John: Got it, thanks for the response.
Robert:
That's hilarious! What a ding dong
You didn't make me feel bad at all. Information is more valuable than pride. I am glad you told me!
I don't know what I was thinking. I never stopped to think that shaft had to be keyed or otherwise driven (by hand) somehow.
The theme here is that I'm getting impatient with the cleanup. I started strong...referencing parts diagrams & watching videos before I tackled the next component. I'm getting lazy. Okay, you kicked me in the right spot. I'll pull it together & either slow down or take a break.
I just finished scrubbing the apron today. I had decided to leave the scroll & half nut lever in place, as to disturb as little as possible. This is silly but I cut a long sliver of masking tape, wrapped the circumference of the broken scroll 2-3 times, & tied two strands of crappy crafting rope around. Just to keep it in place while cleaning the apron. And I think I am going to reassemble with the broken scroll. I think the forces involved, the tight fitting housing it goes into, and the faint whiff of red Loctite I will put on the cracks (with a sheet of card stock slid behind the scroll disk until it dries) -- I think all of that will do until I find a replacement. But even planning for failure: it's not a motor driven part. If we assume I'm [still] a ding dong, I don't think I have much to lose. I'll probably find the replacement long before I make a chip anyway, haha.
You know, even "how to clean a vintage lathe if the paint is decent enough that you don't want to repaint" is not the easiest info to find online for a newbie. Of course I ended up in a few threads here and watching a few videos, but a lot of videos skip the "obvious" parts. By the way, I ended up with mineral spirits, kerosene, and stiff nylon brushes. I cracked the kerosene open first & never looked back. I think the fact that Atlas specifies kerosene for "monthly wipe down" (or similar) had me leaning that way already.
I'm close, fortunately. I think I "only" have the saddle, tail stock, and the right 1/3 of the bed remaining. Famous last words. I'll calm down.
Thanks again.