My Dad had one very similar to this one, and as I recall I inherited it, and used it to turn small commutators on small motor armatures for years in my generator, starter and alternator rebuilding shop. It was an upgraded model, as it had more gears and a multi tool holder. I rebuilt it, and remember every screw and nut in this video. I was born in 1944, and can remember that being in my Dad's shop as long as I can remember. The video brings back fond memories from years long gone. Thanks...👍😁
I have the exact lathe that belonged to my Dad who has long since died. He bought it new, and after some time one of gear(s) in the power feed crumbled so he always told me it was junk. After watching this video I took a look at it and it will work it just won't cut threads or power feed until I can get some made. Now I have the desire to break it down and restore it. Thank you for the inspiration to clean up something that means so much to me and I don't mean money wise.
This was my first lathe as a young man A fellow I worked with gave it to me. I carried it around for years. Traded it for a good vice many years later. I still have the dead center for it. I wish I still had it as now I have the tooling and capiblites to rebuild it. Well done. O carried it around for
Patric, as long as you know the tooth count a machine shop can make the gear for very little cost. A thought for you, when you finish the restoration, if you only start it up just to see it run you will think of your dad. I have a pretty 1940 handsaw belonging to my dad which I still use. When I use it I always think of my dad
I'm sure the diecast gears aren't great, but you can buy nylon, iron or steel gears easily. Nylon would be appropriate for this lathe. You can even have someone 3d print them using rigid resin (very strong) and I'm talking about stereolithography, not filament printing.
I have the same lathe. Gears for it are available on eBay. Both used and new plastic are available. I replaced two of the "back gears" with used from eBay. Just be sure of the tooth count.
When you rebuild an old Craftsman power tool, you know that whatever you have to do to restore it, you're working with top-quality materials and workmanship. When it came to hardware, Sears and Craftsman pretty much set the standard in the U.S. for at least a century.
I just inherited this exact lathe and a working Unimat, been collecting dust for years! This video is exactly what I needed to see. It is time to get them both back to their glory days!! Thank you
I don't know if I'm repeating my self, but I love your restoration on this lathe. I've had mine since 1995 as a gift from my father-in-law. According to the serial number, mine was made in 1938 or 1939. I have everything including the change of gears shown in the original ads. It's still in original condition and still uses the Leland motor that was an option. I used it to make a stand mount for my nieces dress form, some custom parts for a dust distribution system my brothers design for his PHD project. I also built a system to add a RollSizer to the table to remove case bulges in 9 mm cases. Plus a ton of small projects over the years. I have hot spotted your rebuilding of yours to have as a reference for future issues. Thanks for all your work and a very understanding wife.
When I saw you add the Threading Chart toward the end, I had to go back to the beginning to see if it was there. It wasn't. It's nice to see you take such care. Really nice restoration.
Being a shop owner, it is so awesome to see someone with the ability and desire to get a gem like this back to functioning in this day and age! Now have a beer or soda or whatever you choose to reward yourself for a job well done!! Cheers!
About ten years ago I restored a 1950’s Atlas Craftsman 12” lathe with the quick change gearbox for threading. I had a lot of gears to replace because someone didn’t know how to operate the machine,and all the gears are made from pot metal. Took about a month to get all the parts and redo it, because I had never stripped and rebuilt a lathe before. While it’s not a high precision machine, it’s a great mini lathe for the home hobbyist. I laughed out loud a few times as you forgot to put in a part, because as the old adage goes..."been there, done that!" It also is a pretty good wood lathe in a pinch, and I’ve made a few handles for tools over the years with it. I also bought an AXA wedge style quick change tool post with tool holders. It sure speeds up changing tools without having to align the tools every time. I enjoy your channel, and loved the tune you played with the sheet steel. Keep having fun, and I hope you make a few buck in the process. I can’t bear to sell stuff I rebuild, so my kids will have to do that when I croak. Won’t they have fun? 😂😂😂😂
I bought this lathe two weeks back and it was to be a future project. After watching your video I started tearing mine apart. This video is so helpful. I’m almost finished with painting and any repairs. Hopefully back together this week. I was lucky mine was I’m pretty good shape just old grease. Thank you.
I would love to find an old lathe like that. I don't know what would be more fun, restoring it or using it. I've watched all you put out. You do an amazing job making everything work and look new again. Hats off it takes real talent!!
This is such a cool, little lathe. it'd be perfect for someone like me who wants to learn but doesn't have space or money to purchase one of the bigger ones. Thanks for sharing your work!
I am in the same predicament as you are. I want a little lathe to learn on well but a gem like this is pretty hard to find for any reasonable cost. Good luck my friend!
This is a Sears Craftsman back geared Metal Lathe. As a kid I bought one of these from a GunSmith who passed away and that was the start of my journey into Machinery. One of the most important parts of this restoration was truing the Bed Ways. Here’s a trick, if you are not going to use gloves, put on hand cream making sure to get the cream under and around your finger nail... makes clean up a lot easier. Nice video, thx.
РАЗОБРАТЬ ДО ВИНТИКА,, ВСЁ ЭТО ПОЧИСТИТЬ, ПЕРЕМЫТЬ , ОТРЕМОНТИРОВАТЬ, ПОКРАСИТЬ И ВНОВЬ СОБРАТЬ. КЛАССИКА.👍👍👍 И работает как часики. Молодца, столько терпения и можно сказать с любовью к своему станочку. Здоровья и успехов. !!!
