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  1. #1
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    Default Vintage Craftsman Lathe

    Hello all,

    This is my first post in the woodturning section. I spend most of my time in the toy making section. I just acquired today a lathe my Grandpa bought used back in 1970. My Uncle has had it in his garage for the last 25 years. I spent sometime cleaning it up everything is in working order. I am not sure what year it is but a little bit of research it seems a 1930's era maybe? It has a 1/2 hp motor.

    Anyways I have never turned anything. I will be teaching myself how to turn to make small parts for scale models. Wheels, tires, fuel tanks, and dowels. Thought you guys might like it.

    Attachment 186992Attachment 186994Attachment 186995
    Attachment 186997Attachment 186999

    After I cleaned it up. It has a very good cross slide.
    Attachment 187001Attachment 187002Attachment 187003
    Attachment 187005Attachment 187006

    Bret

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  3. #2
    Join Date
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    Thumbs up Welcome

    Hi Bret, Welcome to the turning forum.

    It looks like you have a fine old lathe there, although its not designed for wood turning. It actually a for turning metal.

    Should do you fine for toy making, nice bit of history.
    Inspiration exists, but it has to find you working. — Pablo Picasso


  4. #3
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    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by hughie View Post
    Hi Bret, Welcome to the turning forum.

    It looks like you have a fine old lathe there, although its not designed for wood turning. It actually a for turning metal.

    Should do you fine for toy making, nice bit of history.
    I think it is a wood lathe with an accessory compound, as the four speeds are a bit high for most metal work. It is provided with a wood working tool rest and the shop made long tool rest for spindles.

    Delta had a similar arrangement in the 1950s, with the addition of a counter shaft to get the low speeds and torque to cut steel and cast iron.

    See: Delta 1460 Wood Lathe

    Pattern makers wood turning lathes also had carriages to make wooden patterns of hand wheels and other round things to make molds for making castings.

    http://www.olivermachinery.com/Refer...inePics/25.jpg

    bj383ss,

    Put a few drops of electric motor oil in the cups of the head stock before running it. If it slings oil at the ends of the spindle that is good. After running for a while feel the head stock just below the cups, if too warm to touch it is not getting enough oil.

    If the 383 refers to a Chrysler engine, you probably know about lubrication.
    Last edited by Paul39; 7th November 2011 at 01:39 PM. Reason: add
    So much timber, so little time.

    Paul

  5. #4
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    Default

    Paul,

    I think you are right. Here are 2 better pics of the wood tool rest.

    Attachment 187011Attachment 187012

    Also have a look at this link. At the bottom it shows an add for a convertable lathe.

    VintageMachinery.org - Photo Index - Craftsman - 101.06241

    But I am not expert on it!

    Bret

  6. #5
    cookie48 is offline Old Fart (my step daughters named me)
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    Default

    Bret.
    Welcome and good turning. Rekon you will have fun with that oldie.
    Cookie

  7. #6
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    Default

    Hi and welcome

    Nice score

    Hughie a metal lathe ??? mind you lite metal maybe but the Ornamental turning you could do with that all you need is a cutting head.

  8. #7
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    Default

    Interesting hybrid. A full-blown metal lathe would have a lead screw, multi-speed transmission for the lead screw, thread dial, half nut etc. for cutting threads. I don't think you could cut accurate threads with this. Reversible, though. Nice score indeed.

    Cheers,
    Joe
    Of course truth is stranger than fiction.
    Fiction has to make sense. - Mark Twain

  9. #8
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    Default

    Interesting hybrid. A full-blown metal lathe would have a lead screw, multi-speed transmission for the lead screw, thread dial, half nut etc. for cutting threads. I don't think you could cut accurate threads with this. Reversible, though. Nice score indeed.
    I've got an old Jen-son from the 1930's or so as best as I can guess. Its has a in-board leadscrew, some of the very early lathes had some very unusal designs and configurations.

    But as stated I suspect the cross slide was an extra, which could be very handy with toymaking.
    Inspiration exists, but it has to find you working. — Pablo Picasso


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