Refurb DP#25
10/31/2016
I sold dp#23 today... it was one of the last Craftsman 100's made. I believe it was manufactured in early 1958, just before the 150's came out.
The buyer has another Craftsman 100 drill press and wanted it reconditioned, so I took that one home with me to work on. This one, dp#25, is a 103.23130 and was a very early 100. The motor is stamped E4-47, so made in 1947.
I didn't get any good before pictures, but these were from when I got it home in pieces.
11/2/2016
I got dp#25 apart and ordered new belts from
www.VBeltSupply.com and bearings from
www.AccurateBearing.com.
I found a couple issues that I've never seen before.
First, I could not for the life of me get the tilt table off of the table support. I was eventually able to tilt the table, but it took considerable effort. I'm still not sure what the problem is, but it may have something to do with the tapered pin. It was jammed into the support much farther than I've ever seen.
The second issue is with the feed stop rod bracket.
In an
earlier post, I showed that there were two designs for this bracket. The slot in the earlier design, on the left, did not extend through. The later bracket is on the right.
The bracket on dp#25 is the earlier design. It was only partially seated onto the quill and very difficult to remove. It would not fully re-seat onto the quill. I surmised that because of the closed-loop design, tightening the bracket bolt deformed the bracket. The ID was reduced to the point where it was very tight on the quill. I tried to hammer a wedge into the slot, but still no go.
To correct the problem, I extended that slot with a hacksaw blade to mimic the later design. It works perfect now!
11/5/2016
All parts are cleaned and polished. Today, I installed the new bearings and reassembled the head frame.
Back together for a test run. Nice!