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  1. #1
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    Default Older Woodfast lathe - a few questions

    Our Men's Shed has been given an older Woodfast lathe. It seems a simple enough beast - motor in cabinet under the lathe, nothing fancy but very sturdy.

    We're missing a faceplate and a chuck so I'm hoping the turning wizards can help me identify what the originals (or suitable replacements) look like.

    Here's the machine. Colour is Hammertone grey and green. It has no model number or ID on it other than the characters LS 13 40 stamped into the lathe bed. I believe the spindle thread is 1" 8tpi or 10tpi. Would 10tpi sound more like a Woodfast 'standard'?

    76CE5855-561B-4364-8D1C-1772BE193314.jpeg
    23BFB138-EB6A-4959-8D27-000DC8CC2EF4.jpeg

    Any help identifying the model, year and appropriate faceplate/chuck would be greatly appreciated We're complete newbies to these older machines......

    Many thanks,

    Brian

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  3. #2
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    10 tpi Brian .
    Someone loaded a lot of Woodfast brochures in vintage machinery section some time back and I copied them. I don't remember who it was to thank here though. Ill go have another look .

    X90dWz7.jpg X90dWz7 (2).jpg X90dWz7 (3).jpg

    Rob

  4. #3
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    Default

    Rob - you are a STAR. I'll go and look in that section.

    Really appreciate your help.

    Brian

  5. #4
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    I sincerly hope those flimsy castors are for moving it around your shed and once in place they will be removed....say YES THEY WILL please
    I would love to grow my own food, but I can not find bacon seeds

  6. #5
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    Check on the tailstock bed end to see if there are any numbers stamped into the bed. The numbers, if they are there, will indicate the year of manufacture and model.
    Jim
    Sometimes in the daily challenges that life gives us, we miss what is really important...

  7. #6
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    Jim - thanks. The numbers on the bed are LS 13 40 so I'm guessing it's a 1940's model. I'll follow up further on Auscab's suggestion re manuals to see if I can discover more.

    Tonyz - agree about the wheels - thanks

    Best regards,

    Brian

  8. #7
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    Default

    There was only one lathe brochure. The one I put here. The rest were all types of other Woodfast machines. I cant find what thread it was.

  9. #8
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    Rob (auscab) - Found the post with the original photos of the brochures. It was posted by Bueller from brochures he was sent by Clear Out. Thanks to both of them and again to you!

    Best regards,

    Brian

    Woodfast manuals, brochures etc - show me what you got!

  10. #9
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    Quote Originally Posted by homey View Post
    Rob (auscab) - Found the post with the original photos of the brochures. It was posted by Bueller from brochures he was sent by Clear Out. Thanks to both of them and again to you!

    Best regards,

    Brian

    Woodfast manuals, brochures etc - show me what you got!
    Thanks Brian . Good to know .
    Rob

  11. #10
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    Quote Originally Posted by homey View Post
    Jim - thanks. The numbers on the bed are LS 13 40 so I'm guessing it's a 1940's model. I'll follow up further on Auscab's suggestion re manuals to see if I can discover more.

    Tonyz - agree about the wheels - thanks

    Best regards,

    Brian
    If we are reading the stamp details in the bed correctly, I think that's a 1940 Woodfast lathe, so one of their earliest. All of the early ones (I think pre-80s) had a 1" x 10tpi thread.

    Love that early Art Deco design of the tailstock!

    Almost all chucks nowadays need a separate insert to match the thread on your lathe, so you wont' need a special chuck, just the correct insert.

    Few of us use dedicated faceplates now... replaced with face rings or scrap wooden disks held in the chuck.
    Stay sharp and stay safe!

    Neil



  12. #11
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    Hi Homey,

    My memory faculty is not was it used to be, so i had a look at my old files. I have a letter written by Charles Hagan written in 1989. He states that He and a partner founded, P & H Tools S.A., in 1941, that was to later become Woodfast. The first machine marketed under the name "Woodfast" was a belt and disc sander, and that was in 1944 followed by a 14" bandsaw in 1945 then a "6" buzzer" in 1946.

    So that tells me that the lathe was not built in 1940 but could be even later than 1946. Even so it is still a very sound machine well worth the effort. It would be interesting if some one knew what the numbers meant.

    Jim
    Sometimes in the daily challenges that life gives us, we miss what is really important...

  13. #12
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    Thanks, Neil. Yes, it’s a handsome machine in a chunky kind of way. I like this one so much more than our modern Asian-built lathe even if it means arm-wrestling the drive belt

    I’ve found a supplier of 1x10 faceplates and chucks but you make an interesting point about faceplate rings or wooden discs held in the chuck. More to investigate!

    Thanks again,

    Brian

  14. #13
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    Jim,

    Thanks for the extra helpful information about the manufacture date. I’ll keep investigating but I’m not overly optimistic given that there’s no plate on the lathe just the stamping in the tailstock end of the bed “LS 12 40”. Whatever the date it’s a very sturdy piece of kit and I think it will become a favourite at the Shed.

    One thing I haven’t yet done is check out the motor plate which is buried in one of the cupboards under the lathe. It may have one or more new motors over the years, of course, but it will be interesting to see what we find.

    Thanks again,

    Brian

  15. #14
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    I can't put my hands on the relevant documents ( I have them somewhere ) I am 99% sure that style is 1960's manufacture.

  16. #15
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    I don't actually think this unit is anywhere near that old, unless the bed and head/tailstock are from different machines. Has anyone else seen a two toned machine like that before? The older ones had unsealed bearings, while later ones moved to sealed bearings. The older ones can be identified by the grease nipples atop the bearings, which you're doesn't have.

    NCArcher had one from '77, with grease nipples. Does that mean your headstock is later than that? Mine is from '81 with sealed bearings, which is also the year the new shape came out, so probably the end of the line. One could surmise that yours headstock then would have been made between '77 and '81.

    Of course we could all be wrong and are reading the stamp incorrectly.

    Here are a couple of threads you may find interesting which cover some aspects of these lathes:
    - Value of old woodfast lathes
    - Restoring an early 80’s Woodfast Lathe (woodworkforums.com)

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