Where is this mill? My father rebuilt and sold machine tools for 40 years, and I would be seriously surprised if three years outside hurt anything other than electronics on a Bport. Because of the close tolerances and water based coolants, it’s not unusual for a machine table to become stuck, feel gritty, or get a bit of rust bubbling even sitting indoors. Every machinist has done their share of scrubbing and unsticking them, pass the bfh please. I actually just did a buddy’s clone that had sat a few years in his unheated shop, the table and ways were ~110 grit when I started and minty new two hours later. Bports/clones are the square body pickemup of vertical mills - simple to work on and hard to kill. Most anything you buy used (or new) should be torn down and cleaned regardless, so don’t hesitate. If rigging the machine seems daunting and it’s reasonably close, rollback wreckers are usually cheap and easy ways of hauling iron. As to spindle bearings, I would flush the head’s oil ports thoroughly with diesel (it’s a total loss system, no sump), oil it, and run the head on low 30 mins or so to polish them. If they weren’t trashed before it sat out they can prob be saved.
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