The table drive assembly is looking damn good!

That is just beautiful. Your attention to detail is nothing short of perfection.
I have one question for you. Is that constant revering of the motor hard on it? The only surface grinders I've run have all been hydraulic driven. Thanks.
Mike
Absolutely fantastic beautiful work/restoration. I'm like others.....I hate to run it for fear of getting it dirty. I have a Thompson Surface Grinder that I need to tear into this year as soon as I get some room to work on it.
What is the red paint you used. I know that it is a special paint, but not sure off the name. It's oil resistant paint, and tougher than your normal paints.
But you did a super fantastic job. I just hope mine doesn't take that long to get up and going. But I won't be doing a total teardown either (I don't think) I may now though after seeing your thread.![]()
Thanks!
The motor was designed for constant reversing.
the soft start & stop will help it live even longer
Thanks much
its Glyptal. seals castings so oil etc dont seep through . also seal in dirt / casting sand that u cant get to.


thanks , i enjoy fixing things up , feels good when its all done to see it alive again
i have 2 parts left to finish ,then ill grind in the table and chuck and put it to work.
was thinking of building a dust collector system . could use some ideas?
![]()
![]()
Absolutely one of the purtyest restorations I've seen. But I have to ask, in the bearing block above it has plugs in the casting where it looks like a lube fitting should go, either grease or oil. Are the plugs original to the machine?
lg
no neat sig line
Well, I can see you enjoy fixing things up - a lot!
Talking about dust - does this unit not have coolant system, I don't see it!?
I have only used one of these (actually can't remember what brand, old US model) and dust per se is not a problem. However the coolant can create a mess sometimes.
I am by no means an expert on this, so take this with a grain of salt.i do have the whole coolant system that came with it , has heavy sheet metal tank and cast iron top . 120v cast pump and lines. with drip pan for alone back of machine .
and stainless steel jet
i still have the big sheet metal guard that covers the whole table to finish .
its heavly pitted on one side , so it needs some heavy body work .
i do have it all straightend up though.
i havnt decided if i will put coolant on this machine . worried about the mess and rusting everything up!
I am by no means an expert on this, so take this with a grain of salt.
But you use additives in the coolant water to make it none corrosive. So this should not be a problem.
And by using coolant you increase the accuracy of the surface - depends on several variables like, material, thickness, structural stability (thin plates warp under the heat of the grinding stone), grinding speed... etc - and the lasting of the grinding stones. The dust problem is also solved but naturally coolant spray causes mess. However, wiping it clean after use is probably easy with the smooth surfaces and your fantastic paint job.
I guess this decision depends on what you intent to use it for.
What a fun thread. I wish I understood a quarter of the technical terms being used here but I'll follow along as best I can.
When I started scrolling through the pictures I thought for sure the restoration would bog down, but as I kept going my jaw dropped further and further. What a job you did! (Even if I had five years, all that I'd have to show for it would be a pile of greasy parts.)
I would like to know about the electronics however, what the Hitachi units (and the GE ones they replaced) do? They look pricey is all I can tell.
If you have coolant you'll surly want to use it. I've had two old dry surface grinders and they make as much or more mess than the DoAll I have now with coolant. Also can turn out better work faster with coolant.
Here is a lousy picture of my grinder. It's "restoration" pales in comparison, mainly consisting of a good cleaning, flush the hydraulics, some new stainless splash guards and rework and replacement of all the Bijur lines and metering units.
https://lh6.googleusercontent.com/-.../CMibj2OSD3o/s912/IMG_20140415_180950_080.jpg
Keep up the good work!
Grigg
What feed rate and stepover were you using on that test?