Some months ago I bought a serious drilling press. I was investigating for months looking for a good quality drill press after The Cincinnati was sold. Finally, I favoured a Wörner B13. Although unusual, it’s a nice and high quality machine.
The machine came from Lithuania but they it is made in Germany. The machine condition is good but suffers from aestetical issues and some signs of age. Additionally, someone modified the driving system adding and intermediate pulley to lower the rotation speeds range.
As I explained some posts ago, my garage is being fully overhauled and reorganized. Because of this, I sold the Pujantell lathe and a Milling/drilling Cincinnati machine. Now I sold also my shaper. It’s a Rile-300 shaper, 300mm being the stroke length.
The machine is very similar to other of the same dimensions. Actually, it’s almost identical to Sacia-300, a very usual spanish shaper. I don’t know if Rile is related to Sacia in some way.
After a request from Chris Maron, in this entry I report about the Boley-Leinen LZ4SB carriage stops. I would like the entry to be sufficiently detailed to allow anyone to reproduce the original stops.
Sadly, I have no cross slide stops. If you, beloved reader, have these stops, I invite you to report about them and let me know!
I should add that the stops shown here are of “ordinary” type.
The Antoni Pujantell AP lathe I have been a proud owner of an AP lathe (AP being the initials of the maker: Antoni Pujantell). This lathe is the first machine tool that arrived at home and, after many years of service, I sold it some days ago.
It arrived from a scrap dealer in a bad condition: some parts broken, absolutly rusty, geometry worn out because of the use. My father and myself together spend many hours to recover it.
The milling machine Cincinnati-Chomienne FP30 This entry describes the milling machine Cincinnati-Chomienne model FP30. It has served me a number of years but now it’s on sale. Literature on this machine is scarce. I found only manuals for similar Cincinnati-Chomienne machines and a brochure for this machine that shows its main dimensions.
The milling machine is built in France in the late 60’s (acording to the plate the april of 1968).
Some time ago I bougth an Isoma centering microscope with ans SK40 adaptor. However I have no SK40 machine at all. During the last days I have been turning a cylindric tail which let me to use the microscope in the lathe as well as in the milling machine.
The part was dimensioned from an original one. It is a M15x0.75 threaded end with two main features:
A 16mm bushing guide that assures concentricity, and A mating ring that assures perpendicularity.
One of the jobs done this summer is a special square intended to facilitate the alignment of the grinder axis. I own a Klaiber WSII tool grinder. This grinder has a head with several degrees of freedom and aligning it to the table is not easy given the poor quality of the head scales. Thus, I decided to build a particular square that fits in the head nose and offers a reference plane to test with the indicator or the protractor, for instance.
The tailstock Some time ago I bought an old series Boley Leinen lever tailstock to be fitted to my lathe. This is the tailstock:
It is of the old type because it uses a split casting to lock the barrel as you can see in the picture. Leinen buid two flavors of this tailstock: one with a barrel that takes 363E collets (the 25mm collets) and other that takes the 323E collets (15mm collets).