Found someone who's got one for sale; sounds like he's taken good care of
his equipment. For one of these in good shape, what sort of price would be
fair? I don't want to low-ball him on a price, but I have a reasonably
limited budget for toys right now, and wasn't really planning on buying a
lathe right now, but not many used ones show up around here.
FWIW, I'm up in Canada. I checked some of the sites I'm aware of to see
what the current retail is on it, but it doesn't seem to still be for sale.
Clint
Clint wrote:
> FWIW, I'm up in Canada
Me too!
Where are you? I have one, mint, never used, well I did turn it on a few
times, on the stand. I think it is a 701c.
After I got it Delta came out with the big steel one and I bought it!
Delta in Guelph was selling one for 600 or 650 at the time. I asked a
few people for 450 and only got shamefully lowballed so I said no.
But I could let it go a bit lower.
John
I suspect the wear you mention was caused by grit from the mixer getting
on the belt. That's just a guess, but I have owned a couple reeves drive
lathes, know others who have them as well, and have been a part of this
newsgroup since day one, and I have never heard of the wear you mention on
a reeves drive on a wood lathe. That doesn't mean it couldn't happen, I
suppose, but I think it would be an extremely rare occurrence.
-mike paulson, fort collins, co
You shouldn't have any problems with it. Yes, it would be a rare occurrence.
Lots of industrial milling machines have this type drive and don't have any
problems. It would be the rare hobbyist (pretty well non existent) that
would ever run their machine that hard or that long.
"Mike Paulson" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> I suspect the wear you mention was caused by grit from the mixer getting
> on the belt. That's just a guess, but I have owned a couple reeves drive
> lathes, know others who have them as well, and have been a part of this
> newsgroup since day one, and I have never heard of the wear you mention on
> a reeves drive on a wood lathe. That doesn't mean it couldn't happen, I
> suppose, but I think it would be an extremely rare occurrence.
>
> -mike paulson, fort collins, co
>
On Sat, 12 Aug 2006 01:57:27 GMT, "Clint" <[email protected]> wrote:
>Found someone who's got one for sale; sounds like he's taken good care of
>his equipment. For one of these in good shape, what sort of price would be
>fair? I don't want to low-ball him on a price, but I have a reasonably
>limited budget for toys right now, and wasn't really planning on buying a
>lathe right now, but not many used ones show up around here.
>
>FWIW, I'm up in Canada. I checked some of the sites I'm aware of to see
>what the current retail is on it, but it doesn't seem to still be for sale.
It's been supplanted by, I believe, the 46-715. When it was still
available, I think it was around 600USD or so--make the appropriate
conversion for canuckistani dolers.
About a year ago I happened on one (with the stand, which makes it a
46-701) being sold used from the classroom at a nearby Woodcraft. They
had a price tag of $250 on it. I didn't argue.
An epilogue to that story is that it was missing a manual (easily
obtained from Delta), a live center (had one on my Jet Mini which
works nicely), tommy bar, and the face plate (similarly, the ones from
the Jet fit fine). Not three days after coming home, a wrecker posted
a for sale for some Delta lathe parts. He lives halfway to the
Woodcraft store. He wanted $15 for the lot. It was as if someone had
given him the exact parts that were missing from mine. And I made a
new friend (hi, Jim--long time no hear).
$250 seemed to me a real fair price then and still does (with the
aforementioned conversion). The lathe is perfect for my intended uses.
I will never be a turner that needs a Powermatic, One-Way, Stubby, or
the like. It's principal limitation (which is anecdotal--I haven't
experienced it yet) is that the Reeves drive doesn't transmit torque
well at low speed.
If you do get it, let me give you a hint for working protocol. You're
not supposed to change speeds without the motor on. Therefore, get in
the habit of turning the speed down every time before you turn it off.
I have twice already found that I had left the control up at sanding
speed, turned the lathe off, then chucked up a big 'ol, out of balance
slab of bowl stock, and reached for the switch. Thankfully, I thought
about it each time before I turned it on. Could be nasty.
That doesn't make the lathe unsatisfactory. It's a feature.
--
LRod
Master Woodbutcher and seasoned termite
Shamelessly whoring my website since 1999
http://www.woodbutcher.net
Proud participant of rec.woodworking since February, 1997
email addy de-spam-ified due to 1,000 spams per month.
If you can't figure out how to use it, I probably wouldn't
care to correspond with you anyway.
Thanks for your input, both of you.
Clint
"Lew Hodgett" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> LRod wrote:
>
> > Are you saying always turn it off at a different speed than before?
