Fretters
Well-known member
Thought I'd start a single thread for everything rather than keeping track of multiple. With the way I tend to switch between things at any given time, makes it easier for updating too. 
Finally got off my **** and ventured out to pick this machine up the other day. The truck seems to have been laid up more than its been running the last year or so, so whilst everything is working peachy on it, I went down South to collect this.
It's another Drummond dual height bed 5" lathe. This one has been pulled from a shed which slowly collapsed around it, hence the current condition. It's been owned, but unused, by the same chap for the last forty years or so, which is whom I got it from. It's not going to be getting done any time soon, I'd guess, as I still have the other 5" to complete, but at least I have it here and out of the elements now. It has a 14" faceplate and 9" 3 jaw chuck with it. Appears to date around 1913/1914, as close as I can tell.
There's a slight chunk missing out of the bottom of the bed, where one of the bolt holes for the tailstock end leg is, the tailstock end leadscrew bracket has been replaced with a rough cut replacement, and the tailstock is from a later machine, (judging from how many mismatched part machines there appear due to the Ministry packing and shipping their machines, this might suggest it saw active use during WWI on one of their mobile workshops or the like, but without a plate on there, it's impossible to say for definite), but other than that it seems to be in generally sound condition underneath the rust. No flywheel or treadle though.
Finally finished painting the legs/plinth for the other 5" too.
Other than needing the paint excess scraping off the machined surfaces, they're done. Just need to finish painting all of the other bits in the darker green now.
Stripping perfectly good paint due to a colour mismatch is not my first choice of getting my jollies, but it was the only way to prevent everything looking a bit of a dog. I'll definitely make sure never to split a job across tins again though.
This was the mismatch between the old and new paint.
If it wasn't for the fact that the newer, darker shade of paint is how I expect Mid Brunswick to look, I'd have taken the paint back and got it sorted. I always thought that first tin was too light in shade though, so I've stuck with the phaffy, lengthy approach, but at least will end up with a colour I prefer.
Finally got off my **** and ventured out to pick this machine up the other day. The truck seems to have been laid up more than its been running the last year or so, so whilst everything is working peachy on it, I went down South to collect this.
It's another Drummond dual height bed 5" lathe. This one has been pulled from a shed which slowly collapsed around it, hence the current condition. It's been owned, but unused, by the same chap for the last forty years or so, which is whom I got it from. It's not going to be getting done any time soon, I'd guess, as I still have the other 5" to complete, but at least I have it here and out of the elements now. It has a 14" faceplate and 9" 3 jaw chuck with it. Appears to date around 1913/1914, as close as I can tell.
There's a slight chunk missing out of the bottom of the bed, where one of the bolt holes for the tailstock end leg is, the tailstock end leadscrew bracket has been replaced with a rough cut replacement, and the tailstock is from a later machine, (judging from how many mismatched part machines there appear due to the Ministry packing and shipping their machines, this might suggest it saw active use during WWI on one of their mobile workshops or the like, but without a plate on there, it's impossible to say for definite), but other than that it seems to be in generally sound condition underneath the rust. No flywheel or treadle though.
Finally finished painting the legs/plinth for the other 5" too.
Other than needing the paint excess scraping off the machined surfaces, they're done. Just need to finish painting all of the other bits in the darker green now.
This was the mismatch between the old and new paint.
If it wasn't for the fact that the newer, darker shade of paint is how I expect Mid Brunswick to look, I'd have taken the paint back and got it sorted. I always thought that first tin was too light in shade though, so I've stuck with the phaffy, lengthy approach, but at least will end up with a colour I prefer.
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i wouldn't know where to start to ask any questions on some of the things you have put and plan to put on that engine and inside, but it looks like you are doing a great job.