The part that impresses me about these vids is the parts that _aren't_ rusted. Gets me considering things like available materials of the time, whether any of them were suitable, or maybe that someone just took care of a few things while they used it.
Thank you for this. My grandpa left us this exact lathe model and I've been wanting to restore it but have been too afraid to start for fear I'd somehow mess it up. Your teardown and processes have given me hope that I can figure it out! :)
@Byvägen Thanks! By the looks of it, the entire kit is here and in good order apart from some surface/cosmetic corrosion. It comes with what seems to be a full box of all the original gears, though kinda hard to tell since the manual is mostly stuck together in a smelly, oily chunk :)
There's some other stuff about the lathe that this video doesn't consider. Particularly, if the lathe ways are worn out or if there is a big twist in the bed. That work is much more difficult to do. Particularly worn out ways, they have to be scraped ideally, and that takes a lot of time.
Agree!! I love watching "Hand Tool Rescue" restore things and how he incorporates humor into it, too. I also like watching "This Old Tony". He's pretty funny, too, but his channel focuses less on restoration and more on machining and building things.
I am 62 yrs old. My dad got a used one of these when I was about 8. It hardly ever got used until I took it over during my teens and now I still used it for fun and good memories of my dad showing me what to do and not to do.
I had this lathe. My great uncle gave it to me when i graduated from Machine shop in High School. I got a lot of use out of it making all sorts of projects. My sister in law offered to store it in her garage till i found a new apartment. Which worked out well until her junkie husband sold it for $100 worth of oxy.. I really wish i still had it.
It's a credit to your skill that the repair was so successful on such a machine that requires as much precision in the parts as a lathe. This is a perfect hobby lathe now, small but still plenty big for most turning projects.
Sears was always about making expensive machinery cheap enough for the average consumer. Sort of like ye olde Harbor Freight. If you wanted industrial grade machines, you went elsewhere but for the weekend hobbyist, they were fine.
I have that same lathe, a buddy of mine gave it to me when his Dad passed away. Had all the original paperwork and everything. Need restoration. Glad you made this video.
I am a German Industrial Mechanic I learned what you are doing there. And i have to be honest, you are definitely more experienced then I am and did it better than i could.!
Oh.. FYI - I have a collection of fine old books re making tools. My favorite is an 1890's one on how to build your own dynamo (instructions include a friendly blacksmith) :) Books like these are handy for.. well.. if the lights ever go out for few decades :)
Nice restoration. It seems you did not reinstall the brass thrust bearings in the planetary gears. Also, the weird twist in the T bolts is by design, allows variable pressure settings for the twist action of the headstock. I guess this is why the slot is so tall.
Subscribed. I watched literally hundreds of "restoration" videos lately. But most of them are just guys giving old stuff a new paint-job and polishing stuff. This one is different. You clearly show some really good craftsmanship. It´s simple things like the use of that bronze rod that shows you´re quite an experienced mechanic.
That nice old lathe has had some time in-service. Your rescue of this tool is extraordinary. Starting at 23:38 approximately, you used what looked like a thread chaser of some sort. Would you mind saying what you used? Thanks for a great video.
Привет из России. Мой папа на таком станке обучался токарному делу, когда он увидел слезы потекли. Большое спасибо. Вы вкладываете в восстановление не только силы но и душу, очень приятно и красиво. и все работает. Жаль что можно один лайк за это поставить. Подписан на Вас давно, жду новых видео.
КАКОЕ ВОССТАНОВЛЕНИЕ ты о чём??? Восстановление подразумевает собой ремонт, замену каких либо частей, а тут просто отмыл и покрасил... По факту он делает тех-обслуживание, и вас лохов разводит на лайки и подписку! Вы все за деревьями леса не видите!!!
the whole 'damn I forgot to fit the belts' is so relatable, it reminded me of the amount of times I wired a 3 phase C-form plug then realised the back cover was on the bench next to me lol
I just re-watched this . Good rescue! From table saws to this lathe , without a single emblem and no matter what diameter , that metal wheel say's it's a Craftsman !
I took a shot at making a gingery lathe and it’s become a resting work in progress. I’ve never owned or even used a lathe so it’s been puzzling at times but after watching this vid, it all makes a lot more sense and I’m rekindled to work on it again. Thanks for that!
Oh man, I was so waiting for that spring clip to fly away at 10.28 lol. How many times I've done that ha ha. Also the painters tape had me in tears... I hunted for ages trying to find an old metal lathe to restore and got sick of trying to find one so ended up buying new.
I just bought a 109.20630 from an old farmer and I remembered seeing this video from before so I thought I would give it a watch to give me ideas on how to disassemble the lathe to clean it all up. Did not know its literally the same model number so I guess I will be watching this video religiously for the coming days every time I get stuck on something.
That’s what it is www.ebay.com/i/323890595847?chn=ps&norover=1&mkevt=1&mkrid=711-117182-37290-0&mkcid=2&itemid=323890595847&targetid=593772172013&device=m&mktype=pla&googleloc=1015695&poi=&campaignid=2088717119&mkgroupid=76147658086&rlsatarget=pla-593772172013&abcId=1141026&merchantid=6296724&gclid=EAIaIQobChMIl77awZK75AIVRL7ACh3V9Q2BEAQYASABEgIkE_D_BwE
I really appreciate your video. My mom bought my dad the exact lathe for Christmas before they were married in 1949. Now I fell heir to it, I'm semi retired, and wanted to restore it. This video popped up on "Videos you may like". More than a coincidence, maybe Devine intervention! I found the owners manual a year ago on line all though it was labeled for an Atlas lathe.
