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tyyost

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 14, 2009
Messages
802
Location
Tunkhannock, PA
Nice space, as a tall guy some if the stuff hanging, like the channellocks looks like a potential headache to me. :rolleyes:Looks like you can do a ton of diverse work in there.
 

captain14

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 19, 2012
Messages
7,013
Location
Near College Park Maryland 20740
I like it too. The smaller shops
Are much more interesting to see and watch the thread as you post about your current projects. Where are you located at? Do you need heat or ac most of the year?
 

ecotec

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 5, 2010
Messages
5,404
That turned out really great. It looks like a nice space to work in.
 
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Retctddvr

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 25, 2016
Messages
119
Nice shop! Obviously much more of a metal worker than I'll ever be. However I recently picked up an old drill press which I had to build a table for as it was missing. Its my first drill press and what a difference its made in my capabilities. Your drill press looks very much like mine and I don't know what brand mine is. It would be helpful to me if you could tell me the brand of yours. Also a few close up pictures. If you could post here I would appreciate it. Thanks
 

Retctddvr

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 25, 2016
Messages
119
It's a Klass, I bought it sometime in the mid 19980s. It's undergone a few mods and repairs over the years: The lever boss had very thin walls and the screw in arms stripped the thread in the boss very quickly, so I made a more substantial one.
The switch fell apart so I bought a new one, the central pulley, swinging arm wore, ovalling the hole, so I turned up a plain bearing, pressed it in place and made a new swinging arm. I installed a light, actuated by the on/off switch and installed a depth stop. I have milled slots in wood and aluminium on it, but anything harder is not possible. The table can be tilted, but It only has a single nut holding the arm in place, so the table does tend to tilt over time if constantly drilling on the periphery of the table. I don't use the table, instead, I turned up a spigot, welded a plate to it, slipped it into the tilting arm and mounted a two way vice to it. All in all though, a damn good pedestal drill. I'll never upgrade it.
Thanks for the pictures, I am sure now that mine is a Klass. Mine is a bench top model, but all else is same. Interesting about the weak points. My lever boss was stripped in one hole and all levers were were stripped. I plan to drill out the boss and install inserts. I was in a small tool store (now out of business) asking about how to remove the chuck. While talking I mentioned the levers were stripped and missing knobs. The owner walked over to a cabinet and began digging around a drawer full of junk, he came up with three new levers with knobs. I ended up with all new hardware except the knob for slackening the belt. I think I gave him 10 bucks for all of it. It was a great day. Next up is a good quality cross vise. Again thanks for the pics.
 

Retctddvr

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 25, 2016
Messages
119
I may well end up doing that, but thought I would try inserts first. Since I have the inserts already. By the way do you have any suggestions on a drill press vice? Harbor Freight's seems to have a lot of slop in it. I'v never used one before and would like to get a good one.
 
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toglhot

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 20, 2021
Messages
153
For 90% of drilling I just hold the work with my hand, but, I'm sure some armchair expert on this group will advise you should always clamp your work for safety sake. I've never used a drill vice, I have one of those two way vice thingies they laughingly say is for milling, but that's just a joke I'm sure. They have a little free play, but the drill is hardly a precision machine so they are fine for the job. When holding work you are drilling just make sure you have enough to hold on to, if not, use multi grips or hold it in a two way vice similar to what I've pictured. I have a short piece of angle I clamp in the vice for drilling on, otherwise I just place the work across the gap in the Jaws. I've extended the handles on mine - wasted, arthritic hands.
the last two pics are of the boss and levers I made up about 20 years ago after the originals stripped and fell to bits.
 

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Retctddvr

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 25, 2016
Messages
119
So here's my dumpster find drill press. Looks pretty similar to yours. The second pic shows how I use a piece of angle iron to keep things in place. I thought it was kinda crude, but it works well. So I think I'll build a boss and lever arrangement just in case mine goes south. Should be a fun project.
 

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