Great job reminds me of an Craftsman/Atlas lathe restoration I did years back, well done that press will last you a lifetime and since you restored it you can repair it if needed.
Really well done there, liked the care and attention to detail and the end product of this old beauty is top notch. You seem a cool dude, quietly doing great stuff, cheers
Wow i thank you did a great job of redoing this old press, i just worked out a deal with some older folks to help them clean out a basement and they are letting me work off a drill press it says Dunlop on the front and low and behold here you do a beautiful job of restoring this cool old machine, i want to restore mine too once i get it next week. thanks for sharing your video, oh yeah can you imagine buying that for $14.95 lol that's too funny such a quality product very cool, like some other's on here i was skeptical when you said white but man with those tags and the metal all cleaned up it looks fantastic, great job man keep up the great work and videos and thanks again for sharing. !!!
Great job man! Look and sounds great. So nice to see thees old machines brought back to life. I just went through a 1950s GE Fan, but there is a sound from the motor when its on low that has me stumped.
Nicely done and now you have a piece of historical art in your shop that is useful. I am sure you did it but you didn't mention it and that is to make sure you ground the thing when you rewire (I just mention it for other people because these old steel power tools can bite you). Also, I like Evaporust for convenience but if you can find agricultural molasses you can mix it with water and make your own Evaporust for a lot cheaper. Keep up the projects, you are doing it right.
That's a great point! I forgot to mention about grounding the drill. I did ground the drill press and the motor though using a new three prong plug. They actually have three prong plug machine cords that are already made up at Lowes with a ground for about ten bucks. These old machines definitely needed to be grounded! Also thank you for the info on the molasses. I will have to try it. Thanks again.
Can you post the details of the motor? I just bought one of these and will pick it up over the weekend; I can tell from pictures mine has a different motor and bracket installed. Great restoration, hope mine looks, sounds and works as good as yours when I'm done!
Man that came out Beautiful!!! id be proud to have that drill press in my Shop! so super quiet too! i Love that! and honestly i was sceptical at first when you said white but it looks Great!!! also whats the name of that vise? i Love it and want o buy one! thanks for sharing.
Amazing job! I'm looking around to see if I can find something like this. What is the quill travel on this drill press? Great job overall, thanks for sharing this vid, pretty inspiring.
Nice resto. I'm working on the same model myself. Question for you, after you removed the top pulley, spindle and quill assembly, what did you do with the bearing that sticks out of the top from the head? Did you push it out by putting in a press and pushing down through the hole where the spindle assembly goes?
4 роки тому
Nice!!! I’m restoring a Delta DP-220 floor model. I’m wondering, do you need to grease it in any way? Or is a simple lubricant like silicone enough? I hate greasy machines and this one was covered in grease (probably a metalworker). I only do woodwork so grease is like a sawdust magnet. Thanks!
Hello. I am the same way about greasy machinery. I only use light 10 weight oil and only oil it occasionally. I installed new bearings and bushings and they don't need much oil.
it looks good but i was a bit disapointed in the content. I have the same drill and was hoping for more d,the steps in between. and etail in the disassembly, reassembly
I have the identical press and it seems to work well I have one issue. When I release the handle the front pulley travels up with the spindle and takes maybe 5 seconds or so to come back down. When I put the front pulley cover on it comes up and hits it. I tried grease. Any thoughts any one??
There is a set screw that holds the pulley in place. The pulley is locked to a bushing. There should be two set screws in the same hole in the pulley. The second set screw locks the first screw in place so it does not come loose.
Where did you get that switch box? Do you happen to know what it's called? I'm putting together a vintage drill press also and I've been looking for a switch box like that. Great job on the restore, inspiring work!
It is just an electrical conduit box with a blank cover. I drilled a hole in the blank cover and installed a 110 volt toggle switch. You can buy everything at Lowes.
Thanks! I didn't replace the return spring. It was ok. You can probably find a brand new one on ebay. I think they are basically all the same. Spring steel is hard to bend, so you may need to heat up the end of it to bend it when you install it. Good luck!
Hi. It is a good little cabinet. I paid about a 100 dollars for it from tractor supply. It came all assembled and it was sealed with silicone well. I like the size of the cabinet. I don't have the room for a large cabinet. It is great from small parts.. I had to make a few modification to it to make it work better. I replaced the light inside the cabinet, because the light that came in it was too dim.. I also had to add new a vacuum port to the back of the cabinet so i could connect my shop vac hose to it. I also added an outlet with an switch so I could turn on the vacuum and the light at the same time. I works much better with a bright light and the vacuum connected to it.
I love the older stuff. Strong, super beefy, will last forever if you just maintain it. Wonderful job...
Just add a light and a foot pedal, and you kids can inherit it.
Great job reminds me of an Craftsman/Atlas lathe restoration I did years back, well done that press will last you a lifetime and since you restored it you can repair it if needed.
Really well done there, liked the care and attention to detail and the end product of this old beauty is top notch. You seem a cool dude, quietly doing great stuff, cheers
Wow i thank you did a great job of redoing this old press, i just worked out a deal with some older folks to help them clean out a basement and they are letting me work off a drill press it says Dunlop on the front and low and behold here you do a beautiful job of restoring this cool old machine, i want to restore mine too once i get it next week. thanks for sharing your video, oh yeah can you imagine buying that for $14.95 lol that's too funny such a quality product very cool, like some other's on here i was skeptical when you said white but man with those tags and the metal all cleaned up it looks fantastic, great job man keep up the great work and videos and thanks again for sharing. !!!
