- Joined
- Oct 5, 2010
- Messages
- 1,043
I have always had a beef with most drill presses. Even at the slowest speed, they run too fast for most steel and especially stainless. I am always on the lookout for for a good variable speed press. About 3 years ago I came across a nice restorable Clausing 20". I did a restoration on it and it has been my go to press in the shop. Last month there was an ad on Craigslist for a big drill press. I drove to a place @30 miles north of Houston. The guy took me to an old hay barn. In the barn was a large rusty drill press on a broken pallet. The guy said that it had been sitting there for @5 years. The press was an Ellis. (I was familiar with the name) The guy said he wanted $500 for it. I told him that I would be a buyer if the motor ran. He managed to find @100 foot extension cord. The electronics worked and the motor spun (kind of noisily). Next problem was getting it out of the barn and into the back of my truck. The guy said "no problem" and he would call his wife to bring up the back hoe. I spent about 30 minutes removing delicate parts and we hooked up a chain to it. The wife was a damn good back hoe operator. After about 30 minutes of maneuvering in that tight space, with the seller and I steadying and positioning it, it was in the back of my Tacoma
After talking with Ellis, I found that it is a 2008 model 9400.
I have spent the remainder of the time disassembling, cleaning, painting and reassembling. So here is the proof. It runs like a turbine and the the spindle has 0.001" runout! And the power down feed is sweet.
Now that Clausing has gotta go
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After talking with Ellis, I found that it is a 2008 model 9400.
I have spent the remainder of the time disassembling, cleaning, painting and reassembling. So here is the proof. It runs like a turbine and the the spindle has 0.001" runout! And the power down feed is sweet.
Now that Clausing has gotta go
[/ATTACH]
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