selohssa
Well-known member
It looks too cool to scrap.
http://edmonton.kijiji.ca/c-buy-and...al-Cylinder-Grinding-Lathe-W0QQAdIdZ213197301

http://edmonton.kijiji.ca/c-buy-and...al-Cylinder-Grinding-Lathe-W0QQAdIdZ213197301


Hi do you by chace still have the lathe?It looks too cool to scrap.
http://edmonton.kijiji.ca/c-buy-and...al-Cylinder-Grinding-Lathe-W0QQAdIdZ213197301
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Ooooo....a 12 year old zombie thread....Hi do you by chace still have the lathe?
it turned out to be a wood stove with civil war submarine controls sitting on top.Just joined ,can hope
Just joined ,can hope
-Have to agree, I've run a few OD/ID and many surface grinders. When something bad happens it's usually instantaneous, no time to get out of the way or even react. Wheels can literally explode, sending deadly chunks of stone flying at terrific speed into or through anything within 20 feet. I've been a toolmaker for decades and I still approach grinders with a healthy amount of respect and caution. Grinders are not a good machine for the inexperienced or to be casual about while operating because of the spindle speed and how fragile grinding wheels are. JMOIt is a cylindrical grinder. The only similarity to a lathe is the fact that they're both made for working on round things. For a person inexperienced in grinding, it is one of the most potentially deadly machines in a machine shop.