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Wes[_5_] July 10th 10 11:16 PM

A lathe at an auction, what is it?
 
Went to an auction today with uncle, his interest was piqued by mention of hit and miss
engines. Uncle got out spent on the engine he wanted but at least he likes the guy that
bought it.

I had my eye on this lathe.

http://www.garage-machinist.com/usenet/rcm/Lathe_AV.jpg
http://www.garage-machinist.com/usenet/rcm/Lathe_FV.jpg

Close up of obliterated decal if it helps.
http://www.garage-machinist.com/usen...athe_Decal.jpg


Uncle was curious as to what series of collet this thing uses. Note there is something
you can use to scale for size in image.
http://www.garage-machinist.com/usen...he_collets.jpg


The lathe sold for $160.00 and I didn't buy it.

Sure is cute though.

Wes


Gunner Asch[_6_] July 11th 10 01:01 AM

A lathe at an auction, what is it?
 
On Sat, 10 Jul 2010 18:16:15 -0400, Wes
wrote:

Went to an auction today with uncle, his interest was piqued by mention of hit and miss
engines. Uncle got out spent on the engine he wanted but at least he likes the guy that
bought it.

I had my eye on this lathe.

http://www.garage-machinist.com/usenet/rcm/Lathe_AV.jpg
http://www.garage-machinist.com/usenet/rcm/Lathe_FV.jpg

Close up of obliterated decal if it helps.
http://www.garage-machinist.com/usen...athe_Decal.jpg


Uncle was curious as to what series of collet this thing uses. Note there is something
you can use to scale for size in image.
http://www.garage-machinist.com/usen...he_collets.jpg


The lathe sold for $160.00 and I didn't buy it.

Sure is cute though.

Wes

Interesting design..but is of a type that was VERY common at the turn of
the 19th and 20th century.

You are going to have to go through

http://www.lathes.co.uk/page21.html

slowly over time and see if you can match up something.

My gut feeling was Rivett, but no..its not..not even close.

http://www.lathes.co.uk/rivett/page6.html

Its an interesting lathe, very well made. The electric motor is likely
an addon.

Gunner




One could not be a successful Leftwinger without realizing that,
in contrast to the popular conception supported by newspapers
and mothers of Leftwingers, a goodly number of Leftwingers are
not only narrow-minded and dull, but also just stupid.
Gunner Asch

DoN. Nichols July 11th 10 03:16 AM

A lathe at an auction, what is it?
 
On 2010-07-10, Wes wrote:
Went to an auction today with uncle, his interest was piqued by mention of hit and miss
engines. Uncle got out spent on the engine he wanted but at least he likes the guy that
bought it.

I had my eye on this lathe.

http://www.garage-machinist.com/usenet/rcm/Lathe_AV.jpg
http://www.garage-machinist.com/usenet/rcm/Lathe_FV.jpg

Close up of obliterated decal if it helps.
http://www.garage-machinist.com/usen...athe_Decal.jpg


Hmm ... I can't tell from the decal, but it sort of looks like
an early Hardinge. A jeweler's lathe on steroids -- even more so than
the Derbyshire lathes with 'D' collets.


Uncle was curious as to what series of collet this thing uses. Note there is something
you can use to scale for size in image.
http://www.garage-machinist.com/usen...he_collets.jpg


Look like 3C, too small for 4C or 5C, but if it is a Hardinge,
it certainly is a C (Cataract) series collet. A 3C looks pretty close.

The lathe sold for $160.00 and I didn't buy it.

Sure is cute though.


I think that a Hardinge collector would have paid a lot more
than that for it.

Enjoy,
DoN.

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