Woo this is so quite! Well done!
Great work! It's ready for another 90 years.
Beautiful work, I hope mine will look that good when I"m done.
Great job man! Look and sounds great. So nice to see thees old machines brought back to life. I just went through a 1950s GE Fan, but there is a sound from the motor when its on low that has me stumped.
Thanks!
Looks and sounds GREAT!!
Nicely done and now you have a piece of historical art in your shop that is useful. I am sure you did it but you didn't mention it and that is to make sure you ground the thing when you rewire (I just mention it for other people because these old steel power tools can bite you). Also, I like Evaporust for convenience but if you can find agricultural molasses you can mix it with water and make your own Evaporust for a lot cheaper. Keep up the projects, you are doing it right.
That's a great point! I forgot to mention about grounding the drill. I did ground the drill press and the motor though using a new three prong plug. They actually have three prong plug machine cords that are already made up at Lowes with a ground for about ten bucks. These old machines definitely needed to be grounded! Also thank you for the info on the molasses. I will have to try it. Thanks again.
I figured you grounded it. Keep up the good work, I am an old guy and still learn things from you.
+salmonslayer49 I have also made sure to ground mine. :)
That is smooooooooth, great job!
Great job!!!
Can you post the details of the motor? I just bought one of these and will pick it up over the weekend; I can tell from pictures mine has a different motor and bracket installed.
Great restoration, hope mine looks, sounds and works as good as yours when I'm done!
Nice job, that drill press will outlast your kids with a little basic maintenance, unlike the disposable machines coming from around the Pacific.
Great job. I have a craftsman floor model 103.23141. I’m missing the spindle pulley assembly. Any idea where I can get one reasonably ?
Looks awesome.
I have one in pieces. Do you have a video on how to re assemble it?
Very nice
Man that came out Beautiful!!! id be proud to have that drill press in my Shop! so super quiet too! i Love that! and honestly i was sceptical at first when you said white but it looks Great!!! also whats the name of that vise? i Love it and want o buy one! thanks for sharing.
Thanks! It's a "tool makers" vise. It may be handmade. There is no name on it but it is great!
Hi, I just purchased one of these and would love to find the manual for it. Can you tell me where I can download it please? Thanks
Amazing job! I'm looking around to see if I can find something like this. What is the quill travel on this drill press? Great job overall, thanks for sharing this vid, pretty inspiring.
damn good job kid, damn good job.
Nice resto. I'm working on the same model myself. Question for you, after you removed the top pulley, spindle and quill assembly, what did you do with the bearing that sticks out of the top from the head? Did you push it out by putting in a press and pushing down through the hole where the spindle assembly goes?
Nice!!! I’m restoring a Delta DP-220 floor model. I’m wondering, do you need to grease it in any way? Or is a simple lubricant like silicone enough? I hate greasy machines and this one was covered in grease (probably a metalworker). I only do woodwork so grease is like a sawdust magnet. Thanks!
Hello. I am the same way about greasy machinery. I only use light 10 weight oil and only oil it occasionally. I installed new bearings and bushings and they don't need much oil.
Great restoration! Could you elaborate a bit more on your vise purchase? Perhaps a site or current auction or buy now for one? Thanks!
Thanks! I found the vise on eBay.. I think it is a "tool makers" vise.
Link to the $30 vise?? Thanks
it looks good but i was a bit disapointed in the content. I have the same drill and was hoping for more d,the steps in between. and etail in the disassembly, reassembly
There wasn't much to show with the disassembly. It was pretty easy. Anyone could figure it out.
I have the identical press and it seems to work well I have one issue. When I release the handle the front pulley travels up with the spindle and takes maybe 5 seconds or so to come back down. When I put the front pulley cover on it comes up and hits it. I tried grease. Any thoughts any one??
There is a set screw that holds the pulley in place. The pulley is locked to a bushing. There should be two set screws in the same hole in the pulley. The second set screw locks the first screw in place so it does not come loose.
I have an older craftsman drill press 150 , do you know where I can get replacement parts.
Where did you get that switch box? Do you happen to know what it's called? I'm putting together a vintage drill press also and I've been looking for a switch box like that. Great job on the restore, inspiring work!
It is just an electrical conduit box with a blank cover. I drilled a hole in the blank cover and installed a 110 volt toggle switch. You can buy everything at Lowes.
@@The5upermann1 thank you! 👍
Great job! Did you replace the return spring? If so where did you purchase it? I really need one! Thanks man for the videos.
Thanks! I didn't replace the return spring. It was ok. You can probably find a brand new one on ebay. I think they are basically all the same. Spring steel is hard to bend, so you may need to heat up the end of it to bend it when you install it. Good luck!
how do you like your blast cabinet?
Hi. It is a good little cabinet. I paid about a 100 dollars for it from tractor supply. It came all assembled and it was sealed with silicone well. I like the size of the cabinet. I don't have the room for a large cabinet. It is great from small parts.. I had to make a few modification to it to make it work better. I replaced the light inside the cabinet, because the light that came in it was too dim.. I also had to add new a vacuum port to the back of the cabinet so i could connect my shop vac hose to it. I also added an outlet with an switch so I could turn on the vacuum and the light at the same time. I works much better with a bright light and the vacuum connected to it.
Łał super robota jestem zaskoczony końcowym efektem i jak cicho chodzi wiertarka