I hadn't planned to do a restoration on this. The plan was to get it out of the building it was stored in and move it to the shop on the farm for future use. This guy deserves better than that so it's going to get a facelift before the trip to the farm.
The beast in question is a South Bend 16" engine lathe. I bought it 10 years ago on a whim for $300. 10 years ago it looked like this. Pretty nasty, in a cluttered shop, seldom used, and mostly neglected. Unfortunately I neglected it for another 10 years and mostly forgot about it.
Last Friday I was informed that the building it was in was being torn down. So it was time to get it loaded up and moved. The plan was to use a couple of engine hoists and the trailer winch to get it up on my flatbed trailer. Luckily there was a excavator we could "borrow" to get it loaded. She tips the scales at over 2600 pounds so powered hydraulics were nice to have.
I needed somewhere dry to store it for a few days so it will be spending a week or two at my office in the warehouse.
Here are a few shots of the debris it came with.
Since the lathe is in my work warehouse and I'm sitting around doing next to nothing, I've spent a little time studying it.
The good news is, every thing that is supposed to move does. Kind of surprising since the machine was sitting in 1" of water. Termites had apparently eaten most of the structure out of the roof on the far end of the building so gravity was slowly dragging it back to the ground.
There are no missing or broken knobs. Everything is where it's supposed to be.
For some even better news.
It came with a taper attachment. It hangs off the back of the carriage and allows you to cut tapered shafts. It alone is worth more than I paid for the lathe.
Buried in the mess in the chip pan was a threading dial. It is used to indicate the start and end of threads so you always start in the same spot. They aren't cheap either and are often missing.
It also has a micrometer carriage stop on it. Another frequently missing item that isn't cheap to replace.
That brings this up to date.
More to come.