- Joined
- Nov 14, 2016
- Messages
- 3,287
This little mill just moved in, I didn't even know I needed one but now that I have it I'm pretty excited to see what I can do with it. A thanks to C-bag for posting the CL ad that helped this one find me.
It is a Diamond M20 5x20 horizontal mill, and appears to be mostly unmodified and in very good condition for a 75 year old machine. I think it still has the original paint. It came out of a shop not far from the ocean, and there is almost no rust on it, so the prior owner must have given it a lot of attention.
It was unfortunately part of an estate sale, so I have no information on the history of this machine. It was sitting on a newspaper dated 1984, so assume it had been in the shop that long.
From what I've been able to find the Diamond Tool Co started building small mills in 1943. This one is numbered 326 with a date of December 28, 1944 so it is an early one. The history nerd in me imagines the workers building this one glued to their radios as 12/28 was the day after Patton reached Bastogne ending the siege of the 101st airborne during the Battle of the Bulge.
It has a 3 speed belt driven power feed on the X axis. There is a removable sheet steel drip pan which looks different from others I've seen online, not sure if an early variant of the optional factory pan or something fabricated by a prior owner. Either way it is well made, not a hack job.
It came with a nice Palmgren vise and large amount of tooling.
This little mill is heavier than it looks, specs I found put it at around 800lbs with the base, and it felt every bit of that.
It seems a nice size to complement my Clausing 8520. The prior owner must have felt the same way as it sat next to an 8530 in his shop so should be feeling right at home in mine.
It is a Diamond M20 5x20 horizontal mill, and appears to be mostly unmodified and in very good condition for a 75 year old machine. I think it still has the original paint. It came out of a shop not far from the ocean, and there is almost no rust on it, so the prior owner must have given it a lot of attention.
It was unfortunately part of an estate sale, so I have no information on the history of this machine. It was sitting on a newspaper dated 1984, so assume it had been in the shop that long.
From what I've been able to find the Diamond Tool Co started building small mills in 1943. This one is numbered 326 with a date of December 28, 1944 so it is an early one. The history nerd in me imagines the workers building this one glued to their radios as 12/28 was the day after Patton reached Bastogne ending the siege of the 101st airborne during the Battle of the Bulge.
It has a 3 speed belt driven power feed on the X axis. There is a removable sheet steel drip pan which looks different from others I've seen online, not sure if an early variant of the optional factory pan or something fabricated by a prior owner. Either way it is well made, not a hack job.
It came with a nice Palmgren vise and large amount of tooling.
This little mill is heavier than it looks, specs I found put it at around 800lbs with the base, and it felt every bit of that.
It seems a nice size to complement my Clausing 8520. The prior owner must have felt the same way as it sat next to an 8530 in his shop so should be feeling right at home in mine.