nice drill press Ed! I want a tour of your shop, looks like a lot of great machines in there. But the Dp is awesome
I`m sooo coming down there then this **** it clear and bringing beer.
There was a neat vintage wall mounted press on CL in Milwaukee this morning (NFI)
https://madison.craigslist.org/tls/d/lancaster-drill-press-antique/7096204542.html
Woohoo it's gunna be HUGE, you can't take that back now!!!
Added picture while link is still good.
Swap meet at the Crushers place!!!!!





Camelback door prizes for all attendees?
I was at the Crushers shop about 2 years ago...it was quite a bit to take in and I know he has added a bunch to the horde! If you like working/restored old machinery that is the top notch kind, this is your kind of place! I want to visit again to see what he has added since and I will bring a well known local forum member as well![]()
![]()
Thank you sir!That arm mounted drill file is a very handy attachment on your Craftsman press Nutshell. It looks to be very well done and just looks right on your table. Ed.
That would be a party to remember if the door prize covered the travel expense...I wish. Those baby camelbacks are getting harder to find.
Welcome back any time smoke, to a few The last couple weeks I've been working on adding a few more square feet to the deck shop while isolated and "working from home". It was getting kind of tight. To keep topical here are a few pics of my big Mechanics Machine Co. upright drill from when I brought it home back in 06'. My friend Sam was up on the step ladder to rig it. I had to pull the head shaft off just to get it out of the old crusher shop where it was living. It had come out of one of the big lumber mills in town. Ed.
Your mechanic's is a 24"? 30"? Looks like it could eat my 21" for breakfast, which is a hardy drill is it's own right.
looks like it to me too.Looks like a welded on add-on to me.
Well Done!!That arm mounted drill file is a very handy attachment on your Craftsman press Nutshell. It looks to be very well done and just looks right on your table. Ed.
That would be a party to remember if the door prize covered the travel expense...I wish. Those baby camelbacks are getting harder to find.
Welcome back any time smoke, to a few The last couple weeks I've been working on adding a few more square feet to the deck shop while isolated and "working from home". It was getting kind of tight. To keep topical here are a few pics of my big Mechanics Machine Co. upright drill from when I brought it home back in 06'. My friend Sam was up on the step ladder to rig it. I had to pull the head shaft off just to get it out of the old crusher shop where it was living. It had come out of one of the big lumber mills in town. Ed.





I added this mid-30s Walker-Turner made Craftsman DP to the stable today. Appears to be a rebadged D700. I know my way around the old Atlas presses pretty well but this is a first for me. The pulley cover is cast as one piece with the DP head, it's not removable. I know there's got to be some method to change belts but in the little time I've fooled with this thing, I'm stumped. The only op manual I can find that's close is a D900 and it doesn't mention belt changes. Any gurus able to steer me in the right direction? Thanks.
![]()
Even if the D900 technique works it sure is going to be a tight fit working that belt in.
From the picture, that belt looks to be oversized for that size drill press? It looks like possibly a B size, where I normally see A size belts on similar size drill presses.
I added this mid-30s Walker-Turner made Craftsman DP to the stable today. Appears to be a rebadged D700. I know my way around the old Atlas presses pretty well but this is a first for me. The pulley cover is cast as one piece with the DP head, it's not removable. I know there's got to be some method to change belts but in the little time I've fooled with this thing, I'm stumped. The only op manual I can find that's close is a D900 and it doesn't mention belt changes. Any gurus able to steer me in the right direction? Thank you.
My old Buffalo 15 drill press I picked up for $90 last summer. It seems to have very little use, everything operates smoothly. The last picture shows the table that was installed on it; a piece of sheet metal on top of 3/4" plywood.
Wow, just WOW is all I can say about this thread! I started at the end, and have made it back as far as page 80, and that's taken over a week. Now I really want to find and restore some old DPs!
I'm pretty new here, but just recently came across a pretty old, very small drill press in Dad's basement (was my grandfather's, RIP). Here's a pic, and link to a separate thread that I started, trying to find more info: https://www.garagejournal.com/forum/showthread.php?t=446987&highlight=press
It's most likely a Langelier, but the only ID tag I've found so far says H LEACH MACH CO. Google tells me that they (Leach) were more of a distributor who put their name on products made by other companies. Both companies were located in Providence, RI, which is also where my grandfather worked (different company), and most likely acquired this. Oh, and that basement is in Pawtucket, which borders Providence, so this thing has definitely been local for a very long time.
And, in the nearly 50 pages I've read in this thread, I've seen nothing like it so far, so it's also got charisma!!!
Mike
No "arc of shame" is a good thing~That's a really unique design Mike. They even managed not to drill the table full of holes!
That's a really unique design Mike. They even managed not to drill the table full of holes!
No "arc of shame" is a good thing~
Like Jerry lee lewis said to me about my Korg M1 keyboard,
"That's a fine machine you got there son"
Then he said "Good Job son."
LOL.................Just A Bit!Agreed very interesting DP!
But it does have some battle damage:
![]()