This press has worked like a charm for my projects th-cam.com/users/postUgkxajoEbapTfqWaadnqb04h6U576yxXp-FE . I didn't even secure it to my table top, mainly due to the fact that I was using a 15 lbs drill vise. It's not flimsy at all as to what others have claimed it to be. Make sure the locking nuts and levers are secured and there won't be any issues with light pressure and patience. I was able to drill through aluminum, plastic, and steel (steel took a while) with no problems at all. Yeah it took a little longer than a regular drill press, but I don't have the space OR the money for one.The instruction manual was worthless, but luckily assembling the press was intuitive. However, the manual would be good for ordering replacement parts if needed. There is a nice breakdown of the parts that are included in the kit. Before ordering, make sure it is compatible with your unit, it is clearly stated what models the press is compatible with.This was an excellent purchase for $40!!
When my daughter was in grammar school They were having a science fair My daughter asked me to help her with a project so we looked together and came up with a project that shows how people move their arms and hands to help tell a story And if forced to keep their arms and hands at their sides how they are unable to remember details of a story they are trying to tell people
It is a very nice drill press with high quality, probably one of the later ones. The older ones were a little rounder. It will benefit you all your life and allow the children to inherit.
Really nice restoration! If you didn't know - you're missing two parts in the handle, a spring and a small pin that holds the handle in place so that it doesn't fall down, a really nice feature when it's installed! That's what the hole is for on the end of the holder!
Went down into the comments straight after watching to point this out. There were a lot of oil inlets aswell, some chips are bound to have gotten in somewhere.
Folding the sandpaper back on itself in the lathe is a good way to get your hand pulled in with mayor damage as the result. With the speed of the lathe it is better to have the sandpaper go back and forth while slightly angled.
Really cool! Also another very cool way of havibg smooth lines or even not havibg them is by gasifying some acetone…depending on the material you extrude though..
Alexandre, Is there anything that you can't do? The range and the scope of the projects that you tackle are quite remarkable and they cover many engineering, industrial, and construction fields. Your shows are quite informative and fun to watch. Also, where do you get all that energy? Good luck my friend. Peace.
Yo I really like how you made a table out of scratch and with no previous design. I wanted to tell you the reason your metal plate was warped was nkr because you didn’t clamp it. It’s because you welded in ine big straight line and the heat warped it next time alter side you weld and make sure not to weld the same area for to long
Nice video! On these arborga drill presses there is a spring with a steel ball on the inside of the shaft so the doesnt slide by itself. You will see a small hole where it is supposed to be.
Or a foot-pedal flipped down from the MDF board. The biggest "problem" is that that motor wont stop directly when power is cut, it will continue to spin.
@@zapy-85 But it will lose power. works perfekt. we have emrgency stop in headhight so you can hit it with your forehead. ex if you get cout in the shirt.
I have a similar driller, badged as an Ajax And there is a reverse polarity switch on it which stops the spindel very quickly this is linked into a telescopic limit switch , but to fit this on the dill would cost a lot of cash .My drill press cost £1600
Hi. I have exact same model Arboga G2508. Its great machine! 2-speed electric motor is wounded in dahalander connection, u need special switch to operate it.
Great job young man out in my shop ive got 8 machines waiting for restore to use or complete restoration. When and if i can get my pain under control they will be getting done. I hope thanks for the great videos
I got almost the same model - switch is in different place. Great machine. I got it for just 200 USD mare complete and ready for work. On auction I see some of them go for over 600 USD. Same model as ours.
Great video, I was just a little surprised you never pulled the quill & spindle to clean, regrease, and check bearings. Do you have a dial indicator, I really like to see how these things test out with regard to runout after a restoration. A lot of times these old machines run more true than anything new. Thanks.
I think the part I was most impressed with was your colour matching skills, very well done with that I would have been there for a month. Another wonderful old machine saved and probably looking better than it has done in half a century. I mentioned on your Bridgeport Milling Machine video that I’m totally ignorant when it comes to engineering, and when you drilled and rethreaded the oil ports you got me a bit confused sorry. Will this not do any harm having the metal chips in the oil? Or will any of the chemical in the paint not impact on the viscosity of the oil? I’m probably wrong on both points but please can someone explain why I am wrong so I can learn? It looked absolutely brilliant when you finished and I'm sure it’s good for another 60 years. I love your enthusiasm for your work, you have the passion that’s important for all creatives. Subscribed.
You did a really good job mixing the color! I believe the color you were looking for is called "hammerschlagblau" (literally "hammer blow blue") in german. If you google it it looks pretty similar to the color of your drill press. It's a common machine color I believe :)
@@Helveteshit Those Q tips don't get the tiny crap out that fell into the hole while drilling and tapping. Bearing replacement guaranteed to happen in a year or two.
