CrotalusAtrox
Well-known member
Looks great went through your home town yesterday now I know why you left


Some unsolicited advice...
You might consider moving the belt down a couple/few steps to slow it down. As shown, you're turning the spindle at 5000 RPM. That's shaper speed. The belt on my woodworking DP is at the lowest steps which suits my needs most of the time.
Also, the feed stop lock bolt should be locking on the threads of the feed stop rod, not the flats... 90 degrees as shown. As is, if you apply any significant feed pressure, that bolt will scar the scale.
I see lots of those rapid adjust feed stops used incorrectly and even installed upside down. That was a very nice improvement over the previous style. I swapped one into my 100.
I never thought about letting it free-float.
Thanks for the advice. Do you find that shielded are preferable in applications like this? Or is it 'just the way it is' kind of thing.
Yeah, shielded should be fine. You figure thats what the factory used, and look how long they lasted.Everyone has their own preference. I opt for shielded on the pulley, sealed on the spindle.
There's was stuck, Yours wasn't .............................LOLHere are those sponges:
I read that getting the column out was hard for some people- I don't know what the problem is? I loosened the screw and it popped right out! Our summers may be awful, but I sure love the lack of rust!!

I have a benchtop 150, got it about 15 years ago, It was/still is gold. I repainted it.I could stop the column from spinning with my hand. That would be bad for the drill, but there really was no danger in this setup.
come on Larry, we know you better than that,Thanks for this thread, I've got it bookmarked for when I finally work up the courage to disassemble and restore my bench top Craftsman / Atlas press.