How interesting that the algorithm suggested this video today. I just acquired and one of these lathes that is exactly like yours in every detail. The only thing missing is the actual model number plate. Mine is in much better condition and will need only a minimal restoration but, this is an excellent reference video. Your attention to details is appreciated and will be an invaluable assistance to my own restoration. Thank you for your hard work.
If you think these guys are humorous, then you need to check out This Old Tony. I like both the ones you mentioned as well but damn, TOT is a league above in that regard.
This machine is really in an excellent condition considering the age. I'm in Taiwan and you can just watch the items corroding away in front of your nose due to high humidity (I've never seen that in Europe). Next step - change it to CNC!
@@BigHeretic Finland, where it's wet, moist or insanely cold around 10 months per year, several months so cold that it will crack engine blocks and water pipes without antifreeze or proper insulation. Cold starts are said to cause wear on the engine worth several hundred km. And when the air warms but metal stays cold, it condensates everywhere, inside cars starting to grow mold during and after the first winter if not used and dried in the process. With roads getting salted so that they are barely driveable for trucks.. Thin sheet metals can rust through in few years if living close to a heavily salted road. The reason why yearly car inspections fail cars every single day. Although, they have cut it down in recent years because it affects the ground water. Yeah, not because literally destroys cars... No matter what the car, classic British or new German, it will get destroyed here without storing it in inside a heated dry space.
I really admire his patience. I would like to offer a suggestion and that is to have a box much like a sand blast box to take things apart so when things go flying they don't go too far.
Did you know it's finally not a 47-year wait for one of the Hand Tool Rescue wrenches? There are a few available to be shipped out this month! Have a look here: www.handtoolrescue.com/shop
I did wait a while for mine way back then but it was worth the wait and use mine every day :) My current thing is rebuilding auld Russian watches and the wrench is a bloody good movement vice/holder with a bit o' neoprene to protect the delicates hehe I've used it to hold Matchbox cars for drilling and fixing of, used it on my 1958 Lambretta and my 1985 Vespa, took the lower crank sprocket off my car's engine where I couldn't get a socket on it, doubles up as a bloody good whacker of things too :D
I have this exact lathe in the exact same starting condition.... wow. I was literally looking for a video of someone restoring it and this is it ^_^ so cool
This lathe is made with attention and can be upgraded big time. As mentioned before; bolt it to a piece of steel plate as a first. It will increase rigidity a lot. Get rid of the zamac gears and buy or make brass, bronze or cast iron ones and use at least one Delrin one in between for sound and crashes . Everything is better than Zamac. Use bearings (thrust and/or double row side contact bearings. They'll last you a lifetime. For bushings use impregnated bronze (oil/graphite) or the white metal shimstyle inserts. Measure and correct misalignment of the ways by grinding or scraping. Add felt wipers and oil passages with cups. Install dials so you know where you're going during turning parts. Etc. etc. I don't know this brand of machine but by looking at it I think it's a piece of machinery that's worth to be saved, and better, improved. The people who made it then would be proud again. No heavy cut's here but precision in a slow and mindful pace is in reach. I think it could be much better then your daily driver (which sounds and moves horrible btw) Best, Job
This lathe belongs in the garbage..... literally as cheap as they get.... Good for nothing, maybe turning some small wooden doll house parts. That’s it.
@@louisturner8842 Sorry but you would be wrong. Try machining some really small parts on a large lathe sometime and you'd see the use for a small one like this.
@@louisturner8842 A lot of times it is knowing the machine that makes the difference. A good machinist works to the machine's tolerances. Same applies to firearms where the difference is often the operator.
I really enjoy how playful you are as you do your work. The extra long painter's tape and the little sheet metal dance made me laugh. The lathe really looks nice. Isn't it rewarding when you finish a project like this?
I always wanted to do this type thing (completely rebuild a machine tool) in under 40 minutes as that exactly how long it should take according to all the bosses I've ever had and there have been many. Shazam! it's finished..
It's amazing how much you get accomplished with simple hand tools. Even though I know they're going into the yellow baskets, I always feel like all the pieces are winding up all over the workshop as things come apart, Oh yeah.... they actually DO fly all over the workshop.
I would love to add something like this to my shop. Goal: Make 100% of the parts to a pen kit. Except for the refill of course. Thanks for the great videos.
We have a 1945 109 donated to where I volunteer, it needed to be put into shape , watching you was a run down memory lane, I also had to take the head apart twice to put the belt on , of course you did a great job , like new , Wow , Bill
I was a kid in the 1940s and spent the summers in northern Wisconsin just with my parents and the Sears catalog. I used to drool over that lathe, thinking it was really something special. I don't remember what it cost, I'm sure it would seem cheap today, but it was too expensive for my dad to buy, although he would have liked to have one. Looking at it now I see that it really was a serious and expensive toy. Nonetheless, it would have been a great teaching device for me if we had gotten one. Thanks for the great job on this one and for the excellent video.
Love how you tear into these things and make them better. That lathe was so interesting to see all the working parts. Thanks for a great video. Just Sub'd and liked!
