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Metalworking (rec.crafts.metalworking) Discuss various aspects of working with metal, such as machining, welding, metal joining, screwing, casting, hardening/tempering, blacksmithing/forging, spinning and hammer work, sheet metal work. |
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#1
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drill press help for newbie
I have some experience but this is a first for me: I'm not sure of the
nomenclature but drill presses I've seen have a tensioner or spring that returns the chuck to the top of its travel. Am I explaining that right? A used one I picked up, made in Japan and appears well made, does just the opposite. If I want to drill something I have to rotate the handle "back" so the drill goes up, then I can bring it down to drill the hole. This just seems weird. Is there a way to reverse it and make it "normal?" TIA. |
#2
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Are you saying that the spring forces the drill downward and you have to
compress it to move the drill up and out of the way? Hmm... If it is a spiral spring, you might be able to reverse it. Otherwise, I'd say you have a strange "autofeed" drill press on your hands. Joe - V#8013 - '86 VN750 - joe @ yunx .com Northern, NJ Ride a Motorcycle? Ask me about "The Ride" http://www.youthelate.com/the_ride.htm Born once - Die twice. Born twice - Die only once. Your choice... Have unwanted music CDs or DVDs of any type? I can use them for our charity. eMail me privately for details. Donation receipts available. Know someone with a motorcycle in the NY Metro area? http://host.mynocdns.com/mailman/lis...rides_yunx.com "a6016" wrote in message oups.com... I have some experience but this is a first for me: I'm not sure of the nomenclature but drill presses I've seen have a tensioner or spring that returns the chuck to the top of its travel. Am I explaining that right? A used one I picked up, made in Japan and appears well made, does just the opposite. If I want to drill something I have to rotate the handle "back" so the drill goes up, then I can bring it down to drill the hole. This just seems weird. Is there a way to reverse it and make it "normal?" TIA. |
#3
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Exactly. It's forced down. Kinda different, eh?
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#4
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Tks, that's the answer. Looked closer and, voila, no cover, no spring.
:-) Back to the seller it goes. |
#5
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Maybe it's Australian .. you know ... for "down under" ??
"a6016" wrote in message ups.com... Exactly. It's forced down. Kinda different, eh? |
#6
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They normally use a wound spring such as is found in a clock or a
recoil starter for a smallengine. It may be that the end of the spring on this used drill press is broken. The spring is usually located opposte side of the handle, under a cover. Remove cover, being carefull that it does not fly apart on you and examine the spring ends. One end usually fits into a notch in thre cover and the other (inner) portion fits into the cross shaft of the handle. It may also be that it wa taken apart and reassembled wrong or it may have been made on a Friday or Monday in a china slave shop and it just turnedout that way, and only needs reversing. On 20 Mar 2005 06:58:23 -0800, "a6016" wrote: ===I have some experience but this is a first for me: I'm not sure of the ===nomenclature but drill presses I've seen have a tensioner or spring ===that returns the chuck to the top of its travel. Am I explaining that ===right? A used one I picked up, made in Japan and appears well made, ===does just the opposite. If I want to drill something I have to rotate ===the handle "back" so the drill goes up, then I can bring it down to ===drill the hole. This just seems weird. Is there a way to reverse it ===and make it "normal?" TIA. ============================================== Put some color in your cheeks...garden naked! |
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