Old lathe identification

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Old lathe identification

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  • #599809
    paul rushmer
    Participant
      @paulrushmer83015

      old latheI rescued this from a scrap heap approximatly 18 inches long with a centre height of 2 1/2 inches, looks commercially made. I dont know wether it is a wood or instrument lathe. Spindle looks 1/2" BSW and solidold lathe Thanks Paul

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      #14573
      paul rushmer
      Participant
        @paulrushmer83015
        #599810
        not done it yet
        Participant
          @notdoneityet

          It appears to be a wood turning lathe – probably of anonymous maker.  Likely home-made.

          Edited By not done it yet on 29/05/2022 15:02:04

          #599828
          David-Clark 1
          Participant
            @david-clark1

            I would have said very old clock makers turns.

            #599877
            Michael Gilligan
            Participant
              @michaelgilligan61133

              A couple of points, but no identification

              1. The base is very distinctive, which may aid identification as either a specific commercial lathe, or a ‘made from’
              2. The nuts on the headstock mount have, perhaps, the right proportions for early Whitworth.

              MichaelG.

              #599881
              Nigel Graham 2
              Participant
                @nigelgraham2

                The base does not look as if originally made for the lathe even if on this lathe from new. It might have come from a small milling-machine. That raising block – is it a casting? It looks like a piece of angle or Z-section found for the purpose.

                What do the isolated nuts and bolts in the base hold?

                Oh, probably commercially-made parts but the headstock doesn't seem quite to match in style to the saddle and tailstock. I wonder if it came from a different source; or perhaps the same manufacturer but a different model.

                Intriguing and rather pretty little machine anyway, and it would be good to see it all bright and serviceable again, even if just for small items of wood-turning or brass-work by hand.

                It was probably driven by treadle originally, possibly the type advertised as a "foot-motor" when sold as a stock item for driving any small machine.

                #599883
                Hopper
                Participant
                  @hopper

                  I would guess homemade from the way the heastock has been carved out of a piece of plate. Commercial offerings were usually cast as a matter of cost saving and simplicity of manufacture. Other components on it look fabricated from bar stock too.

                  Will make a nice piece all cleaned up.

                  #599893
                  paul rushmer
                  Participant
                    @paulrushmer83015

                    Thanks for the thoughts so far, the head stock is a bronze casting, base is cast iron with plywood infill with mountings for motor so not origional and yes the mounting bracket is a lump of angle.

                    Thanks Paul

                    #599903
                    vic newey
                    Participant
                      @vicnewey60017

                      Unusual to see a flat belt pulley on such a small lathe, V belts first appeared around1917 but much earlier pulleys for round leather belts are often thought to be for V belts as they fit very well.

                      Here someone has tried a V belt upside down? so the flat side is on the pulley but not sure how well that would work if at all

                      #599906
                      David-Clark 1
                      Participant
                        @david-clark1

                        A timing belt would probably work well.

                        #599912
                        Hopper
                        Participant
                          @hopper

                          The best flat-belt replacement I have found on my Drummond M-Type is running a Poly-V belt straight on the old flat belt pulleys. I run it with the V grooved side contacting the flat pulley. Works really well. Seems to grip well enough even without the V-grooves, including for taking 100 thou deep cuts in steel.

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