DP#151 Part 11
I cleaned and installed the final pieces. I'm calling this one complete.
I'm thinking this may be my own refurb swan song (although I thought that at DP#100, LoL!). I've got too much other **** going on; starting with cataract surgery on Feb 3rd.
Who was I kidding? Only myself.
My left eye cataract surgery on 2/3 went well.
A major bathroom renovation was started on 2/23 and completed on 4/7, $$$. (I had to paint the bathroom.)
I painted the kitchen ceiling on 4/20 and installed five additional can-less light fixtures.
I replaced 40 kitchen cabinet hinges with the 35mm soft-close hinges. (That Kreg hinge jig works great!)
Cataract surgery on my right eye on 4/28 went well.
I painted the kitchen walls on 5/13 and then installed all new switches, receptacles and replaced three other light fixtures.
DP#152 - Part 1, Acquisition, Assessment, Disassembly Overview
The last week was relatively quiet. When I saw this 150 on FB a few days ago, I knew I was going for it. I broke that news to my wife this morning and went to get it early this afternoon in Grosse Pointe Park, Mi.
The seller said that he had it only a few months and that the original spring was fubar. He also said that he found someone selling new springs (
@11b30b4 ?} and installed one.
The original paint is nice enough to save. The milled surface of the table appears to be in great shape. The bare metal parts are moderately rusted. The rapid-adjust feed collar is only missing original part besides the spring.
The v-belt was too tight which contributed to the noise when running. The quill was very gummy which required the spring to be tensioned too much.
I had to use jams nuts to remove one of the feed handles from the hub.
One spindle pulley retaining screw did not back out, so it had to be broken to get the pulley out.
There was some sort of weird tissue paper around the bearings. Perhaps it acted as a shim to tighten the bearings in the head
casting?
The column still needs mechanical persuasion to be extracted. Otherwise the machine is apart; sub-assemblies to be dismantled yet.
So, the saga continues with DP#152. This is a model 113.24501 manufactured in June '66; the tail end of the 150 era. I'll be taking my time on this refurb.