Hello everyone,
A few years ago I bought an old Monarch lathe at a Ham radio festival but have had no luck identifying it or figuring out how to setup the belt drive. From what I can tell it is a cone-drive lathe, possibly pre-WWI.
I did find an pdf of an old Monarch information book that contained similar machines, but mine is not covered. I have found old Monarchs online, but most of them have a multi-step selector on the feed gearbox. You can see in the picture that mine only has a 3 position A-B-C selector. Does anyone have any info on which model this is or what year it was built?
I also have a picture of the separate motor assembly and have been confused about how it interfaces with the lathe. It looks like it was supposed to hang off the back of the lathe on that arm with the motor weight maintaining belt tension? Most old Monarch setups I've found seem to have a countershaft above the lathe, not behind it.
Any help would be greatly appreciated! It seems to be in decent shape and is cleaning up well with WD40 and steel wool. Any other suggestions for cleaning off nearly 100 years of grime?
Thanks,
A few years ago I bought an old Monarch lathe at a Ham radio festival but have had no luck identifying it or figuring out how to setup the belt drive. From what I can tell it is a cone-drive lathe, possibly pre-WWI.
I did find an pdf of an old Monarch information book that contained similar machines, but mine is not covered. I have found old Monarchs online, but most of them have a multi-step selector on the feed gearbox. You can see in the picture that mine only has a 3 position A-B-C selector. Does anyone have any info on which model this is or what year it was built?
I also have a picture of the separate motor assembly and have been confused about how it interfaces with the lathe. It looks like it was supposed to hang off the back of the lathe on that arm with the motor weight maintaining belt tension? Most old Monarch setups I've found seem to have a countershaft above the lathe, not behind it.
Any help would be greatly appreciated! It seems to be in decent shape and is cleaning up well with WD40 and steel wool. Any other suggestions for cleaning off nearly 100 years of grime?
Thanks,