I've often wondered what Charles Manson was making while he was in prison; now I know it was miniature lathes. 😂. Another interesting video Mr. Pete and I'd love to have one of these neat little lathes.
I can see how collecting those lathes could become very addictive and if you are a single man they'd make great living room ornaments or if you are a married man and used them as living room ornaments you'd soon _become_ single.
I REALLY DO ENJOY MR PETES CONTENT Im not a Machinist Im a Mechanic and Toolcahaulic, I live the Auctions and garage sales videos those are so Fun because we never know what were gunna find.
Thanks Mr Pete. The old German made watch makers lathes use an 8 millimeter Collette and draw bar that looks like that one. Also, most of the sewing machine manufacturer outsourced the motors and controls so most any control would work with most any motor.
Sadly the corrosion is most likely caused by simply sitting in a basement on a concrete slab. Having worked on 'The Flying Beer Can' (A7 Corsair II, which is close to being 90% aluminum) I know how vulnerable raw polished aluminum is around merely moist environments towards corroding. The way that line of corrosion is climbing? It was sitting for decades on just a concrete pad, most likely in an Illinois basement which... is humid to moist during Spring.
Very good presentative. While in collage I was often asked to "compare and contrast" a particular subject, always a great way to provide important information. I really appreciate all your research and presenting these lathes. Please offer my thanks to Lost Creek Machine for loaning this to you.
It appears to be a very good miniature lathe just much smaller than I have. My 7x10 midi lathe is a monster to those lathes and I noticed that my cross slide does the same thing even after adjusting the gibs.
Until you first showed the Manson lathes, I had never seen one. Great job, Mr Pete! Thanks!
I've often wondered what Charles Manson was making while he was in prison; now I know it was miniature lathes. 😂. Another interesting video Mr. Pete and I'd love to have one of these neat little lathes.
Yes, he was a killer machinist
Lyle - Another interesting video on these small lathes is appreciated. Enjoy your Easter and looking forward to next week's video.
Thanks 👍
Much better looking than the Chinese micro lathes. Thank you Mr Pete.
The other end of the spectrum from where i operate. It takes all kinds. 😎
That entire machine could be put in one of your four jaw chucks
@@mrpete222 Heck it looks like it would fit on one jaw of my chuck! lol
I can see how collecting those lathes could become very addictive and if you are a single man they'd make great living room ornaments or if you are a married man and used them as living room ornaments you'd soon _become_ single.
👍
These mini/micro lathe explorations seem to have restored your enthusiasm - very enjoyable!
Thanks for all you do,it is much appreciated🤗😎🤗😎
Beautiful. YES
I REALLY DO ENJOY MR PETES CONTENT Im not a Machinist Im a Mechanic and Toolcahaulic, I live the Auctions and garage sales videos those are so Fun because we never know what were gunna find.
Thanks 👍
@@mrpete222 MR PETE WILL YOU DO A TOOLBOX TOUR OF THAT BIG RED BOX IN YOUR GARAGE
Lots of like here !!
A fascinating series covering these amazing micro lathes, thanks for sharing
Fine show! Thank you.
I recall John, but I haven't seen him since he retired.
great little lathes Dremel made a tiny lathe too.
Thanks for the work and time you put into these videos Mr Pete
Glad you like them!
Thank you I loved it!
Thanks Mr Pete.
The old German made watch makers lathes use an 8 millimeter Collette and draw bar that looks like that one. Also, most of the sewing machine manufacturer outsourced the motors and controls so most any control would work with most any motor.
Who would have gussed there would be more than one brand of tiny lathe and more than one size in each brand. Thanks for the video keep on keeping on.
"Useful in the tool room" 😂😂
Sadly the corrosion is most likely caused by simply sitting in a basement on a concrete slab. Having worked on 'The Flying Beer Can' (A7 Corsair II, which is close to being 90% aluminum) I know how vulnerable raw polished aluminum is around merely moist environments towards corroding. The way that line of corrosion is climbing? It was sitting for decades on just a concrete pad, most likely in an Illinois basement which... is humid to moist during Spring.
👍
Thanks, master Pete for this and all your videos. love them all love you. Obviously master pete was a mistake but it does have a nice ring to it.😮
Thanks for that
Very good presentative. While in collage I was often asked to "compare and contrast" a particular subject, always a great way to provide important information. I really appreciate all your research and presenting these lathes. Please offer my thanks to Lost Creek Machine for loaning this to you.
Glad it was helpful!
Brian from Ma. great video. Enjoyed very much. Thank you.Besafe
These are such neat little machines.
Happy Easter MrPete.
God bless.
Happy Easter
Mrpete this has been a very interesting video series 👍👍👍👍 Happy Easter
Very good
If I'm not mistaken I believe that the faceplate on the Do-All had a stick out thread much like the collet.
Great job. Thank you 😊
Great video Mr pete enjoyed it!!there so tiny .
i like this series mrpete.
see you at the next video.
cheers ben.
Evening Lyle. I slept in.
lol
Hi Mr Pete. Enjoy your videos. I especially like your teaching videos. Yorktown, New York 😊
Thanks so much
Great series
Interesting
My guess is that the small one uses a short MT0 (the back half of an MT0), just like my Flexispeed Meteor II.
It appears to be a very good miniature lathe just much smaller than I have. My 7x10 midi lathe is a monster to those lathes and I noticed that my cross slide does the same thing even after adjusting the gibs.
thank you sencei
The second set of threads in the drawbar is usable for a stop.
Had no idea that there were lathes that small. You get the best stuff to demonstrate. Are there any decent micro lathes still being manufactured?
good information... would be fun for little plastic or wood items. Seen any good typewriters of the period?
Dang man, aren't you gonna build a watch or something for us?
OK,they were great.Why did they go out of business?
👍👍👍👍👍👍
😄😄
Without a second belt are you not in back gear
W.C.Fields had a bulbous nose.
Too much whiskey
You are sounding more like Joe Biden with each vlog.
If that is true, I would have to kill myself
Not true. Mr. Pete is a capital T man.
@@mrpete222 No, you wouldn't, because you'd be beyond the point where you still know that your mind is going out.