EngineerNate
Well-known member
Hi all, first thread here. Hope I'm in the right section. Just picked up an old Delta drill press that popped on Facebook marketplace. Did some reading here and elsewhere and it matches this one feature wise exactly:
http://vintagemachinery.org/photoindex/detail.aspx?id=33942
Based on the serial number the two are relatively close. Mine was also manufactured in 1945:
It was dirty and there was surface rust on several areas, but it looked complete aside from the obvious top cover and jury-rigged switch, and the smile of shame was minimal. Here are the pics from the ad:
The chuck runout wasn't awesome (0.010" at the shank of a chucked drill bit, checked with two different drill bits) but the outside of the morse taper shank was at ~0.002" total run out so I figure it's either a crummy chuck, corrosion inside the chuck, or the morse taper needs to be touched up. Nothing seemed crazy with the bearings/quill and play between the top pulley and the quill splines seemed okay (A couple degrees). I plugged it in and it fired right up and ran without any drama in the lowest speed setting so I decided to go for it.
I had to tear it down to get it into my hatch. I need a truck (Evidence of this shared later...
)
I grabbed an old Craftsman 1/3 HP bench grinder while I was at it. Lookled to be in good shape, ran, and didn't add much to the total. (Sidenote: I need to dust my dash something fierce... good grief!)
I got it home safe and knolled it. Somehow I came up short one nut from the motor plate to motor connection. I was planning on replacing these anyway but it's a little irritating. Should have done a walk around after packing it, I must have missed the coffee cup we were putting the hardware into.
The smile of shame isn't too bad, and the rust looks very surface level:
Now for the bad. During breakdown, I incorrectly assumed that all four bolts holding the head to the post were installed identically. Their shed was kind of dark, and I'd successfully broken the bolts on the right side of the post (looking at it from the rear) free and moved on to the left. I got my breaker bar on it and turned and heard something that didn't sound like a nut breaking loose. Grabbed the headlamp I should have been wearing already and found this.
I was hoping it was just in the 'flats' used to keep the bolt from spinning but it went through a bit further than that. I already have a replacement on order from eBay because I don't want to deal with finding someone who can braze/weld this up and then worry about it breaking somewhere down the road.
So. At this point I've soaked the chuck taper with PB blaster to try to get it loosened up a bit before I try to separate it. Doing research on next steps and looking into ordering new bearings. Any comments welcome. I've joined up over at OWWM.org, just waiting on confirmation.
Does anyone have any info on the stock motor? The nameplate was rusted over to the point it was unreadable. It's enormous compared to the ones I've seen on the typical imports I've used in the past.
Really excited for this. My first bench press and my first vintage tool.
Cheers,
Nathan
http://vintagemachinery.org/photoindex/detail.aspx?id=33942
Based on the serial number the two are relatively close. Mine was also manufactured in 1945:
It was dirty and there was surface rust on several areas, but it looked complete aside from the obvious top cover and jury-rigged switch, and the smile of shame was minimal. Here are the pics from the ad:
The chuck runout wasn't awesome (0.010" at the shank of a chucked drill bit, checked with two different drill bits) but the outside of the morse taper shank was at ~0.002" total run out so I figure it's either a crummy chuck, corrosion inside the chuck, or the morse taper needs to be touched up. Nothing seemed crazy with the bearings/quill and play between the top pulley and the quill splines seemed okay (A couple degrees). I plugged it in and it fired right up and ran without any drama in the lowest speed setting so I decided to go for it.
I had to tear it down to get it into my hatch. I need a truck (Evidence of this shared later...
I grabbed an old Craftsman 1/3 HP bench grinder while I was at it. Lookled to be in good shape, ran, and didn't add much to the total. (Sidenote: I need to dust my dash something fierce... good grief!)
I got it home safe and knolled it. Somehow I came up short one nut from the motor plate to motor connection. I was planning on replacing these anyway but it's a little irritating. Should have done a walk around after packing it, I must have missed the coffee cup we were putting the hardware into.
The smile of shame isn't too bad, and the rust looks very surface level:
Now for the bad. During breakdown, I incorrectly assumed that all four bolts holding the head to the post were installed identically. Their shed was kind of dark, and I'd successfully broken the bolts on the right side of the post (looking at it from the rear) free and moved on to the left. I got my breaker bar on it and turned and heard something that didn't sound like a nut breaking loose. Grabbed the headlamp I should have been wearing already and found this.
I was hoping it was just in the 'flats' used to keep the bolt from spinning but it went through a bit further than that. I already have a replacement on order from eBay because I don't want to deal with finding someone who can braze/weld this up and then worry about it breaking somewhere down the road.
So. At this point I've soaked the chuck taper with PB blaster to try to get it loosened up a bit before I try to separate it. Doing research on next steps and looking into ordering new bearings. Any comments welcome. I've joined up over at OWWM.org, just waiting on confirmation.
Does anyone have any info on the stock motor? The nameplate was rusted over to the point it was unreadable. It's enormous compared to the ones I've seen on the typical imports I've used in the past.
Really excited for this. My first bench press and my first vintage tool.
Cheers,
Nathan
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