Cobra4B
Well-known member
Says it works but may need a new belt soon. Worth $65? Parts available?
The only bad part about this forum is seeing the good deals people find and then feeling like you've over paid for similar items. If I like something I buy it because I like it and if I feel the price is fair. A night out with friends would likely cost more then $65.00 and the next day you are likely left with a hang over, this way you get to keep what you spent your money on.

Bought it... guy had the original instruction pamphlet, clearly says 1946 on it and matches the drill press. Had the proper chuck key and works fine. Operates silently and the chuck spins true. Can't believe how heavy it is... must be 60+ pounds; awesome.
Only thing that was odd is the electric motor has no on/off switch, just a reset buton. Guess I need to make a switch to plug it into that plugs into a normal outlet. Is that normal for the older motors to not have an on/off switch?
A picture back in my garage. Now to build my new welding/metal working table to put it one along with my vice and bench grinder.
http://sphotos-b.**.fbcdn.net/hphotos-snc7/3506_4622045320382_35880110_n.jpg
Wow that gives me some inspiration. Is the main lever supposed to easily slide out of its "mount" easily? Did you make that handle knob?
Did you remove the label plaque to paint? It has some kind of rivets/studs holding it on.

That's a 1948-ish "80" model. The "100" is what you want to hold out for. The "100" has floor model features and size. The "80" has bronze bearings, the "100" has all ball bearing construction. The "100" has the depth gauge, the "80" doesn't. And so on.
I'd pass on it.
Catalog pictures:
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The 150's were made starting around 1959 and were a fine DP........but it looks like the one in that ad is missing the motor. At that price, it needs to include the motor.
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Can you tell if this is a Craftsman? Their asking $100 on CL.