thewhittlingguide.com
I did look at both those links and wasn't able to find mine. I'll look at the bearings next.Might this help? Guess not too many dates there.
This is light on details
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What Year Is My Atlas Lathe - The Whittling Guide
It is often difficult to identify the year of an Atlas lathe, given its vintage nature. This problem is common for consumers who purchase secondhand optionsthewhittlingguide.com
Maybe here, this has lots of entries.
Atlas/Craftsman Serial Numbers and Bearing Dates (if applicable) For Database Entries
Edited with title change 20200627 In the combined machine database (742 entries to date) there are 180 10" entries, 21 of which show no serial numbers. There are 113 Craftsman entries, 19 or which show no serial numbers. Plus we only have 30 10" and 22 12" bearing dates for Timken equipped...www.hobby-machinist.com
It does look very much like that one. Mine is model 111 serial 9532. It has the tag on the right side. I could not readily see the bearings without taking some things apart.I think it's this one: http://vintagemachinery.org/photoindex/detail.aspx?id=39608
Actually now that I am on lunch I was able to easily take off the chuck and the nut behind it. The bearing says 10-17-50. So apparently it is a 1950. Thanks guys for the help. Now I just need to learn how to use it! Not bad for FREE.Nice! If your headstock has Timken bearings then there's a decent chance the mfg/assembly date is inscribed on the outer race. The unit I used to have was 1939, before they used the metal serial/model tags. With that different styled apron, and your headstock pulley cover I'm placing a $2 bet its around 1948-1950