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Default Shopsmith - antique or just old?

Hello, all you dust devils! My late father owned a 1950's-era
Shopsmith and my mother is thinking of selling it. I have asked her
if she can find the manual, but in the meantime I can give you the
faceplate info. It's a Model ER, Serial No. R67986, Patent Applied
For.

I have seen Shopsmiths for sale referred to as Mark II, Mark V, etc.
Anyone know which this is?

Thanks,
Jeannie


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Default Shopsmith - antique or just old?


"Jeannie" wrote in message
...
Hello, all you dust devils! My late father owned a 1950's-era
Shopsmith and my mother is thinking of selling it. I have asked her
if she can find the manual, but in the meantime I can give you the
faceplate info. It's a Model ER, Serial No. R67986, Patent Applied
For.

I have seen Shopsmiths for sale referred to as Mark II, Mark V, etc.
Anyone know which this is?

Thanks,
Jeannie



Try this link http://www.songofthegreatlakes.com/ss10er.htm


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Default Shopsmith - antique or just old?

That, I believe, would be a 10ER - which is not a Mark version - made
from 1947 to 1953, check with:

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Shopsmith10ERusers/

Brian

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Default Shopsmith - antique or just old?


"Jeannie" wrote in message
...
Hello, all you dust devils! My late father owned a 1950's-era
Shopsmith and my mother is thinking of selling it. I have asked her
if she can find the manual, but in the meantime I can give you the
faceplate info. It's a Model ER, Serial No. R67986, Patent Applied
For.

I have seen Shopsmiths for sale referred to as Mark II, Mark V, etc.
Anyone know which this is?

Thanks,
Jeannie


There is a Shopsmith Users Group in the Yahoo domain. Their resident guru
can tell you all the variations ever made.

Yours sounds like a 10ER. That was one of the earliest versions, with the
open belts. I still use the one my Dad left me. It has a high serial
number, like yours. The guy at SUG said it was a version sold by
Montgomery-Wards in 1953. That's relatively late for this model.

These are like old motorcycles. Some people think they're old junk, and
some covet them. A good example will still bring over $500 at a yard sale,
but some others have worn out until they are only used as sanders. If your
mother finds the manual, that could generate some interest, too.

The only accessories this unit shares with the Mark V are the ones that fit
on the spindle. The 1/2" quill with the flat is about the only thing they
have in common.

Hope this helps. Good Luck.


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Default Shopsmith - antique or just old?

The User Group might be the ticket.
Someone there might be making one up to spec - and need parts or a new
frame..... for that older model. So there is some worth in older shop stuff.

Look around and see if there are other parts that are made for it. They
will up the price as often they are forgotten and are not on the market.

Martin

Martin H. Eastburn
@ home at Lions' Lair with our computer lionslair at consolidated dot net
TSRA, Endowed; NRA LOH & Patron Member, Golden Eagle, Patriot's Medal.
NRA Second Amendment Task Force Charter Founder
IHMSA and NRA Metallic Silhouette maker & member.
http://lufkinced.com/


BeeFlow wrote:
"Jeannie" wrote in message
...
Hello, all you dust devils! My late father owned a 1950's-era
Shopsmith and my mother is thinking of selling it. I have asked her
if she can find the manual, but in the meantime I can give you the
faceplate info. It's a Model ER, Serial No. R67986, Patent Applied
For.

I have seen Shopsmiths for sale referred to as Mark II, Mark V, etc.
Anyone know which this is?

Thanks,
Jeannie


There is a Shopsmith Users Group in the Yahoo domain. Their resident guru
can tell you all the variations ever made.

Yours sounds like a 10ER. That was one of the earliest versions, with the
open belts. I still use the one my Dad left me. It has a high serial
number, like yours. The guy at SUG said it was a version sold by
Montgomery-Wards in 1953. That's relatively late for this model.

These are like old motorcycles. Some people think they're old junk, and
some covet them. A good example will still bring over $500 at a yard sale,
but some others have worn out until they are only used as sanders. If your
mother finds the manual, that could generate some interest, too.

The only accessories this unit shares with the Mark V are the ones that fit
on the spindle. The 1/2" quill with the flat is about the only thing they
have in common.

Hope this helps. Good Luck.


** Posted from http://www.teranews.com **



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Default Shopsmith - antique or just old?

On Sun, 10 Aug 2008 17:34:49 -0500, "Martin H. Eastburn"
wrote:

The User Group might be the ticket.
Someone there might be making one up to spec - and need parts or a new
frame..... for that older model. So there is some worth in older shop stuff.

Look around and see if there are other parts that are made for it. They
will up the price as often they are forgotten and are not on the market.

Martin

Just a clarification on the "parts" that (I think) Martin is referring to..
Not spare parts, though some folks on Ebay make more money by taking the machine
apart and selling it bit by bit..

The shopsmith is a "multi-purpose" machine, and because of the changeability,
for lack of a real word, most of us bought not only the machine, but many
accessories.. Sanding disks, router and mortising attachments, even band saw and
belt sanding attachments..

You want to round up any pieces that either have the Shopsmith name or logo on
them, as well as anything that looks like it might fit on the machine itself..

I'd recommend taking a trip to EBAY and looking at the ones for sale now and
sort of learning models, pricing, accessories, etc..


mac

Please remove splinters before emailing
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Default Shopsmith - antique or just old?

That is what I was meaning - often there are spur inserts and centers
and wood working chisels he used with the unit. Someone starting
might need the max.

Martin

Martin H. Eastburn
@ home at Lions' Lair with our computer lionslair at consolidated dot net
TSRA, Endowed; NRA LOH & Patron Member, Golden Eagle, Patriot's Medal.
NRA Second Amendment Task Force Charter Founder
IHMSA and NRA Metallic Silhouette maker & member.
http://lufkinced.com/


mac davis wrote:
On Sun, 10 Aug 2008 17:34:49 -0500, "Martin H. Eastburn"
wrote:

The User Group might be the ticket.
Someone there might be making one up to spec - and need parts or a new
frame..... for that older model. So there is some worth in older shop stuff.

Look around and see if there are other parts that are made for it. They
will up the price as often they are forgotten and are not on the market.

Martin

Just a clarification on the "parts" that (I think) Martin is referring to..
Not spare parts, though some folks on Ebay make more money by taking the machine
apart and selling it bit by bit..

The shopsmith is a "multi-purpose" machine, and because of the changeability,
for lack of a real word, most of us bought not only the machine, but many
accessories.. Sanding disks, router and mortising attachments, even band saw and
belt sanding attachments..

You want to round up any pieces that either have the Shopsmith name or logo on
them, as well as anything that looks like it might fit on the machine itself..

I'd recommend taking a trip to EBAY and looking at the ones for sale now and
sort of learning models, pricing, accessories, etc..


mac

Please remove splinters before emailing



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