Шестерни смазываются маслом только в закрытых картерах. В открытых местах, шестерни смазываются густыми смазками типа Литол. Gears are oiled only in closed crankcases. In open areas, gears are lubricated with Litol grease.
Texaco Crater solves the open gear problems. Or Chevron Pinion Grease MS. Just a word of warning about the latter, Don't get it on anything you don't want it on. It is hard to get off anything where it is unwanted.
I thoroughly enjoyed watching this. I literally laughed and cried...for some reason, I started mourning the loss of my two cats, I recently lost to coyotes here in LA. It just happened this week and I hadn't had the time or the moment yet to fully let myself go there. Then somewhere you made me laugh. The machine is all put together and it's so satisfying. Anyway, thank you for that. ✌🏼💕
i was planning on pressing the like button once the video was over (i'm on mobile) but had to exit fullscreen and do it as soon as the wibble wobble commenced
My Dad had one very similar to this one, and as I recall I inherited it, and used it to turn small commutators on small motor armatures for years in my generator, starter and alternator rebuilding shop. It was an upgraded model, as it had more gears and a multi tool holder. I rebuilt it, and remember every screw and nut in this video. I was born in 1944, and can remember that being in my Dad's shop as long as I can remember. The video brings back fond memories from years long gone. Thanks...👍😁
Awesome story. Thanks for sharing
Great job! As a former salesman in Sears Division 9 (hardware) it does my heart good to see these older machines given a new life.
Sears tools were the best. Hard to see such a great American iconic brand die.
I have the exact lathe that belonged to my Dad who has long since died. He bought it new, and after some time one of gear(s) in the power feed crumbled so he always told me it was junk. After watching this video I took a look at it and it will work it just won't cut threads or power feed until I can get some made. Now I have the desire to break it down and restore it. Thank you for the inspiration to clean up something that means so much to me and I don't mean money wise.
This was my first lathe as a young man A fellow I worked with gave it to me. I carried it around for years. Traded it for a good vice many years later. I still have the dead center for it. I wish I still had it as now I have the tooling and capiblites to rebuild it. Well done.
O carried it around for
would love to see it working.
Patric, as long as you know the tooth count a machine shop can make the gear for very little cost. A thought for you, when you finish the restoration, if you only start it up just to see it run you will think of your dad. I have a pretty 1940 handsaw belonging to my dad which I still use. When I use it I always think of my dad
I'm sure the diecast gears aren't great, but you can buy nylon, iron or steel gears easily. Nylon would be appropriate for this lathe. You can even have someone 3d print them using rigid resin (very strong) and I'm talking about stereolithography, not filament printing.
I have the same lathe. Gears for it are available on eBay. Both used and new plastic are available. I replaced two of the "back gears" with used from eBay. Just be sure of the tooth count.
When you rebuild an old Craftsman power tool, you know that whatever you have to do to restore it, you're working with top-quality materials and workmanship. When it came to hardware, Sears and Craftsman pretty much set the standard in the U.S. for at least a century.
I just inherited this exact lathe and a working Unimat, been collecting dust for years! This video is exactly what I needed to see.
It is time to get them both back to their glory days!! Thank you
No fair!
I don't know if I'm repeating my self, but I love your restoration on this lathe. I've had mine since 1995 as a gift from my father-in-law. According to the serial number, mine was made in 1938 or 1939. I have everything including the change of gears shown in the original ads. It's still in original condition and still uses the Leland motor that was an option. I used it to make a stand mount for my nieces dress form, some custom parts for a dust distribution system my brothers design for his PHD project. I also built a system to add a RollSizer to the table to remove case bulges in 9 mm cases. Plus a ton of small projects over the years.
I have hot spotted your rebuilding of yours to have as a reference for future issues. Thanks for all your work and a very understanding wife.
When I saw you add the Threading Chart toward the end, I had to go back to the beginning to see if it was there. It wasn't.
It's nice to see you take such care.
Really nice restoration.
Being a shop owner, it is so awesome to see someone with the ability and desire to get a gem like this back to functioning in this day and age! Now have a beer or soda or whatever you choose to reward yourself for a job well done!! Cheers!
You say that like you are gonna buy it for him lol
@@jacobleeson4763 And I would if I were in the position to.
This lathe is an Atlas press lathe. Sears use to get Atlas lathe then put their name on it.
Awesome find and resto. Who wouldn't want this lathe as even a show piece, as much as a working machine. It's all about maintenance!! Thanks
About ten years ago I restored a 1950’s Atlas Craftsman 12” lathe with the quick change gearbox for threading. I had a lot of gears to replace because someone didn’t know how to operate the machine,and all the gears are made from pot metal. Took about a month to get all the parts and redo it, because I had never stripped and rebuilt a lathe before. While it’s not a high precision machine, it’s a great mini lathe for the home hobbyist. I laughed out loud a few times as you forgot to put in a part, because as the old adage goes..."been there, done that!" It also is a pretty good wood lathe in a pinch, and I’ve made a few handles for tools over the years with it. I also bought an AXA wedge style quick change tool post with tool holders. It sure speeds up changing tools without having to align the tools every time.
I enjoy your channel, and loved the tune you played with the sheet steel. Keep having fun, and I hope you make a few buck in the process. I can’t bear to sell stuff I rebuild, so my kids will have to do that when I croak. Won’t they have fun? 😂😂😂😂
This comment brought me a lot of joy, especially that last line haha!
