I would think that's an owner made copy, not a factory piece. Too crude to be factory made.I picked up these three stands at an auction a couple of years ago. I had my eye on just the NTD stand, but since they were grouped together, they all came home with me. After cleaning, I sold the Cleveland's , but kept the NTD. The photos should reveal why. I've owned quite a few of the indices on this thread, but have never come across an early "metal" stand. I can't claim it's a first gen NTD stand, but guessing pretty close. If anyone has seen one like it or may know its age, please let me know. As shown in one of the photos, I circled a drill that had broken off at some point, in its life. That same photo, shows the misalignment of the holes, another clue to its age. The other pics show, both the casting marks and worn down fractional marks of the zinc. Thanks for any info.
That’s too easy. I did not expect the bottom to be that different.This is what a factory made one looks like:



I would say it was owner painted.Has anyone seen a painted Detroit drill bit index before? I picked up this one that came in white and yellow. It was a very good paint job (sprayed, crisp lines, etc) but just don't know if it was original. I stripped it and can't decide whether to replicate the color theme or leave it bare like it's twin brother. Searching the internet for other images does not show that any of these were ever painted. What say you? I think I'll leave it naked. (DTD indices are among my favorite style)![]()
Absolutely.I would say it was owner painted.
I have one that looks 100% identical but it's stamped "Precision Products, Sandy, Oregon".








Sorry to hear that actually. I hope you're not like some people that think a rusty broken tool from the flea market is something to be proud of. I decided early on in my collecting that I would go for quality rather than quantity.But I’m a cheap b@stard when buying.
Yes, it does, Ed. An amazing historical connection, actually. The Army plays a role, too!I don't think this company has anything to do with the Alemite lubricant equipment company.
Kudos!Found it at a local swap meet buried in a trailer of rusty junk.
Thanks Ed! I still haven't seen another one of those stands.Thanks Lugz. I fixed Aurthurs last name in my post as well....definitely help out with any future searches. Also I was surfing up thread a bit and looking at crguy's revolving Morse taper stand and I thought I had seen it in a catalog a while back. Here is an ok pic (screen shot) of the cut from a 1915 Morse catalog. Probably the same one. Ed.
Ed: I thought that looked familiar. I have this one marked Keystone Reamer & Tool Company.I picked up a number size drill stand from the Alemite Die Casting & MFG Co. A division of the electric auto-lite company. I don't think this company has anything to do with the Alemite lubricant equipment company. Found it at a local swap meet buried in a trailer of rusty junk. Cleaned up ok with mostly soap and water and a little help from an SOS pad. I see there were a couple others posted up thread. By this particular variation on the company name I think this one is probably from the 40's. These same castings were around with the Alemite name for a couple decades before that though. A couple pics and a bit of a sales add. Ed.






Macgee, nice to see you back again.



Macgee, nice to see you back again.
I needed an organizer like yours, and settled for a newly made Foredom version. No style, no substance, and about 1/3 of the holes are for shaft sizes I don’t have. On the lookout for a nice one like yours now.