trlvn
Ultra Member
Any idea who was the manufacturer of this?
This is from an auction site and despite there being a lot of pictures, there are no identifying labels that I can see. It is a change gear lathe and the gears appear to be Zamak. It could well be missing a countershaft assembly. The motor does not have a multi-step pulley on it--it directly feeds into the headstock.
The milling attachment mounts in place of the compound slide. Note the crude welding job on the adapter plate attaching it to the cross slide. The compound is present (but not shown above) and kind of looks like an Atlas. The threading chart also looks pretty similar to an Atlas. Maybe this is an Atlas 'clone'?!?
One interesting feature is that the far side of the cross slide has two large thumbscrews that must be to lock the carriage position. This could possibly be a user mod; I've never seen anything like it.
Craig
(Part of me wants to see if I can get this cheap as a fix-up project for the summer!)
This is from an auction site and despite there being a lot of pictures, there are no identifying labels that I can see. It is a change gear lathe and the gears appear to be Zamak. It could well be missing a countershaft assembly. The motor does not have a multi-step pulley on it--it directly feeds into the headstock.
The milling attachment mounts in place of the compound slide. Note the crude welding job on the adapter plate attaching it to the cross slide. The compound is present (but not shown above) and kind of looks like an Atlas. The threading chart also looks pretty similar to an Atlas. Maybe this is an Atlas 'clone'?!?
One interesting feature is that the far side of the cross slide has two large thumbscrews that must be to lock the carriage position. This could possibly be a user mod; I've never seen anything like it.
Craig
(Part of me wants to see if I can get this cheap as a fix-up project for the summer!)