PineRidge
Super Member
3800 Pound South Bend 17\" Turn-Nado Lathe Project
Figured you guys that love to play with machinery would get as much of a kick watching this project as I'm having actually doing the dirty work.
This is a 3800 Pound South Bend 17" Turn-Nado Lathe that came to me by the way of eBay. There were 4 identical lathes that came out of a school in the Cleveland, Ohio School District. The fellow that bought all 4 decided to keep one for himself and I got pick of the litter otherwise.
I borrowed a heavy duty trailer, called a TBN friend of mine that has a new Dodge diesel truck and asked him if he wanted to break the diesel in the right way, "By putting it to work."
Anyway this series will cover the lathe being taken down to the bare bed, stripped, inspected for any defective parts like bearings, primed, painted, and then finally reassembled.
The first picture shows the lathe at my place and us scratching our heads, trying to decide how to get the 3800 pound monster off the trailer. It was loaded in Cleveland using a tow-motor which was no sweat, but the loader on my TC-40D will only handle 2000 pounds at best. /forums/images/graemlins/ooo.gif
Yeah, I know we go full steam ahead, then figure out later how where gonna get er done.....
Figured you guys that love to play with machinery would get as much of a kick watching this project as I'm having actually doing the dirty work.
This is a 3800 Pound South Bend 17" Turn-Nado Lathe that came to me by the way of eBay. There were 4 identical lathes that came out of a school in the Cleveland, Ohio School District. The fellow that bought all 4 decided to keep one for himself and I got pick of the litter otherwise.
I borrowed a heavy duty trailer, called a TBN friend of mine that has a new Dodge diesel truck and asked him if he wanted to break the diesel in the right way, "By putting it to work."
Anyway this series will cover the lathe being taken down to the bare bed, stripped, inspected for any defective parts like bearings, primed, painted, and then finally reassembled.
The first picture shows the lathe at my place and us scratching our heads, trying to decide how to get the 3800 pound monster off the trailer. It was loaded in Cleveland using a tow-motor which was no sweat, but the loader on my TC-40D will only handle 2000 pounds at best. /forums/images/graemlins/ooo.gif
Yeah, I know we go full steam ahead, then figure out later how where gonna get er done.....