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Another Lodge & Shipley Lathe

jims09build

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Joined
Nov 11, 2009
Messages
102
I looked at this last night and it's a monster (to me). It has a 8' bed and a 16" chuck. It also has a taper attachment. The condition is fair for it's age. It has a serial number of 2221. I wish someone on here could date it for me. The owner wants $500 for it. It's too large for my shop but a buddy of mine is interested. I took a bunch of pictures of it but when I try to attach them they are too large:confused:

Jim in Pa
 
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drivesitfar

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Joined
Oct 23, 2013
Messages
36,032
Location
Pacific Northwest
would love to see the pictures of your lathe so maybe try this. can you open a free www.photobucket.com account? then upload the pictures to that site and make a link and add it to your written posts. the pictures will show up pretty large which might be a good thing if you can figure it out. PM me or add a post to this thread asking for more help if that didn't work and either i or maybe another GJ member can help.

good luck
 

Provincial

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Sep 21, 2011
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6,871
Location
Near Salem, OR
In the 1970's I worked in a shop that had two L&S lathes. One was a 24" with about a 20' bed. The other was a 20" Tool Room Lathe with a 16' bed. These were really heavy-duty machines.

The 24" was a pre-WWII model that had Timken spindle bearings, but the rest of the machine was of low-speed design. It had standard V ways. We used it for really large or long work repairing logging and sawmill equipment. It had an interesting history. It was bought by the Navy and sent to the Philippines just before the Japanese invasion. It was never hooked up, survived the war, and was brought back to the US on a cargo ship that went directly into storage. Around 1970 the ship was bought by a salvage company and dismantled. This lathe was saved and sold to my employer, who put it under power the first time in 1972!

The 20" Lodge was out bread-and-butter machine. It had the power and spindle speed to handle carbide tooling and was a wonderful machine. It had the inverted notch ways, which pushed the carriage deeper into the inverted groove in the front way as more pressure was being applied to the cut. Being a Tool Room Lathe, it had lots of travel speeds and thread options. The highest spindle speed was 1500 RPM, and that speed got used a lot! This lathe was also from a scrapped Navy ship, in this case a repair ship. This lathe may have seen some use in WWII, but if so, it wasn't much. I believe it was made around 1943.

Lodges are heavy!!!!! You could make three modern lathes of the same swing/centers with the iron in one Lodge.
 
OP
J

jims09build

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Joined
Nov 11, 2009
Messages
102
Thanks for the info guys. Can anybody date this from the serial #2221?



I am on a server at work and it won't let me download photobucket or any other program for my pics so I'll try it at home later. I did get some good pics tho. Since this is larger than I want I'm going to look at a Atlas tonight. Surprising how many lathes are just sitting around not being used. I got 5 calls in 2 days from just putting a want ad in a weekly ad paper.
 
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Steinmetz

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Joined
Oct 11, 2012
Messages
2,274
Location
Washington State
In the 1970's I worked in a shop that had two L&S lathes. One was a 24" with about a 20' bed. The other was a 20" Tool Room Lathe with a 16' bed. These were really heavy-duty machines.

The 24" was a pre-WWII model that had Timken spindle bearings, but the rest of the machine was of low-speed design. It had standard V ways. We used it for really large or long work repairing logging and sawmill equipment. It had an interesting history. It was bought by the Navy and sent to the Philippines just before the Japanese invasion. It was never hooked up, survived the war, and was brought back to the US on a cargo ship that went directly into storage. Around 1970 the ship was bought by a salvage company and dismantled. This lathe was saved and sold to my employer, who put it under power the first time in 1972!

The 20" Lodge was out bread-and-butter machine. It had the power and spindle speed to handle carbide tooling and was a wonderful machine. It had the inverted notch ways, which pushed the carriage deeper into the inverted groove in the front way as more pressure was being applied to the cut. Being a Tool Room Lathe, it had lots of travel speeds and thread options. The highest spindle speed was 1500 RPM, and that speed got used a lot! This lathe was also from a scrapped Navy ship, in this case a repair ship. This lathe may have seen some use in WWII, but if so, it wasn't much. I believe it was made around 1943.

Lodges are heavy!!!!! You could make three modern lathes of the same swing/centers with the iron in one Lodge.

A very interesting story. Thanks.
 

Steinmetz

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Joined
Oct 11, 2012
Messages
2,274
Location
Washington State
The addition of the automotive transmission makes the other flat pulleys inaccessible. I wonder what kind of spindle speeds are obtainable?
 

Zrexxer

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Joined
Jan 23, 2007
Messages
5,058
Location
Pflugerville, TX
The addition of the automotive transmission makes the other flat pulleys inaccessible. I wonder what kind of spindle speeds are obtainable?
Doh... I looked at the pictures as I was uploading them and I briefly wondered what the heck that was, it didn't click that someone had grafted a ****** into the powertrain.
 

Deskmechanic

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Joined
Aug 17, 2010
Messages
426
Location
Long Beach, CA
Neat monster. If you have space and a use for it, and it's not totally worn out, I could see $500 for that. As long as the ways are good you could still make accurate parts with it.
 
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jims09build

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Joined
Nov 11, 2009
Messages
102
ZREXXER, thanks for posting my pics! I passed on this one but did buy another L&S in better condition but about the same age I think. I'll post some pics later.

Jim
 
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