I recently acquired an old Craftsman lathe. Its the same as the one my
dad had in high school, so it is late 30s to early 40s vintage. Its the
dark blue with the cast iron bed. I am looking for the cast cover that
goes over the pulleys. The lathe is complete with everything else. I
could not find a part number anywhere. Any help would be greatly
appreciated.
While I'm on the subject, I believe that the centers are a #1 morse
taper. I could also use a live center for it. Someday I may want a
face place to do bowls too!
Grant
Well, google is always the place to start, but one never knows who is
lurking. Look at http://www.catfish-hollow.com/sher-chucks.html and contact
them. Another is http://www.homeshopsupply.com/ . That should get you
started.
Wilson
"Grant P. Beagles" <[email protected]> wrote in
message news:[email protected]...
> I recently acquired an old Craftsman lathe. Its the same as the one my
> dad had in high school, so it is late 30s to early 40s vintage. Its the
> dark blue with the cast iron bed. I am looking for the cast cover that
> goes over the pulleys. The lathe is complete with everything else. I
> could not find a part number anywhere. Any help would be greatly
> appreciated.
>
> While I'm on the subject, I believe that the centers are a #1 morse
> taper. I could also use a live center for it. Someday I may want a
> face place to do bowls too!
>
> Grant
>
>
>
In article <[email protected]>, "Grant P. Beagles" <[email protected]> wrote:
>I recently acquired an old Craftsman lathe. Its the same as the one my
>dad had in high school, so it is late 30s to early 40s vintage. Its the
>dark blue with the cast iron bed. I am looking for the cast cover that
>goes over the pulleys. The lathe is complete with everything else. I
>could not find a part number anywhere. Any help would be greatly
>appreciated.
Have you posted this request in rec.crafts.woodturning too? Probably a better
chance of finding an answer there (although a lot of people read both groups).
>
>While I'm on the subject, I believe that the centers are a #1 morse
>taper. I could also use a live center for it. Someday I may want a
>face place to do bowls too!
>
Google. You shouldn't have any trouble finding that.
--
Regards,
Doug Miller (alphageek-at-milmac-dot-com)
Save the baby humans - stop partial-birth abortion NOW
I think I have some NEW-IN-THE-BOX #1 MT centers. Got 'em on eBay and have
never used them. I mis-read or missed the #1 MT when I bid on them. I use
#2s.
If interested let me know and I'll give you a full description. You can have
them for what I paid. I think there are 5 or 6 pieces in my shop.
Nsum.
"Grant P. Beagles" <[email protected]> wrote in
message news:[email protected]...
> I recently acquired an old Craftsman lathe. Its the same as the one my
> dad had in high school, so it is late 30s to early 40s vintage. Its the
> dark blue with the cast iron bed. I am looking for the cast cover that
> goes over the pulleys. The lathe is complete with everything else. I
> could not find a part number anywhere. Any help would be greatly
> appreciated.
>
> While I'm on the subject, I believe that the centers are a #1 morse
> taper. I could also use a live center for it. Someday I may want a
> face place to do bowls too!
>
> Grant
>
>
>
I started off with a lathe like that one.
After I upgraded, I turned it into a foot powered (with a bungy cord as a mock
spring pole) lathe. I ended up giving it to a friend because I was running out
of room.
You can find accessories at Sears. I bought a #1 morse taper live center
there. They also had 4 jaw non scrolling chucks. That means that the jaws
move independantly. They may have had face plates, but I don't remember.
Woodcraft also sells #1 MT accessories.
I don't know if you are going to be able to find a pulley cover. If not, I
would advise making one for safety. You could make a wooden box that attaches
to the lathe bench.
Have fun.
David
remove the key to email me.
I had thought of some kind of box (Safety first!). I would like to get a cover if
possible, even though finding one is really a crap shoot.
"J Pagona aka Y.B." wrote:
> I started off with a lathe like that one.
> After I upgraded, I turned it into a foot powered (with a bungy cord as a mock
> spring pole) lathe. I ended up giving it to a friend because I was running out
> of room.
>
> You can find accessories at Sears. I bought a #1 morse taper live center
> there. They also had 4 jaw non scrolling chucks. That means that the jaws
> move independantly. They may have had face plates, but I don't remember.
>
> Woodcraft also sells #1 MT accessories.
>
> I don't know if you are going to be able to find a pulley cover. If not, I
> would advise making one for safety. You could make a wooden box that attaches
> to the lathe bench.
>
> Have fun.
>
> David
>
> remove the key to email me.
"Grant P. Beagles" <[email protected]> writes:
> I recently acquired an old Craftsman lathe. Its the same as the one my
> dad had in high school, so it is late 30s to early 40s vintage. Its the
> dark blue with the cast iron bed. I am looking for the cast cover that
> goes over the pulleys. The lathe is complete with everything else. I
> could not find a part number anywhere. Any help would be greatly
> appreciated.
>
> While I'm on the subject, I believe that the centers are a #1 morse
> taper. I could also use a live center for it. Someday I may want a
> face place to do bowls too!
You really want to post this on rec.crafts.woodturning