crguy
Well-known member
I have seen that style a few times before. Different manufacturers.
Think I have finally figured out that it is a Model No 50 - looks like very early 30's. Advertisement for it attached.
Now I have to find the direct drive mounting hardware. One thing leads to another....
The lower pulley gets driven by the in floor main drive shaft, and a clutch is used to engage the drive.
I think Schaffer's DP is a "factory floor" DP, flat belts and all. The motor is not stock, and the head is sitting 180 out of phase. The flat belt would have gone to a set of pulleys that were on a common shaft for all the other powered gear on that line. possibly one engine possibly steam would have driven the floor/building. with the head design it would have been at the end of the era for that approach, as the head is, relative to the common shaft era, "Modern". You usually see the Camel back DS and even mills used here.
I would guesstimate that one is 1920's-1930's
I'm interested in a link to the "Delta's first DP" pic, as I suspect that is simply internet conceit, with no basis in fact.
My Burgmaster Model B Turret Drill saved from the Scrap Man. 3 Phase, VFD powered. Had to go to the patent application to see how to repair it. Don't know the age, maybe 50's
Terry
Sorry, I think you're wrong on that. The OPs drill press has a factory V belt drive just like this early 30s Walker Turner #100.
Huh, I just realized that I never posted this here!
Now that is cool! That should cut the labour time down a bit.
My Burgmaster Model B Turret Drill saved from the Scrap Man. 3 Phase, VFD powered. Had to go to the patent application to see how to repair it. Don't know the age, maybe 50's
Terry
That is really interesting. Are all of the spindles engaged at the same time or only the one pointing down? It would be one frightening machine with 5 spindles spinning at once.
Just picked up this cool looking Rockwell homecraft drill press for $75. These are the Craigslist pictures better pictures before and after to come.It is designed to run only the active / drilling spindle..


Agree, the lack of motor mounting boss on the head caught my eye too, from the begining. I've seen that style before. Just haven't dug up the paper work on it.
Those are a nice press, good overall size for general work. I like how they made the base into a 2nd table. Majority just leave a somewhat rough casting with two slots, no center hole. I have the craftsman version.
My cousin had one like that, it was my great uncles, and it had cone pullies and a flat belt. No idea if the make.That's crazy Shaffer, never saw one like that before. Thanks for posting!
I like that idea. When the paint is that clean and original it would be a shame to strip it. Do you know who the manufacture is? Looks a little like a Delta-made machine.
WAY too nice to do more than clean and de-rust where needed.Cool, I mixed your profile up with someone else.I was looking for a bench top model like this in original condition. I was visiting Pittsburgh and picked it up.

Here is a mod i just did on an old Atlas drill press table that was hard to adjust. The pole grippers would stay tight so i dug through my scrap bin and found these rocker arm springs. The inner support spring fits perfectly in between the pole grips and provides enough force to loosen the grip when you get ready to move the table.
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yeah, i should try that on my craftsman, I always have to jerk it a bit after i loosen it.The spring clears the pole OK? Great idea...