Bought this one for $20.00 this weekend 1/2 HP. It is missing whole guard on wirewheel side and outer guard on right. Any one sell parts that you know of?
$20 NIB would be my tops, $5 loose in the bottom of a pile. I paid about $1 for mine, but I'm a miser.![]()
I paid $5 for a loose used one, got one basically free along with a flat blade sharpening guide #335.19495 and belt and motor driven grinding stone for $15, and the latest, NIB with instructions for $10
I don't know if this is an exact fit, but it's an old us-made cutler-hammer. ]


I do believe it may work. The guy is on vacation till the 12th, but I'm definetly ordering a couple. Thanks
Cults & virgin sacrifices? Hmmm, now I know I'm in the right place
Anybody notice how the market has dried up a bit? CL has been grinderless for a couple of weeks now.
Bought this one for $20.00 this weekend 1/2 HP. It is missing whole guard on wirewheel side and outer guard on right. Any one sell parts that you know of?
Yes the label is very faded! Today I flipped it over , pulled the bottom plate and do not know how it ran so smooth , the whole inside cavity is covered in East Texas Dirt Dauber nests , man they get in anything !!
It's like: "Trés Cool".All: so i picked up this old Craftsman (pre block?) that runs like a tank. i posted on the vintage thread, but i also want to show the block heads my cast iron one piece stand.
is it cool or is that just me thinking so? also it looks like it might have had something on the broken off handle. any idea who this company is or what would have been on it originally? if i do get a 1 HP Block i think it might have to go on this stand.

All: so i picked up this old Craftsman (pre block?) that runs like a tank. i posted on the vintage thread, but i also want to show the block heads my cast iron one piece stand.
is it cool or is that just me thinking so? also it looks like it might have had something on the broken off handle. any idea who this company is or what would have been on it originally? if i do get a 1 HP Block i think it might have to go on this stand.
Maybe they are all on Eprey? :dunno;
i want one of those 40's models sooo bad....
I recently picked up a 397.19591, I believe this is a 7" model, correct? Where is a good place to by 7" wheels, as they don't seem to be a popular size in the hardware stores.
If it does take 7" stones/wheels, try the following link for info. on MSC.
http://www.garagejournal.com/forum/showpost.php?p=1533471&postcount=33
I no longer have my 1/2 HP m-397.19591 (cagullett1 can verifysize), but my notes say it should be 7".
If it does take 7" stones/wheels, try the following link for info. on MSC.
http://www.garagejournal.com/forum/showpost.php?p=1533471&postcount=33
I no longer have my 1/2 HP m-397.19591 (cagullett1 can verifysize), but my notes say it should be 7".
I've been trying to get ahold of this guy since the hour he posted it. I was in Denver for a week visiting family, and was hoping he would respond before I left. My wife is still in Denver, and I'm hoping he responds to the message I sent him today so she can pick it up before she leaves! (obviously not going to pay asking price)
http://denver.craigslist.org/tls/4553335733.html
Very interesting! That 1/2hp 7" commercial is a 397.1949. It looks just like a 397.19591. Same side covers and eye shields, except it has a plastic switch. The 397.19591 has a metal switch. I assume the 397.1949 is a little newer. The numbers on these grinders seem to increase up until about 1970, and the start counting down again. Has anyone put together a list of model numbers or figured out any pattern or logic for the numbering system? A timeline, of sorts, is what I mean.
I didn't even catch that it was a different model number. I noticed the switch was a newer style, but everything else about it looks identical to the 397.19591.
My 397.19591 has the same switch as the 397.1949 for sale in Denver. Not sure if that means mine was replaced at some point or what.

I saw this one yesterday at a fire station in Naperville, Illinois.
"Trés Very Nice"I picked one of those in about the same shape a few months ago for $25. After a new set of bearings, new eye shields, new light socket,and a set if fabricated tool rests, it ended up being a nice grinder. However, it was a lot more work than I thought it would be.
Is that one for sale?

Picked this one up today and pretty stoked about it. I think it will clean up pretty easy. The only thing I'm wondering is if it's kosher to add a toggle switch, I guess the previous owner used a switch on his workbench to power it on.
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The only thing I'm wondering is if it's kosher to add a toggle switch, I guess the previous owner used a switch on his workbench to power it on.
By all means add a switch if you like, but I don't believe that model had a switch but was rather, "plug and play". I've seen several and none had a switch and there is no switch shown on the parts diagram at Searspartsdirect.
I'd go with a foot switch instead of a toggle. That would be kewl.
Nice vintage round top! I would definitely add a switch, but I would make sure it was of the period - early 60's. A few pages back, there was a link to an eBay listing to some old Cutler-Hammer toggles switches.
Congrats on getting a block grinder!![]()