Dr Jo
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Nov 1, 2011
- Messages
- 166
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- 13
Last Monday I purchased a second hand Cowells lathe, and over the next few weeks I plan to "restore her":
This weekend I chose to start by remounting her, this was necessary as on her original mounting the primary belt was only tensioned by the weight of the motor, which meant that she "hunted" during cuts which had an adverse effect on the finish, I was unhappy with reaching across her to get at the switch, the two bars that the lathe and motor were mounted on made an unsightly gouge on my kitchen table and I just did not like that green drawer.
Having enquired to Cowells on the price of an original cast base and discovered that it was going to cost more than I had paid for the lathe , she is now sporting a very nice (free ;D) gloss white kitchen door front:
The motor has been turned 180 degrees to enable the swarf tray to fit(which is one of these silly modern paper trays that come with these titchy modern desks to try to give you more room) and to enable the switch to be put on the left hand side. I kept the original motor mount and did nothing more than add an adjustment bolt to keep the tension, the result was something of a transformation in her machining! I plan to cover those unsightly cables with a small shelf.
If you look a bit closer you will see that I have fitted dial gauges, this is because the original dials are not adjustable:
My plans for next week is to go into mass production of quick change tool holders.
Jo
This weekend I chose to start by remounting her, this was necessary as on her original mounting the primary belt was only tensioned by the weight of the motor, which meant that she "hunted" during cuts which had an adverse effect on the finish, I was unhappy with reaching across her to get at the switch, the two bars that the lathe and motor were mounted on made an unsightly gouge on my kitchen table and I just did not like that green drawer.
Having enquired to Cowells on the price of an original cast base and discovered that it was going to cost more than I had paid for the lathe , she is now sporting a very nice (free ;D) gloss white kitchen door front:
The motor has been turned 180 degrees to enable the swarf tray to fit(which is one of these silly modern paper trays that come with these titchy modern desks to try to give you more room) and to enable the switch to be put on the left hand side. I kept the original motor mount and did nothing more than add an adjustment bolt to keep the tension, the result was something of a transformation in her machining! I plan to cover those unsightly cables with a small shelf.
If you look a bit closer you will see that I have fitted dial gauges, this is because the original dials are not adjustable:
My plans for next week is to go into mass production of quick change tool holders.
Jo