Well I'm sure there are a couple other camelback drills in this thread but as the topic is back at the top of the page here is mine. I picked it up about 10 years ago and this is what it looked like when I found it. It was so filthy I wasn't even sure what I had until we could get it out in the light.
It actually wasn't too bad to move out and load but I did pull the head shaft as it was too tall to slide under a beam that had it hemmed in. I think we just wrapped a strap around the base and skidded it out where we could lift it. The wife was thrilled with this showing up on the trailer...and the shop had a lot more empty space back then.
The restoration took a couple of months. I had it completely apart and rebuilt a lot of the drive system starting over from scratch. It had come out of an old sawmill sometime in the past and the original lower cone pulley was nowhere to be found. Some millwright in the past had fitted a drive all gearbox and ran V-belts up to the head shaft. I kept a modified version of that but added a lot of guarding and styling on the new drive. Here is a couple of pics after I was done.
And here it is in the 'final' spot it occupies in the shop. The ceiling over the drill is 9' tall and I still needed to bore a hole through it for the spindle to pass when the head is raised. It is a 32" Mechanics Machine Company sliding head drill. The spindle is MT 5. Back gears and power feed available. I kind of designed the wall and room behind it to let it fit in the shop without being too intrusive...it's a pretty big footprint. I can still get fairly large items on the table. And of course you need some big bits. Ed.