Yes, a little surface rust and missing a crank handle.Emerson, that DP looks to be in great shape too!

That's the plan, I'll do the same thing for cleaning up as I did on the smaller DP and it will be ready to rock.Clean it up, put a 100w equiv. LED bulb in there, and you'll be good to go!

Thanks.My google fu found this here on GJ. Looks the same & according to the thread, 113 - Emerson.
I just looked up the handle. If you don't care about being original, they should be easy to find. Searching "revolving handle" should yield better search results.Thanks.
Ironically, the one I'm going to get is missing the same handle.
I'm not worried about it being original in the least bit. I'll take the functional ability over that any day.I just looked up the handle. If you don't care about being original, they should be easy to find. Searching "revolving handle" should yield better search results.
Yep that may work, if same thread of course.I think I can rob a handle off the old horizontal bandsaw. .. maybe the round crank handle ?
Now you're taking the fun out of it.Yep that may work, if same thread of course.
Generic replacements should be cheap. Or if you have a lathe, not too hard to make. The internal part is basically a shoulder bolt. But these are so cheap that I wouldn't even bother spending the time making one, I'd just buy one if I had to.

I believe, without looking, I believe the one I already have is a 13" model and I forget what the chuck size is. I'm currently on a 96 so it's been a few days since I have been at home.Thats a decent press, Emerson would be my guess too. Taiwanese made. 20" so it will be on the heavy side. If you lower the table and the head it should be a little easier to move, less top heavy.
I'm not so sure that the motor is really 2hp. That was from the time when sears uprated everything hp-wise. If you can take a pic of the motor tag with the amps that will tell you what it really is. A scotchbrite pad should clean up most of the surface rust and your rust inhibitor of choice shoud help to keep it down over time. Good luck with it.
Fun is the reason why I make things like the SR2000 in my sig.Now you're taking the fun out of it.
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Now you're taking the fun out of it.
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Sorry, not a beer drinker here, just a random smiley.You really should up your intake of cheap canned beer, get the Gingery diy forge book, figure out how to cast into sand molds and then design a new handle or two!
Any aluminum cans will work, just gotta build up some stock!Sorry, not a beer drinker here, just a random smiley.
I did a few castings in high school, few decades ago. Honestly, I have enough to do and not enough time to do something else like that.Any aluminum cans will work, just gotta build up some stock!
I used one on the other drill press column and it was fine. However, I did grab a pack of Scotchbrite pads for the grinder too.Eric, I would think twice about using that abrasive pad you referenced. Way too aggressive in my opinion. Some hand held burgundy scotch brite and wd40 to use it with will do wonders for the column and table without damaging it. For flat surfaces like the table, I cut a circle from the scotchbrite and use it on my 5” orbital sander, wetting with wd40 along the way. I use pads like you referenced to completely strip paint or powder coat off of things like a mower deck.