The old machines were made to last. Thank you for restoring this one.
I bought this lathe two weeks back and it was to be a future project. After watching your video I started tearing mine apart. This video is so helpful. I’m almost finished with painting and any repairs. Hopefully back together this week. I was lucky mine was I’m pretty good shape just old grease. Thank you.
I would love to find an old lathe like that. I don't know what would be more fun, restoring it or using it. I've watched all you put out. You do an amazing job making everything work and look new again. Hats off it takes real talent!!
Both, one just came my way restore first and use after!!
It’s a Craftsman 109, they’re around. You can find them.
It's worth a like just for the intro.
Right lmao
It’s why I subscribed. A video came up recommended like 2 years ago, I subscribed during the intro hahah”
lol so true!
Any ideal why so many dislikes?
@@glbaker5595 Stupid people do stupid things, I'll give a dislike if the video is crap, with a comment, but otherwise, I give a like or move on.
I was getting ready to type about the washers on the planetary gears. Nice restoration makes me want to restore mine.
This is such a cool, little lathe. it'd be perfect for someone like me who wants to learn but doesn't have space or money to purchase one of the bigger ones. Thanks for sharing your work!
I am in the same predicament as you are. I want a little lathe to learn on well but a gem like this is pretty hard to find for any reasonable cost. Good luck my friend!
There are so many things that both give me anxiety and induce extreme calm in your videos…I’m hooked
Much respect to your craftsmanship skills, your photographic memory, and your humor. A pleasure to watch you work seemingly having fun too!
I think he has contemplated suicide many times on this project. 😂
if by "photographic memory" you mean recording footage of everything he does, which he can then reference whenever he needs to.
28:56 I saw that assembly and was wondering just how the belt went on. Your reaction was PRICELESS!
Yes - I liked that too!
For the lazy, they make link belts so that if you forget to do it, you just assemble a belt around the pulleys. ;-)
This is a Sears Craftsman back geared Metal Lathe. As a kid I bought one of these from a GunSmith who passed away and that was the start of my journey into Machinery. One of the most important parts of this restoration was truing the Bed Ways. Here’s a trick, if you are not going to use gloves, put on hand cream making sure to get the cream under and around your finger nail... makes clean up a lot easier. Nice video, thx.
best kind of restoration i've ever seen, that lathe can now go on to make all sorts of things! a new lease of life for the most versatile tool.
Your "Opening credits" are amazing and hilarious. I love the humor you put in your videos. Please don't ever stop ❤😁
Thank you!
Its one if my favorite parts of his videos and when he does silly stuff like pop his head in the media blaster or the tape lol
I am agree. It's the main pleasant difference between you and other youtubers.
Lo mismo que ella dijo .... Me encantas
РАЗОБРАТЬ ДО ВИНТИКА,, ВСЁ ЭТО ПОЧИСТИТЬ, ПЕРЕМЫТЬ , ОТРЕМОНТИРОВАТЬ, ПОКРАСИТЬ И ВНОВЬ СОБРАТЬ.
КЛАССИКА.👍👍👍
И работает как часики. Молодца, столько терпения и можно сказать с любовью к своему станочку.
Здоровья и успехов. !!!
That 80s sitcom opening was strange, and fantastic. I can already tell I'm going to enjoy this.
Oh, far away childhood! Is that Grizzly Addams?
Blue painter's tape... It's everywhere! Nice work all around.
The part that impresses me about these vids is the parts that _aren't_ rusted. Gets me considering things like available materials of the time, whether any of them were suitable, or maybe that someone just took care of a few things while they used it.
Thank you for this. My grandpa left us this exact lathe model and I've been wanting to restore it but have been too afraid to start for fear I'd somehow mess it up. Your teardown and processes have given me hope that I can figure it out! :)
Good luck! I hope it goes well.
Restoring my lathe would bring a tear to my eye that’s for sure.
@Byvägen Thanks! By the looks of it, the entire kit is here and in good order apart from some surface/cosmetic corrosion. It comes with what seems to be a full box of all the original gears, though kinda hard to tell since the manual is mostly stuck together in a smelly, oily chunk :)
There's some other stuff about the lathe that this video doesn't consider. Particularly, if the lathe ways are worn out or if there is a big twist in the bed. That work is much more difficult to do. Particularly worn out ways, they have to be scraped ideally, and that takes a lot of time.
Did u get it done??
Dude is so friggen funny I love watching his restoration vids let alone very good at what he does......
Well said🙂
and magic!
Agree!! I love watching "Hand Tool Rescue" restore things and how he incorporates humor into it, too. I also like watching "This Old Tony". He's pretty funny, too, but his channel focuses less on restoration and more on machining and building things.
@@Randall82760 рот й
Love your sense of humor also your not afraid of getting your hands dirty. No sissy rubber gloves. One of my top shows.
I'm impressed that you found the spring and detent ball.
I assumed they would be lost in the bowels of your shop and eaten by a rust monster.
I heard all the rust near that location had Evapo'd
I bet your glad this project is finished. Your not scared of tackling a literal lump of rust and turning it into something that is functional again.
I am 62 yrs old. My dad got a used one of these when I was about 8. It hardly ever got used until I took it over during my teens and now I still used it for fun and good memories of my dad showing me what to do and not to do.
It is refreshing to see one so young display the talent that you do. Thanks for sharing with us.
