Red Leader,
Congratulations on your latest acquisition.
Do you have an additional storage building, or does all of this stuff live in your garage?
Just curious...thanks!
Additional storage? Haha, I wish!
Nope, just the garage. I do have a tool in the basement, but it is a gift that will be leaving.
Right now, what I have out in the garage:
3 grinders
3 bandsaws
2 table saws
1 planer
2 sanders
1 drill press (+ drill press parts: base and column)
Radial Arm saw
So right now, pretty modest.
I used to have 3-4 table saws, a huge wood lathe, and a couple radial saws. So technically, I have room to take on more
Here are some of the things that are still on the 'list', things that no matter what, I will always have room for:
1942 (only) Craftsman machine shop vise;
1940-1941 Craftsman 9" cabinet saw (code 101.02180)
1940s-1950s (?) Craftsman-badged version of the Darra James 95 table saw:
Any size (2 sizes made) 1940-1941 Craftsman sheet metal enclosed base for lathes:
1940-1941 Companion/Craftsman sheet metal enclosed base for tools:
1956-1957 Craftsman 12" Belsaw planer with enclosed stand:
Mid-1940s Craftsman 103.0304 floor press OR a '100' model with table raising attachment:
OR
Although I'm a Craftsman junkie, I gotta say, I would not have the willpower to turn down any of these following tools. 1939 was a special year for the home hobbyist. Before that time, many machines were simply 'hobbyist' grade, meaning small, somewhat unsubstantial, bronze bearing, lineshaft, making use of 1 motor for multiple tools (makes sense, i.e. depression era), etc. 1939 saw the introduction of some industrial grade tools marketed at the home hobbyist. This does not represent the very first industrial grade tools that a home hobbyist could buy, but it marked a shift in the amount and the grade of tools offered. What also makes 1939 special is that it was the one and only year that some of the most beautiful and most desirable tools were made or offered for sale.
While I'm all about Craftsman, I'll be the first to admit that this single photo below probably best represents the absolute pinnacle of design for power tools and, in this humble collectors opinion, also represents 2 of the most beautiful tools ever made, the 1939 Walker Turner P907 jointer and the TA 1165 table saw:
I would love to have either of these in my shop, period! The fact that Craftsman was also contracting with Walker Turner at the time for tools also means that there is a Craftsman connection. Good enough for me!
Here is the table saw, including a real world example:
And the jointer:
If anyone has any leads on any of these tools, this is what my current quest list looks like. I'll make sure to make it worth your time
[/nerding out]
-RL