Ainsley
Well-known member
That's a beauty bench top buffalo.
This is my floor stander.
This is my floor stander.
I can't imagine paying $350 for any bench model drill press, and that one has only 4 speeds and missing the belt guard. For that kind of cash, it should have variable speed or something extra special.
is it a DC Motor and Drive?Very nice quality machine, and VERY low speeds with endless torque. Not only great for big drills, but also for hole saws and such. Low speed is rated at something like 80 rpm, but mine goes to roughly 60 before the drive starts complaining.
This is a 1907 drill press made by Rockford Drilling Machine Company. I just finished restoring it.
If I understand properly, there is BMT (Buffalo machine tool) which is the old american company, and there is Buffalo brand, which is all chinese junk.
There is also General, which has a 15" drill press that looks almost identical to the old Buffalo 15, and is made in Canada.
BUMP
Nice thread. I came to it because I was curious if there was anything drill presses still being made in the USA. I've got an old Buffalo 18 I've been trying to get a few parts for. Including a return spring and one or two other pieces. I checked with BMT a while ago and the price on the spring was I want to say a few hundred dollars which stunned me. I checked over at OWWM (which now has a wider spread of interests than it did previously).
I also have an older Jet and Delta but they're pretty beat up.
Looking at the stuff being made in Germany. Starting prices of about USD3500 for bench models. Going way way up from there. Beautiful stuff.
"The difference in the two stories. Amana used to be made in Pennsylvania and Ohio but they have since shipped production to the far east. Amana had very tight quality control. No matter which washer you bought you never got a bad one (there are statistical aberrations but the warranty made them all good).
"[signed] Big Dave"
There's a nice older drill (Delta?) press at work they're gonna scrap. Jusdging by the obsolete motor , I'd say from the 50's. Normallysomething like that would "wander away" from the dumpster and follow me home, but to swap out the 5Hp 3 phase motor is just too expensive for me. I just don't have $500-700.00. Unfortunately, I'm not allowed to give it away, either. Another vintage unit may go away...
Tommy
Just out of curiosity, what drill press needs a 5hp motor? I've see a few big drill presses that were powered similarly but they wouldn't fit in a dumpster nor would they endup there given scrap value. A typical 15 - 20" drill press is under 1 1/2 hp and if three phase can be equipped with a VFD to run on single phase for under $200.
VFD for a .5 hp motor is under $150 and it powers the existing three phase motor.It would be very unusual for me, but if I read the motor tag wrong it might have been .5 Hp, but it was definitely 3 Phase and even if it was .5 Hp, why would it have a 20A plug?
A new motor and a $200.00 VFD is still too steep to make it worth it for me to bring it home. I just don't need a drill press THAT much.
Tommy
VFD for a .5 hp motor is under $150 and it powers the existing three phase motor.
They used to make a good quality maintenance / light production drill press. I would assume they still are.
Are you talking about this bulletin?
http://www.bmt-usa.com/resources/15_18+Drill+Bulletin.pdf
Machine tool manufacturers generally don't print flashy sales bulletins. There's no need for a bunch of fancy photos and page upon page of verbal diarrhea like a car brochure.

