Hi all,
I've been dabbling in my company's machine shop for years, but finally started making the plunge into having my own hobby shop within my home. Now truth be told the shop tools I had available to me at my place of work are considerably larger than I'd be able to utilize at home, and probably as a result be far more accurate. However, my main motivation to buying my own machines was the benefit of walking away from a set up for hours at a time and not having to worry about someone messing things up for me.
I was on the hunt for a small vertical mill for some time. Like everything in the hobbyist scale, these machines carry a hefty premium. I don't have the room or the means to move a Bridgeport type mill into my home, and the typical bench top mills just seem too flimsy to me. All of this made the list much smaller, but one faithful day I stumbled across an estate auction listing and saw this....
A Rockwell 21-100 vertical mill... The auction was just shy of 2hrs away, but nothing was going to stop me from grabbing this diamond in the rough. Unfortunately someone else there had the same intentions as I did, so the final price was a tad steeper than I hoped it would be, but in the end the machine ended up being loaded onto my trailer...
The individual on the trailer is an acquaintance of mine that I hadn't seen for some time. We ran into each other at the auction and had made arrangements to come back the next day to pick up our winnings. The loading went fine and the trip home was uneventful. Unloading the mill proved to be slightly more challenging however...
I had to borrow my neighbour's car port as I didn't have enough clearance to back into mine. Once there I took advantage of a rather large center beam and had just enough room to take the weight off the trailer so I could pull away with the ramps down...
At just under 800lbs there was no way I was going to be able to move the mill into my home and down stairs in one piece. So that's the cue for the time lapse disassembly video... :whistle:
[video=youtube_share;wNgDvBstslU]http://youtu.be/wNgDvBstslU[/video]
At any rate, I'm fairly new to the forum, and this is my first post other than the intro I believe. I didn't see much in the rebuild thread genre on the forum, so I'm not completely sure if this is appropriate. There's tons to show if anyone is interested.
Thanks for your time...
I've been dabbling in my company's machine shop for years, but finally started making the plunge into having my own hobby shop within my home. Now truth be told the shop tools I had available to me at my place of work are considerably larger than I'd be able to utilize at home, and probably as a result be far more accurate. However, my main motivation to buying my own machines was the benefit of walking away from a set up for hours at a time and not having to worry about someone messing things up for me.
I was on the hunt for a small vertical mill for some time. Like everything in the hobbyist scale, these machines carry a hefty premium. I don't have the room or the means to move a Bridgeport type mill into my home, and the typical bench top mills just seem too flimsy to me. All of this made the list much smaller, but one faithful day I stumbled across an estate auction listing and saw this....
A Rockwell 21-100 vertical mill... The auction was just shy of 2hrs away, but nothing was going to stop me from grabbing this diamond in the rough. Unfortunately someone else there had the same intentions as I did, so the final price was a tad steeper than I hoped it would be, but in the end the machine ended up being loaded onto my trailer...
The individual on the trailer is an acquaintance of mine that I hadn't seen for some time. We ran into each other at the auction and had made arrangements to come back the next day to pick up our winnings. The loading went fine and the trip home was uneventful. Unloading the mill proved to be slightly more challenging however...
I had to borrow my neighbour's car port as I didn't have enough clearance to back into mine. Once there I took advantage of a rather large center beam and had just enough room to take the weight off the trailer so I could pull away with the ramps down...
At just under 800lbs there was no way I was going to be able to move the mill into my home and down stairs in one piece. So that's the cue for the time lapse disassembly video... :whistle:
[video=youtube_share;wNgDvBstslU]http://youtu.be/wNgDvBstslU[/video]
At any rate, I'm fairly new to the forum, and this is my first post other than the intro I believe. I didn't see much in the rebuild thread genre on the forum, so I'm not completely sure if this is appropriate. There's tons to show if anyone is interested.
Thanks for your time...