I had this lathe. My great uncle gave it to me when i graduated from Machine shop in High School. I got a lot of use out of it making all sorts of projects. My sister in law offered to store it in her garage till i found a new apartment. Which worked out well until her junkie husband sold it for $100 worth of oxy.. I really wish i still had it.
It's a credit to your skill that the repair was so successful on such a machine that requires as much precision in the parts as a lathe. This is a perfect hobby lathe now, small but still plenty big for most turning projects.
Watching this made me realise that not all tools from the "good old days" were better made than they are today...
Sears was always about making expensive machinery cheap enough for the average consumer. Sort of like ye olde Harbor Freight. If you wanted industrial grade machines, you went elsewhere but for the weekend hobbyist, they were fine.
and the abuse the poor thing took didn't exactly help to improve quality
I have that same lathe, a buddy of mine gave it to me when his Dad passed away. Had all the original paperwork and everything. Need restoration. Glad you made this video.
That intro gets better and better each time
You won’t win any awards for work accuracy from this lathe but it looks nice for its age.
Brings back memories First late I learned to run 75 years ago on my dads work bench. Had to stand on a stool to reach everything
You and I both Allen.
At least you had a father. I never knew mine. I was placed in a foster home. The foster father didn't anything with me.
@@leonardwilson1846 Oh, thanks?
An og craftsman tool from SR&co. Awesome restoration and find!
I am a German Industrial Mechanic I learned what you are doing there. And i have to be honest, you are definitely more experienced then I am and did it better than i could.!
Oh.. FYI - I have a collection of fine old books re making tools. My favorite is an 1890's one on how to build your own dynamo (instructions include a friendly blacksmith) :)
Books like these are handy for.. well.. if the lights ever go out for few decades :)
Very lucky to have those books keep them in a good place
You should have those books scanned and uploaded. There are book preservation sights that will keep digital copies for free.
Whats about scan it and share for us?
Now THAT sounds like a book worth reading.
Nice restoration. It seems you did not reinstall the brass thrust bearings in the planetary gears. Also, the weird twist in the T bolts is by design, allows variable pressure settings for the twist action of the headstock. I guess this is why the slot is so tall.
Fantastic restoration! My sons gave me a Logan for my birthday years ago. About to retire and it will be my first project. Great job!
i m 8o yrs old and would love to have a small lathe about that size, maybe a little newer . great video loved it, great job love your videos!!!
Subscribed. I watched literally hundreds of "restoration" videos lately. But most of them are just guys giving old stuff a new paint-job and polishing stuff.
This one is different. You clearly show some really good craftsmanship. It´s simple things like the use of that bronze rod that shows you´re quite an experienced mechanic.
th-cam.com/channels/MrMVIBtqFW6O0-MWq26gqw.html absolutely schools this guy
ElTurbinado I sub to both channels and I really wouldn’t say he schools him at all. I’d say they’re both on the same level.
@@austindorf83 Agreed. They both use what they have to play around in the workshop and they do it well.
That nice old lathe has had some time in-service. Your rescue of this tool is extraordinary. Starting at 23:38 approximately, you used what looked like a thread chaser of some sort. Would you mind saying what you used? Thanks for a great video.
Привет из России. Мой папа на таком станке обучался токарному делу, когда он увидел слезы потекли. Большое спасибо. Вы вкладываете в восстановление не только силы но и душу, очень приятно и красиво. и все работает. Жаль что можно один лайк за это поставить. Подписан на Вас давно, жду новых видео.
КАКОЕ ВОССТАНОВЛЕНИЕ ты о чём??? Восстановление подразумевает собой ремонт, замену каких либо частей, а тут просто отмыл и покрасил... По факту он делает тех-обслуживание, и вас лохов разводит на лайки и подписку! Вы все за деревьями леса не видите!!!
@@Фантомас-у1ю согласен
Точности и качества нету никакой
Шабрение вообще не увидил
И даже норм обработки поверхностей
the whole 'damn I forgot to fit the belts' is so relatable, it reminded me of the amount of times I wired a 3 phase C-form plug then realised the back cover was on the bench next to me lol
it's even better when you had also soldered the wires so they "last a lifetime"
Could use a link belt so that you don’t have to disassemble.
@@dwaynewestley7648 I throw link-belts on all my machines for this exact reason haha!
Who hasn't done this or something like it in the past? Lol
I just re-watched this .
Good rescue!
From table saws to this lathe , without a single emblem and no matter what diameter , that metal wheel say's it's a Craftsman !
Best video I've seen on the 109. It should help a lot of people out.
This is exactly the type of lathe I desire for my own workshop.
that lathe wasn't good new... the restoration is great but the lathe is crap :D
I took a shot at making a gingery lathe and it’s become a resting work in progress. I’ve never owned or even used a lathe so it’s been puzzling at times but after watching this vid, it all makes a lot more sense and I’m rekindled to work on it again. Thanks for that!
Oh man, I was so waiting for that spring clip to fly away at 10.28 lol.
How many times I've done that ha ha. Also the painters tape had me in tears... I hunted for ages trying to find an old metal lathe to restore and got sick of trying to find one so ended up buying new.
Ubiquitous 90's sitcom intro...
The feels man, the feels
My (Rip 1977) Dad was a master machinist in the 1950s'. I am sure if he was around today he would love this video.
