me wondering what's the roughest shape that you've seen in a vintage tool or drill press that was able to be rescued and restored?
(Forgive my messy garage in the pics...)
After exploring it further at home, the bad news is that the quill is siezed and won't travel up and down (no, it's not locked). The lock handle to move the head up and down is also stuck. And the chuck itself is seized. The good news - it seems to be 100% complete, including chuck key. The drill and pulleys turn. The depth stop works (not that you can lower the quill). The table unlocks and moves fairly easily. And, surprise, surprise, the motor works, although the power cord needs replaced at minimum because the insulation is cracked in several places.
I've eventually come back around from excitement in buying a cool old drill press, to disappointment that it's essentially unusable without significant work, and now back around to excitement again at the prospect of refurbishing it. It'll be quite a transformation if I can get the siezed parts freed up and proceed with a full tear down, cleanup, and repaint.
BTW it's a '64-'66 model, from what I've read in these forums.
Anyway, this got me wondering what's the roughest shape that you've seen in a vintage tool or drill press that was able to be rescued and restored?
(Forgive my messy garage in the pics...)





















