OP
throttlejunkie1
Well-known member
- Joined
- Mar 1, 2011
- Messages
- 71
I had a few of the 50's Craftsman bench top models when I was young and they were fine as long as you didn't need the highest speeds. I got a floor model about 20 years ago and thought it was ok, but the runout was only average, the spindle was sloppy, and highest speed was very noisy. I ditched the floor model when I got a 40's/50's Walker-Turner. It was much smoother and tighter. The table was better, the locks were better, everything was better------and it only cost me $60.
I recently had a MINT 1947 Atlas 12" bench model and it was smooth as butter in every speed. It weighed 147 lbs, the pulleys were machined and balanced (unlike the later Craftsman stuff), and the bearings were real Timkens. Paid $100 for it, and would have kept it except I don't have the room for it .
There are numerous old Delta/Rockwells being sold for cheap, so why not treat yourself to something nicer that performs with precision, runs smoother, has more spindle stroke, and typically has a better table to clamp to (those Craftsman 150's **** for clamps). Put a new belt on it, maybe a nicer chuck if it has a morse taper, and pass it on to your children.
Matthew
Oh, now that my interest for things like this has grown greatly over the last year or two, I've kept my eyes peeled in the local classifieds and CL for deals like the ones you've mentioned. For me, timing is everything. With the wife going to school, kids doing summer sports, me at the drag strip and car shows....I get lost in my own little life sometimes with my family
I've been going out of my way here lately to the conveniently local machine shop on base and making friends there
I little "on the job training" is priceless for a guy like me not having the opportunity to work in an environment like they do.

My momentum is slowing down on this project a little bit lol.