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Re: Free Standing SS Drill press

Posted: Sat Nov 28, 2015 9:13 pm
by robinson46176
This was my solution... Its been a few years now and I am happy with the concept. It has a caster set under it now but not many other changes. I do still have some other ideas. There was some concern with stability early on but I find it quite stable.
Here is link to the discussion as it came into being:
http://www.shopsmith.com/ss_forum/viewtopic.php?t=5135
Shopsmith push me pull me.JPG
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Re: Free Standing SS Drill press

Posted: Sat Nov 28, 2015 11:35 pm
by tomsalwasser
robinson46176 wrote:This was my solution... Its been a few years now and I am happy with the concept. It has a caster set under it now but not many other changes. I do still have some other ideas. There was some concern with stability early on but I find it quite stable.
An awesome conversion Francis!

Re: Free Standing SS Drill press

Posted: Sat Nov 28, 2015 11:40 pm
by tomsalwasser
jsburger wrote:The bench tubes are 18" long. They are the left over pieces from when I made my shorty. The bases castings are slid on the tubes as far as they will go (one end has a stop but the other end does not).
Can I just use a hack saw to cut the bench tubes?

Re: Free Standing SS Drill press

Posted: Sun Nov 29, 2015 12:59 am
by JPG
tomsalwasser wrote:
jsburger wrote:The bench tubes are 18" long. They are the left over pieces from when I made my shorty. The bases castings are slid on the tubes as far as they will go (one end has a stop but the other end does not).
Can I just use a hack saw to cut the bench tubes?
Sure!

Have plenty of blades.

Eat a hearty breakfast!

I have tried a pipe cutter.(2 tubes)

Next time it will be an abrasive cutoff wheel.

Re: Free Standing SS Drill press

Posted: Sun Nov 29, 2015 8:57 am
by BuckeyeDennis
tomsalwasser wrote:
jsburger wrote:The bench tubes are 18" long. They are the left over pieces from when I made my shorty. The bases castings are slid on the tubes as far as they will go (one end has a stop but the other end does not).
Can I just use a hack saw to cut the bench tubes?
A diamond-grit reciprocating saw blade should do the trick, if you don't need the ends perfectly square. I've used them to cut heavy machine castings. My local Lowes stocks them.
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But since I have the hardware (including a speed reducer and a steady-rest) to chuck up a tube in lathe mode for polishing, I'd probably do that, and use an angle grinder with a cutoff wheel to make the cut. That should give a nice clean edge.

Re: Free Standing SS Drill press

Posted: Sun Nov 29, 2015 9:21 am
by damagi
JPG wrote:
tomsalwasser wrote:
jsburger wrote:The bench tubes are 18" long. They are the left over pieces from when I made my shorty. The bases castings are slid on the tubes as far as they will go (one end has a stop but the other end does not).
Can I just use a hack saw to cut the bench tubes?
Sure!

Have plenty of blades.

Eat a hearty breakfast!

I have tried a pipe cutter.(2 tubes)

Next time it will be an abrasive cutoff wheel.
Metal cutoff saw would certainly be best...I took one set of tubes to a transmission repair place and they cut them for free.

I have gotten decent results using a sawzall with a standard metal cutting blade. I imagine using a diy miter guide would help the cuts, but following the line worked well enough.

Re: Free Standing SS Drill press

Posted: Sun Nov 29, 2015 10:02 am
by tomsalwasser
damagi wrote:[I took one set of tubes to a transmission repair place and they cut them for free.
Great idea! I know the Muffler Doctor down the street will be glad to help me even if he charges for it. Maybe even free you never know.

Re: Free Standing SS Drill press

Posted: Sun Nov 29, 2015 10:06 am
by ERLover
When I cut my greenie tubes it was done on a metal cutting horizontal band saw. It took less then 30 seconds per tube. Nice to have a friend that works in a machine shop.

Re: Free Standing SS Drill press

Posted: Sun Nov 29, 2015 10:56 am
by tomsalwasser
ERLover wrote:When I cut my greenie tubes it was done on a metal cutting horizontal band saw. It took less then 30 seconds per tube. Nice to have a friend that works in a machine shop.
Nice!

Showing my ignorance here. Just a crazy thought. Can a Mark V headstock and table be mounted on 10ER tubes and carriage? I think the combination might make a nice, easy wall mounted permanent drill press if it all fits. I know the 10ER is a very good drill press in it's own right.

Re: Free Standing SS Drill press

Posted: Sun Nov 29, 2015 11:28 am
by JPG
tomsalwasser wrote:
ERLover wrote:When I cut my greenie tubes it was done on a metal cutting horizontal band saw. It took less then 30 seconds per tube. Nice to have a friend that works in a machine shop.
Nice!

Showing my ignorance here. Just a crazy thought. Can a Mark V headstock and table be mounted on 10ER tubes and carriage? I think the combination might make a nice, easy wall mounted permanent drill press if it all fits. I know the 10ER is a very good drill press in it's own right.
Way tube spacing is different. :(