Far Away Hand Tool Rescue looks rather shady, you should watch your back around him.
...and your front!
@@HandToolRescue Well not with that attitude. LMFAO!
You better keep an eye on your Nutella 😂
Speaking of which: where IS Nutella?
@@elliepascoe5954 oh shit, he got it!
Love the restoration and your sence of humor. I confess I watched the intro twice 😂. Great video, keep up the good work and stay safe.
I just bought a 109.20630 from an old farmer and I remembered seeing this video from before so I thought I would give it a watch to give me ideas on how to disassemble the lathe to clean it all up. Did not know its literally the same model number so I guess I will be watching this video religiously for the coming days every time I get stuck on something.
I have a early 1900s delta scroll saw you can have it you would wanna pay the shipping. It is about 4ft high 4ft long and 1ft wide.
It might be $2,000,000,000 to ship though...
If I took it apart it probably be cheaper to send...lol it is on a stand. I could probably get it down to 3ft x 1ft x 1.5ft
FedEx said $136 usd
That’s what it is
www.ebay.com/i/323890595847?chn=ps&norover=1&mkevt=1&mkrid=711-117182-37290-0&mkcid=2&itemid=323890595847&targetid=593772172013&device=m&mktype=pla&googleloc=1015695&poi=&campaignid=2088717119&mkgroupid=76147658086&rlsatarget=pla-593772172013&abcId=1141026&merchantid=6296724&gclid=EAIaIQobChMIl77awZK75AIVRL7ACh3V9Q2BEAQYASABEgIkE_D_BwE
@@HandToolRescue take it
This was absolutely the best of this channel's videos. Thank you!
I really appreciate your video. My mom bought my dad the exact lathe for Christmas before they were married in 1949. Now I fell heir to it, I'm semi retired, and wanted to restore it. This video popped up on "Videos you may like". More than a coincidence, maybe Devine intervention! I found the owners manual a year ago on line all though it was labeled for an Atlas lathe.
I was sure the ground would open and swallow the workshop when you whipped off the last piece of blue tape...Stay safe and keep up the good work. 👍🖖😂
you are the best. i actually look forward to all your video's. keep up the awesome work!!!
Thank you!
How interesting that the algorithm suggested this video today. I just acquired and one of these lathes that is exactly like yours in every detail. The only thing missing is the actual model number plate. Mine is in much better condition and will need only a minimal restoration but, this is an excellent reference video. Your attention to details is appreciated and will be an invaluable assistance to my own restoration. Thank you for your hard work.
You and ave just get humor, I absolutely love the intro
If you think these guys are humorous, then you need to check out This Old Tony. I like both the ones you mentioned as well but damn, TOT is a league above in that regard.
This machine is really in an excellent condition considering the age. I'm in Taiwan and you can just watch the items corroding away in front of your nose due to high humidity (I've never seen that in Europe).
Next step - change it to CNC!
You obviously never drove a British Leyland car in England in the 70s !
@@BigHeretic Finland, where it's wet, moist or insanely cold around 10 months per year, several months so cold that it will crack engine blocks and water pipes without antifreeze or proper insulation. Cold starts are said to cause wear on the engine worth several hundred km. And when the air warms but metal stays cold, it condensates everywhere, inside cars starting to grow mold during and after the first winter if not used and dried in the process.
With roads getting salted so that they are barely driveable for trucks.. Thin sheet metals can rust through in few years if living close to a heavily salted road. The reason why yearly car inspections fail cars every single day. Although, they have cut it down in recent years because it affects the ground water. Yeah, not because literally destroys cars...
No matter what the car, classic British or new German, it will get destroyed here without storing it in inside a heated dry space.
I really admire his patience. I would like to offer a suggestion and that is to have a box much like a sand blast box to take things apart so when things go flying they don't go too far.
10:39 good ol Jesus clips
I’m always amazed at how many small parts many machines have.
По сути, красиво, раритет!
Здоровья автору!
Made in 1940 lathe restoration is great. As i worked in a mechanical engg company i know something about lathe and its funtion..nice to watch .👍👍👍
внешне красиво. но при таком маленьком съеме биение на резце охренительное! от такой реставрации никакого смысла нет!
да от говорильни толку никогда и не было..
Надо ссылку ему кинуть по проточке кулачков =)
A new vid! Better lathe than never!
I have a 1930’s table saw my grandfather built gaining all I can before I tackle the project. Thank you for the inspiration!
Did you know it's finally not a 47-year wait for one of the Hand Tool Rescue wrenches? There are a few available to be shipped out this month! Have a look here: www.handtoolrescue.com/shop
i need a wrench like that
I waited for months for mine, but I absolutely love it. I use it quite literally every chance I get.
I got the one that I ordered in February sometime in August. It's a very nice wrench. Thank you.
