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Old shop equipment
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Ok folks, who's finally found a use for their old shop equipment that's been gathering dust all these years? what neat old machines did you get to play with? Being an old car guy, I can appreciate the beauty of the old stuff...here's my 1946 South Bend lathe at work, fixing a control at the end of the fix-it window today.
This robot stuff is neat...so many disciplines for the students to learn about... |
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well we got to work with an ancient tool (i don't remember excatly what it was) that had, get this, an on-off switch for a PERMENANT magnet. that's right, this was from before electromagnets made it into many commerical devices. I don't remember exactly how it worked, but it was something else
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I recently took home an old (year unknown) Atlas 618 lathe from the local community college machine shop and cleaned it up a bit. When I got it, almost everything that was meant to spin was totally siezed. The carraige would not move on the ways. The spindle was wobbling beyond belief in the headstock.
Anyway, I fixed all that, and it seems like it could be made functional again, but it is still missing a motor, chuck, tailstock accessories (drill chuck, center, etc) and change gears. Also, the clasp nut is not engaging the lead screw properly. So, it would probably take $300-400 bucks to get it going again, but even then it would just be so so. I like the 18" between centers on this thing, but for the price, I could just get a brand new Asian 7x10 or maybe even 7x12. |
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I have a lathe a lil smaller than that but just as old (if not older) in my basement that still will remain my favorite piece for years to come
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I've certainly never found a use for it, but in the shop we use at TTS, there's a large Fritz-Werner mill from 1935. Apparently, before the advent of easily-available ground-to-size die blocks, it was used to make 1/2"-deep fly-cuts in annealed steel....
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Here's the Bridgeport mill I use in our shop. I haven't had a chance to look up the serial number to find out when it was made but I suspect we're about the same age. It's seen some abuse as it used to reside in the auto shop but it's cleaned up fairly well and works well.
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Wow, that looks like it was made before my parents were born...
The oldest tool we have is probably the table big clamp we got from a mentor, it's probably from the early 40's... We have a dewalt drill that still works, we got it the year the team started 5 years ago, it still outperforms our new genric brand drill... |
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The oldest tool Ive ever used on a FIRST team was well over 8,000 years old
hard to be certain of the age, it was definately prehistoric. We used it on heat shrink tubing. very primative - very dangerous if you were not carefull! |
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Don |
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absolutely original
when you are building a robot there's no time to wallow in the mire! |
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We also have an old Monarch Lather I could not give you a build time, bur probably shortly after WW2, its an awesome lathe! |
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We have two Bridgeports that look very similar to the ones posted here. We also have a lathe that I am told was made some time between WWI and WWII.
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