>
> What I'm really trying to convey is that you don't want to "set it and
> forget it" for extended periods of time.
>
> I had a customer once who used a Reeves drive on a mixer.
>
> Tended to operate at the same speed for weeks at a time.
>
> Eventually he would wear a groove in the sheave faces.
>
> It was time for a rebuild.
>
> By varying the speed setting, even a little bit, you spread the wear and
> tear over a larger area, thus no sudden speed change surprises.
>
> Lew
By "real fair", do you mean widder-woman fair, or fair for both parties? I
don't want to insult the guy by low-balling him on the price; he's getting
out of the hobby for reasons I'm grateful I don't have to deal with.
Clint
"LRod" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> On Sat, 12 Aug 2006 01:57:27 GMT, "Clint" <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>>Found someone who's got one for sale; sounds like he's taken good care of
>>his equipment. For one of these in good shape, what sort of price would
>>be
>>fair? I don't want to low-ball him on a price, but I have a reasonably
>>limited budget for toys right now, and wasn't really planning on buying a
>>lathe right now, but not many used ones show up around here.
>>
>>FWIW, I'm up in Canada. I checked some of the sites I'm aware of to see
>>what the current retail is on it, but it doesn't seem to still be for
>>sale.
>
> It's been supplanted by, I believe, the 46-715. When it was still
> available, I think it was around 600USD or so--make the appropriate
> conversion for canuckistani dolers.
>
> About a year ago I happened on one (with the stand, which makes it a
> 46-701) being sold used from the classroom at a nearby Woodcraft. They
> had a price tag of $250 on it. I didn't argue.
>
> An epilogue to that story is that it was missing a manual (easily
> obtained from Delta), a live center (had one on my Jet Mini which
> works nicely), tommy bar, and the face plate (similarly, the ones from
> the Jet fit fine). Not three days after coming home, a wrecker posted
> a for sale for some Delta lathe parts. He lives halfway to the
> Woodcraft store. He wanted $15 for the lot. It was as if someone had
> given him the exact parts that were missing from mine. And I made a
> new friend (hi, Jim--long time no hear).
>
> $250 seemed to me a real fair price then and still does (with the
> aforementioned conversion). The lathe is perfect for my intended uses.
> I will never be a turner that needs a Powermatic, One-Way, Stubby, or
> the like. It's principal limitation (which is anecdotal--I haven't
> experienced it yet) is that the Reeves drive doesn't transmit torque
> well at low speed.
>
> If you do get it, let me give you a hint for working protocol. You're
> not supposed to change speeds without the motor on. Therefore, get in
> the habit of turning the speed down every time before you turn it off.
> I have twice already found that I had left the control up at sanding
> speed, turned the lathe off, then chucked up a big 'ol, out of balance
> slab of bowl stock, and reached for the switch. Thankfully, I thought
> about it each time before I turned it on. Could be nasty.
>
> That doesn't make the lathe unsatisfactory. It's a feature.
>
> --
> LRod
>
> Master Woodbutcher and seasoned termite
>
> Shamelessly whoring my website since 1999
>
> http://www.woodbutcher.net
>
> Proud participant of rec.woodworking since February, 1997
>
> email addy de-spam-ified due to 1,000 spams per month.
> If you can't figure out how to use it, I probably wouldn't
> care to correspond with you anyway.
> It's principal limitation (which is anecdotal--I haven't
> experienced it yet) is that the Reeves drive doesn't transmit torque
> well at low speed.
You'll have to define what you mean by the above, it is a constant
horse power device.
> If you do get it, let me give you a hint for working protocol. You're
> not supposed to change speeds without the motor on. Therefore, get in
> the habit of turning the speed down every time before you turn it off.
A "Reeves" type drive should be running when you change speeds to
minimize wear on the belt and the sheaves.
You also don't want to leave the drive in one position because you
will tend to wear a groove in the sheaves at one place which makes a
smooth change of speed very difficult.
Lew
On Sat, 12 Aug 2006 16:12:42 GMT, "Clint" <[email protected]> wrote:
I went back and rechecked my original data. The market price was a
little less than $600, but with the stand and tools, certainly >$500.
By generally accepted standards, the price I got it for being less
than 50%, it was certainly fair to me. I also don't believe you're
into widder-woman territory until that particular transaction gets
into double figures.
I am by no means a good one to ask, as I, too, don't want to insult
someone by making a lowball offer. On the other hand, given the
givens, if the guy did feel insulted by a $250 offer then he's
probably too personally invested in the machinery and situation to be
able to judge rationally. That, then, isn't your fault.
