Here you go Frank. This was one of my older projects. I had an Atlas 618, and then my cousin gave me this lathe. It’s a 1939 South Bend 9” model C. The bed looks banged up as hell but the headstock and spindle are cast iron on cast iron bearings and I have to tell you, after 80 years... that spindle is immaculate. Just a mirror finish. And the lathe holds its accuracy pretty damned good in my opinion.
But, the apron was shot to ****. And since I needed a new apron, I figured why not upgrade it to a A. That turned out a bit too complicated so I just went with a C to a B.
Anyway, it’s kind of sitting at m house and not used much only because I don’t have the space. But being the pack rat I am....I can’t get rid of it. Maybe one day it’ll be set up as a dedicated metric threading lathe...or even a grinding plus metric threader.
But...enough fluff. Here’s the link of my upgrade. It was a lot of work, but lathes don’t show up often down here. Plus, I was impatient and don’t mind working. I like to work.
But, the apron was shot to ****. And since I needed a new apron, I figured why not upgrade it to a A. That turned out a bit too complicated so I just went with a C to a B.
Anyway, it’s kind of sitting at m house and not used much only because I don’t have the space. But being the pack rat I am....I can’t get rid of it. Maybe one day it’ll be set up as a dedicated metric threading lathe...or even a grinding plus metric threader.
But...enough fluff. Here’s the link of my upgrade. It was a lot of work, but lathes don’t show up often down here. Plus, I was impatient and don’t mind working. I like to work.
Trying to add a Model A apron to a SB 9" model C
I have a 9" South Bend Model C I am working on. I have not set it up yet and don't even have the motor mounted on it yet. That said, I really want to have the power cross feed of the models A and B, so I already purchased a model A/B Apron. I planning on cutting a keyway in the feed screw which...
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