That restoration.
th-cam.com/video/wycU52BR0Oc/w-d-xo.html
I did wait a while for mine way back then but it was worth the wait and use mine every day :) My current thing is rebuilding auld Russian watches and the wrench is a bloody good movement vice/holder with a bit o' neoprene to protect the delicates hehe I've used it to hold Matchbox cars for drilling and fixing of, used it on my 1958 Lambretta and my 1985 Vespa, took the lower crank sprocket off my car's engine where I couldn't get a socket on it, doubles up as a bloody good whacker of things too :D
I have this exact lathe in the exact same starting condition.... wow. I was literally looking for a video of someone restoring it and this is it ^_^ so cool
This lathe is made with attention and can be upgraded big time. As mentioned before; bolt it to a piece of steel plate as a first. It will increase rigidity a lot. Get rid of the zamac gears and buy or make brass, bronze or cast iron ones and use at least one Delrin one in between for sound and crashes . Everything is better than Zamac. Use bearings (thrust and/or double row side contact bearings. They'll last you a lifetime. For bushings use impregnated bronze (oil/graphite) or the white metal shimstyle inserts. Measure and correct misalignment of the ways by grinding or scraping. Add felt wipers and oil passages with cups. Install dials so you know where you're going during turning parts. Etc. etc. I don't know this brand of machine but by looking at it I think it's a piece of machinery that's worth to be saved, and better, improved. The people who made it then would be proud again. No heavy cut's here but precision in a slow and mindful pace is in reach. I think it could be much better then your daily driver (which sounds and moves horrible btw) Best, Job
Great work, But I was itching to see that threading chart engraved and infilled with a bit of paint.
I feel jealous. Evrybody finds this kind of machines in the garbage and i find only vacuum cleaners and old tires :(
Bumper sticker:
"My other garbage bin is eBay"
This lathe belongs in the garbage..... literally as cheap as they get.... Good for nothing, maybe turning some small wooden doll house parts. That’s it.
@@louisturner8842 Sorry but you would be wrong. Try machining some really small parts on a large lathe sometime and you'd see the use for a small one like this.
gravelydon lmao, I have a small large for turning small parts/bushings. It’s 100x better than this turn although can get right tolerances
@@louisturner8842 A lot of times it is knowing the machine that makes the difference. A good machinist works to the machine's tolerances. Same applies to firearms where the difference is often the operator.
Finally, someone who's not afraid to get their hands dirty and not have on gloves.
I really enjoy how playful you are as you do your work. The extra long painter's tape and the little sheet metal dance made me laugh. The lathe really looks nice. Isn't it rewarding when you finish a project like this?
Well that was the quickest 36 minutes and 58 seconds of my week!
I always wanted to do this type thing (completely rebuild a machine tool) in under 40 minutes as that exactly how long it should take according to all the bosses I've ever had and there have been many. Shazam! it's finished..
It's amazing how much you get accomplished with simple hand tools. Even though I know they're going into the yellow baskets,
I always feel like all the pieces are winding up all over the workshop as things come apart,
Oh yeah.... they actually DO fly all over the workshop.
This just reminds me I haven't seen a new ClickSpring video in far too long.
Yeah, I like that machinist clock guy too
I would love to add something like this to my shop. Goal: Make 100% of the parts to a pen kit. Except for the refill of course. Thanks for the great videos.
We have a 1945 109 donated to where I volunteer, it needed to be put into shape , watching you was a run down memory lane, I also had to take the head apart twice to put the belt on , of course you did a great job , like new , Wow , Bill
That’s amazing. I have this exact model in almost never used condition. Thank you, now I can figure out how to use it.
Always a good sign when your machine tools are covered with leaves and pine needles
I was a kid in the 1940s and spent the summers in northern Wisconsin just with my parents and the Sears catalog. I used to drool over that lathe, thinking it was really something special. I don't remember what it cost, I'm sure it would seem cheap today, but it was too expensive for my dad to buy, although he would have liked to have one. Looking at it now I see that it really was a serious and expensive toy. Nonetheless, it would have been a great teaching device for me if we had gotten one. Thanks for the great job on this one and for the excellent video.
Love how you tear into these things and make them better. That lathe was so interesting to see all the working parts. Thanks for a great video. Just Sub'd and liked!
I'll be interested to see how you go about improving the performance.
Thanks!
Damn it! I usually can't remember what part went where after pulling 2 Lego bricks apart...
Thank you for restoring that craftsman lathe.
I’m glad to see you use maple syrup on the ways and not maple butter as that would be too heavy.
Do you think I am a savage?!
If you want to save a little money, you can use straight corn syrup.
there probably was a user created needle bearing upgrade for those bushings
From the old days when the Sears tool department was AWESOME.
Шестерни смазываются маслом только в закрытых картерах. В открытых местах, шестерни смазываются густыми смазками типа Литол.
Gears are oiled only in closed crankcases. In open areas, gears are lubricated with Litol grease.
И редукторах
Тоже об этом подумал.
never heard of Litol...is that a lithium grease?
DR. Feelgood yes
Texaco Crater solves the open gear problems. Or Chevron Pinion Grease MS. Just a word of warning about the latter, Don't get it on anything you don't want it on. It is hard to get off anything where it is unwanted.
I thoroughly enjoyed watching this. I literally laughed and cried...for some reason, I started mourning the loss of my two cats, I recently lost to coyotes here in LA. It just happened this week and I hadn't had the time or the moment yet to fully let myself go there. Then somewhere you made me laugh. The machine is all put together and it's so satisfying. Anyway, thank you for that. ✌🏼💕
sorry about your cats. love from Pakistan
This is AWESOME. We were mesmerized .... dare I say hypnotized!!
Truly cool (and funny in places) !!!
When finished, it's a work of art.
Its the small silly bits in this channel that make me love it all the more ^^
Keep being awesome!
i was planning on pressing the like button once the video was over (i'm on mobile) but had to exit fullscreen and do it as soon as the wibble wobble commenced