W-Cummins said:This one is sure a nice machine!
-lecroix- said:Sa-weet! Nice to see the those ol' work horses still around.
I sell CNC machines for a living, and even I will admit that these new fangled, computer controlled, ultra-fast rapid rate beasts have nothing on the old machines when it comes to one thing.
Soul.
Oh the stories I bet those two machines could tell.
kartracer55 said:Hell yeah! I was learning how to run a lathe wednesday night and made my first project. Ironically, it was some sort of large bushing for a PTO that the instructor needed made for the next morning lol. Either way, its an old Southbend machine. Dont know the size, or the exact age, but its huge. I couldnt imagine the parts that have been made on it. All the people who have used it, and how the little parts that have been made by it have touched so many people's lives without anybody realizing it.
Jim
Canadian Charlie said:Thats a really nice machine
-lecroix- said:I sell CNC machines for a living, and even I will admit that these new fangled, computer controlled, ultra-fast rapid rate beasts have nothing on the old machines when it comes to one thing.
Soul.
Oh the stories I bet those two machines could tell.
wilbilt said:What about this turret lathe being run by someone's great grandmother back in WWII? Old machines are a living, breathing, connection to our history. So many young people these days just don't get it.
wilbilt said:What about this turret lathe being run by someone's great grandmother back in WWII? Old machines are a living, breathing, connection to our history. So many young people these days just don't get it.
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bmwpower said:Where'd you get that pict?!? That's pretty cool. Almost doesn't look like it's from WWII?
In a weird way....kinda ****... with all that machine oil on her arms.
bmwpower said:The quality of those photos is simply amazing. I have to see if I can get some blown up.
wilbilt said:There are huge (like 200MB)TIFF versions of the photos available. I agree, they are outstanding.
eschoendorff said:Those photos are cool... but ****???? Dude, that's someone's grandma!
OldCarGuy said:The absence of safety glasses on these pictures is rather striking. Makes me shudder,, thank goodness you don’t see that today.
Peter on Practical Machinist’s board posted a slide show of a local junk yard he visited over his lunch hour. It was so depressing to see all that old iron rusting, tossed around and waiting to be melted down. A heartfelt moment for sure, as I recognized the machines of yesterday from my youth. It makes me feel good that I saved but a few pieces from their fate.![]()
http://home.comcast.net/~steamtruckin1/Scrap_yard/main_file.htm
OldCarGuy said:The absence of safety glasses on these pictures is rather striking. Makes me shudder,, thank goodness you don’t see that today.
Peter on Practical Machinist’s board posted a slide show of a local junk yard he visited over his lunch hour. It was so depressing to see all that old iron rusting, tossed around and waiting to be melted down. A heartfelt moment for sure, as I recognized the machines of yesterday from my youth. It makes me feel good that I saved but a few pieces from their fate.![]()
http://home.comcast.net/~steamtruckin1/Scrap_yard/main_file.htm