Really Cool Old Lathe
Really Cool Old Lathe
http://dallas.craigslist.org/dal/tls/5123463475.html
Found this listing for a 120 yr old metal lathe that is pedal powered. The Seat is attached to the lathe bed and slides left and right, wherever you need to work. There are several pedals to power it from wherever you're working. Pretty damn ingenious ! I wonder what kind of speeds you could get once it works its way through the gears.
W. F. & John Barnes
No. 5 11" Velocipede Metal Lathe
1880-1900
This lathe is presently in cosmoline, has never been rusted. Seat has break and missing a piece, other than that I believe this lathe complete with original paint and many of the original accessories. Flywheel and pedal mechanisms move- freely. Headstock needs cosmoline removed, cleaned and lubricated. Spindle does turn, not freely. Lead screws and all parts of compound slide operate freely.
Lathe can be seen at Paramount Antique Mall 13200 west hwy 54 (Kellogg), booth #270 in the shed.
Accessories with this machine:
7" 4 jaw chuck, 4" 3 jaw chuck, 2 lathe dogs, spur center for wood, center rest, seat post, wrenches and some miscellaneous, and 9 change gears plus gears already on machine.
Rarely found in this condition
And completeness
~~~$3500 firm~~~
Found this listing for a 120 yr old metal lathe that is pedal powered. The Seat is attached to the lathe bed and slides left and right, wherever you need to work. There are several pedals to power it from wherever you're working. Pretty damn ingenious ! I wonder what kind of speeds you could get once it works its way through the gears.
W. F. & John Barnes
No. 5 11" Velocipede Metal Lathe
1880-1900
This lathe is presently in cosmoline, has never been rusted. Seat has break and missing a piece, other than that I believe this lathe complete with original paint and many of the original accessories. Flywheel and pedal mechanisms move- freely. Headstock needs cosmoline removed, cleaned and lubricated. Spindle does turn, not freely. Lead screws and all parts of compound slide operate freely.
Lathe can be seen at Paramount Antique Mall 13200 west hwy 54 (Kellogg), booth #270 in the shed.
Accessories with this machine:
7" 4 jaw chuck, 4" 3 jaw chuck, 2 lathe dogs, spur center for wood, center rest, seat post, wrenches and some miscellaneous, and 9 change gears plus gears already on machine.
Rarely found in this condition
And completeness
~~~$3500 firm~~~
Ryan Alden
http://www.aldenpipes.com
http://www.aldenpipes.com
Re: Really Cool Old Lathe
Better pick that up as a back up lathe. You know when pipe making doesn't quite get the electric bill paid. Or you could incorporate it as part of a rigorous exercise regimen.
Seriously, though, that is a cool machine.
Seriously, though, that is a cool machine.
- oklahoma red
- Posts: 1084
- Joined: Tue Apr 12, 2011 6:14 pm
Re: Really Cool Old Lathe
There is a saying that it takes a lathe to make a lathe. One has to wonder what "patient zero" was.
Re: Really Cool Old Lathe
Yeah ! This particular lathe fascinates me. Interesting how much *hasn't* changed since then. Most of the bits and pieces were already there that long ago.oklahoma red wrote:There is a saying that it takes a lathe to make a lathe. One has to wonder what "patient zero" was.
Hey, my thoughts exactly. I was thinking I could just cut off electric all winter and save money. Wood Stove and Candle Light. Too damn hot for that nonsense in summer though.You know when pipe making doesn't quite get the electric bill paid.
Ryan Alden
http://www.aldenpipes.com
http://www.aldenpipes.com
Re: Really Cool Old Lathe
oklahoma red wrote:There is a saying that it takes a lathe to make a lathe. One has to wonder what "patient zero" was.
Not quite, I think the saying is that a lathe is the only tool that can build itself.
Re: Really Cool Old Lathe
At the Science museum in London they have some very old lathes, the first real screw cutting lathes made around the turn of the 19th.C. They are in great condition and the exhibit allows you to really get a good look at them. When you do look you realise how clever the mechanisms are and how little they have changed even in the most modern (non-CNC) lathes. Give my Super 7, or a South Bend or an Atlas to an Machinist in 1800 and aside from the fact that ours run on an electric motor rather than a steam/water wheel belt drive they would have no problem understanding how it works and would be happily working away within minutes I am sure.Alden wrote: Yeah ! This particular lathe fascinates me. Interesting how much *hasn't* changed since then. Most of the bits and pieces were already there that long ago.
Re: Really Cool Old Lathe
Yes. I need a machine that will make me feel more like a hamster on a hamster wheel.
Re: Really Cool Old Lathe
Welcome to the industrial reveloution
"I never knew how empty was my soul untill it was filled" Arthur
http://www.clarkpipes.com
http://www.clarkpipes.com
Re: Really Cool Old Lathe
yea.. but it is cool... you gotta admit that
james
james
Re: Really Cool Old Lathe
Very cool, yes!
Now, if I can only direct my 5-year-old's energy into that lathe, I'll be sorted!
Now, if I can only direct my 5-year-old's energy into that lathe, I'll be sorted!
Re: Really Cool Old Lathe
caskwith wrote:At the Science museum in London they have some very old lathes, the first real screw cutting lathes made around the turn of the 19th.C. They are in great condition and the exhibit allows you to really get a good look at them. When you do look you realise how clever the mechanisms are and how little they have changed even in the most modern (non-CNC) lathes. Give my Super 7, or a South Bend or an Atlas to an Machinist in 1800 and aside from the fact that ours run on an electric motor rather than a steam/water wheel belt drive they would have no problem understanding how it works and would be happily working away within minutes I am sure.Alden wrote: Yeah ! This particular lathe fascinates me. Interesting how much *hasn't* changed since then. Most of the bits and pieces were already there that long ago.
Sounds very cool ! Have to remember that if I'm ever in London.
I was thinking once the whole thing gets spinning good, moving wrong could be a recipe for a mangled foot and broken ankle. I guess they were smart enough back then to not do that. Nowadays there would be the word DANGER on the side in 6 different languages and a drawing with a mangled leg wrapped around the pedals and a line drawn through it, warning you this was contraindicated in the user manual.I need a machine that will make me feel more like a hamster on a hamster wheel.
Ryan Alden
http://www.aldenpipes.com
http://www.aldenpipes.com
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- Posts: 1056
- Joined: Mon Jan 07, 2013 6:25 pm
Re: Really Cool Old Lathe
The add would read, Wanted, Pedal dancer for Pipemaker, lunch supplied!