2011cummins
Well-known member
Hello all. I thought I would share this because I enjoyed the project and think it came out decent.
I've been casually looking for a drill press and after seeing yaidunno's camelback restoration decided I needed one. Yes needed
Luck would have it I found one on Craigslist for $125 that sat inside it's whole life covered in oil. The tags on it said "Detroit-Cleveland Machinery", "Department of Defense", and "Ford" among other things.
It had a 3PH 1/3hp GE motor on it with 1939 patents, so I'm assuming its of the 40's vintage. Who knows what back door it walked out of.
Getting the thing home and setup:
Modifications to the base complete. The plates that came with it were welded to the top of the cabinet and the exposed corners rounded to match the look. When I got it Newton was the only thing holding it down.
Partially reassembled after wire wheeling and paint. A blasting cabinet is definitely on the wish list. I thought I could use the leather belt but it broke on startup. Most of the hardware was replaced with stainless just because well it's pretty. Thanks McMaster...
Complete with new motor, serpentine belt, etc. Speed changes are remarkably quick and a quick test with holes from 1/8" through 1/2" on 3/16 steel plate was very satisfying. It might be a little underpowered (1/3HP) since it doesn't like the highest two speeds.
If my math's right it should run at 350-630-1050-1750-3150 RPM (ignoring slippage).
Thanks for looking
I've been casually looking for a drill press and after seeing yaidunno's camelback restoration decided I needed one. Yes needed

Luck would have it I found one on Craigslist for $125 that sat inside it's whole life covered in oil. The tags on it said "Detroit-Cleveland Machinery", "Department of Defense", and "Ford" among other things.
It had a 3PH 1/3hp GE motor on it with 1939 patents, so I'm assuming its of the 40's vintage. Who knows what back door it walked out of.
Getting the thing home and setup:
Modifications to the base complete. The plates that came with it were welded to the top of the cabinet and the exposed corners rounded to match the look. When I got it Newton was the only thing holding it down.
Partially reassembled after wire wheeling and paint. A blasting cabinet is definitely on the wish list. I thought I could use the leather belt but it broke on startup. Most of the hardware was replaced with stainless just because well it's pretty. Thanks McMaster...
Complete with new motor, serpentine belt, etc. Speed changes are remarkably quick and a quick test with holes from 1/8" through 1/2" on 3/16 steel plate was very satisfying. It might be a little underpowered (1/3HP) since it doesn't like the highest two speeds.
If my math's right it should run at 350-630-1050-1750-3150 RPM (ignoring slippage).
Thanks for looking
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