By the same token, the lathe is another year out of production and
away from new, so even though it's "indestructible" cast iron (as
opposed to Detroit tin), you still might go lower with a clear
conscience. Only you can judge the circumstances.
So, the short answer is, I feel $250 was fair all around.
>By "real fair", do you mean widder-woman fair, or fair for both parties? I
>don't want to insult the guy by low-balling him on the price; he's getting
>out of the hobby for reasons I'm grateful I don't have to deal with.
[self-snippage]
>> $250 seemed to me a real fair price then and still does (with the
>> aforementioned conversion).
--
LRod
Master Woodbutcher and seasoned termite
Shamelessly whoring my website since 1999
http://www.woodbutcher.net
Proud participant of rec.woodworking since February, 1997
email addy de-spam-ified due to 1,000 spams per month.
If you can't figure out how to use it, I probably wouldn't
care to correspond with you anyway.
On Sat, 12 Aug 2006 03:55:50 GMT, Lew Hodgett
<[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > It's principal limitation (which is anecdotal--I haven't
> > experienced it yet) is that the Reeves drive doesn't transmit torque
> > well at low speed.
>
>You'll have to define what you mean by the above, it is a constant
>horse power device.
Well, it happened on my drill press once when I first got it. I was
turning a good sized Forstner bit at a fairly low (what I thought was
conservative) speed and the bit would stop. The motor kept running,
but the shaft/chuck/bit assembly stopped. Constant horsepower it may
have, but the system depends on friction to work, and the low
speed/high torque demand seems to have exceeded the coefficient of
friction.
Anyway, the anecdotal evidence I had was not that, but what someone
posted either on the wreck or on r.c.w. as a limitation of the -700
around the time I first posted my gloat about it (as I recall).
> > If you do get it, let me give you a hint for working protocol. You're
> > not supposed to change speeds without the motor on. Therefore, get in
> > the habit of turning the speed down every time before you turn it off.
>
>A "Reeves" type drive should be running when you change speeds to
>minimize wear on the belt and the sheaves.
I said that: "you're not supposed to change speeds without the motor
on." My point was that if you turned the motor off when the speed was
set high and then chucked up something that needs to be turned slow,
you'll have to unchuck, turn the lathe on, reset the speed, and then
rechuck the blank. Do not turn the thing on with big ugly,
out-of-balance work and the speed set on high.
>You also don't want to leave the drive in one position because you
>will tend to wear a groove in the sheaves at one place which makes a
>smooth change of speed very difficult.
Are you saying always turn it off at a different speed than before?
--
LRod
Master Woodbutcher and seasoned termite
Shamelessly whoring my website since 1999
http://www.woodbutcher.net
Proud participant of rec.woodworking since February, 1997
email addy de-spam-ified due to 1,000 spams per month.
If you can't figure out how to use it, I probably wouldn't
care to correspond with you anyway.
I'm out west, in Alberta. I appreciate the input, though.
Clint
"Eddie Munster" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>
>
> Clint wrote:
>
>> FWIW, I'm up in Canada
>
> Me too!
>
> Where are you? I have one, mint, never used, well I did turn it on a few
> times, on the stand. I think it is a 701c.
>
> After I got it Delta came out with the big steel one and I bought it!
>
> Delta in Guelph was selling one for 600 or 650 at the time. I asked a few
> people for 450 and only got shamefully lowballed so I said no.
> But I could let it go a bit lower.
>
> John
>
Mike Paulson wrote:
> I suspect the wear you mention was caused by grit from the mixer
getting
> on the belt. That's just a guess, but I have owned a couple reeves
drive
> lathes, know others who have them as well, and have been a part of
this
> newsgroup since day one, and I have never heard of the wear you
mention on
> a reeves drive on a wood lathe. That doesn't mean it couldn't
happen, I
> suppose, but I think it would be an extremely rare occurrence.
The wear is inherit to the drive; however, doubt the members of this
list are using them in a production application, 8-10 hours per day,
5-6 days per week.
Makes a big difference.
Lew
LRod wrote:
> Are you saying always turn it off at a different speed than before?
What I'm really trying to convey is that you don't want to "set it and
forget it" for extended periods of time.
I had a customer once who used a Reeves drive on a mixer.
Tended to operate at the same speed for weeks at a time.
Eventually he would wear a groove in the sheave faces.
It was time for a rebuild.
By varying the speed setting, even a little bit, you spread the wear
and tear over a larger area, thus no sudden speed change surprises.
Lew