48James
Well-known member
Show us your cool old drill presses!
Recently started to restore a very old delta drill press.
Recently started to restore a very old delta drill press.
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Enough with the jibber jabber. Now show us some drill presses fools!!
My 1921 vintage Buffalo. I'm gonna have to squirt some paint on it someday.
Very cool machine.
I notice Craftsman 150 drills are heavily represented here too. My grandfather used one in his shop for a number of years and it is still in the family. I've used it a couple times and it's a solid machine for its size.
Chuck, How did you add the new center pulleys?
Chuck, How did you add the new center pulleys?
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Found this, might work: http://www.garagejournal.com/forum/showpost.php?p=667366&postcount=35
http://www.vintageprojects.com/machine-shop/LoSpeedPress.pdf
Here is my Silver Manufacturing 20 inch Drill press I recently restored. It still needs a belt for the powerfeed, but it functions. 3hp, with a #4 MT. I had to fabricate new bevel gears for the spindle, as the previous owner had broken them. Works great now. The pics make it look kinda pale, in person its a nice forest green. Here are some pics.
Does it have a self centering chuck with morse cone? The ones like yours that I've seen on our side of the pond has chucks were drill bit must be centered by hand.
Evintho, I take it that is the power switch shown below?
Mine has a pull chain like on an old table lamp.
Thanks,
Tony
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Just got my newest drill in the shop this evening. In the first photo I have it hanging from slings to remove the shop brew coolant tray a previous owner put under the machine:
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Here it is inside for the night. It will stay here for the near term, until I have a chance to pull the head, column and arm for overhaul. The little drill on the right is my first drill press, bought when I was 8 or 9 from the Cummins traveling tool show. Not a very good machine, but it served its purpose. I use it on occasion for coring holes in tile.
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How much for one?2 1/2" al. bar stock, old alternator bearings, 5/8" shaft.
And a HF lathe
Chuck
Yeah that's the power switch. It originally had an old thumb wheel switch built into the power cord. Both were toast! I put in a new power cord and grabbed the rocker switch from Grainger. Had to bore a hole in the side of the head unit to make it fit but now it's much safer and cleaner.
Yeah, That's a clean job. I just had thought it was factory.
Since it had a switch in the cord, now I'm wondering if the switch on mine was put in by a PO or if it came like that.
Maybe they didn't have switches in them from the factory?
Ocular Engineer, did yours have a switch and what type?
Thanks,
Tony
They sold them with or without a motor. I suspect a lot of people bought them without, and then used a spare motor they had laying around the shop. My Craftsman has a switch in the cord, as far as I can tell it's always been that way but it doesn't have a factory motor either.
I've looked at the illustrations in the old Sears catalogs, and there's nothing to indicate one way or the other what they did for a switch.
It looks like those old Craftsman drill presses are pretty popular. I found mine in a basement of an estate sale. He is named Leroy for obvious reasons. The only thing I have done is replace the belts and add the cross vise.
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what year are these things from ? i have one at my grand fathers wood working shop and i know its atleast 50 years old if not older