I remember these! that gearbox! oh how i miss it.. 35 years ago and the machine probably had a few years of service then in the shop class.. Everytime today when i think: Maby I need to change speed on my dp... (find the right socket, hold back the motor, undo the belt without damage, move it ba... nah.. it will be fine.. If a tool takes longer to set up than actually work with it; its not a very good tool.
You can thread MDF directly you know...On a 3 cm thick MDF and 6 big screws threaded it will be rock solid. And you've left the center portion of the MDF unsupported...EXACTLY where the pressure is applied!
You should be able to download an app onto your phone that will analyze the color of something and give you the paint code for it. Since you've already come up with the paint through a different method, testing multiple apps would give you the chance to compare and contrast accuracy of paint codes from different apps. Good job, keep up the great work! Subscribed.
Great job. I have the exact same arboga maskiner geared head drill press. Mine is complete with the table if you need any details. It has two forward (electronic) speeds plus the gearbox. They don’t reverse.
Hi, great rebuilt! I'm rebuilding one myself, do you have the stl file for the knobs. I have the same drill press and missing the knobs on the long handle. Many thanks
You are indeed a man of many talents. I love your enthusiasm! Could you please share which exact model your drill press is? I am looking for something very similar for myself. Keep building things!
That should be an Arboga G2508 :) There are several very similar models with minor differences. I have a GM2508, this is a bit bigger and has an automatic feed.
65 grams of silver, 25 grams of green and 11 grams of blue. I just got another drill press, now I have same model G2508 as on this video. Getting 3 cans would cost more then I paid for the drill press (!)
A little warning. It looks like that press doesn't have a drawbar to hold the taper in. This is fine(superior in some ways), however, people often rig up sanding drums or wire brushes to work in a drill press. You can do that if you have a drawbar or a chuck that screws on to the quill rather than the taper system this one has. Do not do this. Lateral forces on that taper can loosen the taper and send it flying.
i really like that you restore old great tools and bring them back to life for ur workshop!! those are great content and inspiring videos. I like ur style, u are really smart and you have a really good method for working on your designs, i really like it and inspires me. I really dislike though the heavy loads of plastic you use in your projects. Plastic is not a good resource, maybe for big and strong parts is not a bad idea to use high quality plstic but for the other prints u should definietly switch to recycled plastic filaments, it would defenietly mke more sense for your project and you would inspire others to use such filaments. Just my opinion. have a good day :)
MDF Query - Which oil are you using to finish it? I'd like to make my MDF worksurfaces stronger but thought any liquid (other than primer) would warp it?
Hola Alexandre! Algún error de compaginación o edición? Limpiaste de óxido la columna, y ahora que estás con el caño torneado, vuelve a estar oxidada la columna del taladro. No lo entiendo.
You should’ve just stripped the whole press and refurbished it properly and painted it all with a color matched paint, that would’ve been EPIC! Edit: WTF, I had forgotten you actually drilled and tapped the oilers in situ, that’s terrifying considering only oil is supposed to be in those areas. I really hope the oilers work out ok and that you didn’t get any metal flecks/pieces in the mechanisms.
Great, so this year we wil also see how to replace all the bearings in that machine, thanks to all the chips from drilling & tapping going into to the oiling ports.
This press has worked like a charm for my projects th-cam.com/users/postUgkxajoEbapTfqWaadnqb04h6U576yxXp-FE . I didn't even secure it to my table top, mainly due to the fact that I was using a 15 lbs drill vise. It's not flimsy at all as to what others have claimed it to be. Make sure the locking nuts and levers are secured and there won't be any issues with light pressure and patience. I was able to drill through aluminum, plastic, and steel (steel took a while) with no problems at all. Yeah it took a little longer than a regular drill press, but I don't have the space OR the money for one.The instruction manual was worthless, but luckily assembling the press was intuitive. However, the manual would be good for ordering replacement parts if needed. There is a nice breakdown of the parts that are included in the kit. Before ordering, make sure it is compatible with your unit, it is clearly stated what models the press is compatible with.This was an excellent purchase for $40!!
Proud owner myself mine is older tough. High quality, will last for generations. Greetings from Sweden
my woodworking class had one of these in sweden in the 90's!
Nice machine, I think the best drill press the world has created and nice restoration.
"This top isn't flat"
*stares at Bridgeport mill in background*
"So I'm go put wood on it"
*head explodes*
He is an adult student. What do you expect?
it is more complicated then that.
@@BKdefr Uhh, I'd like to hear how, lol. Ultimately the flatness of that surface doesn't matter, but that bridgeport can 100% fix the problem he had.
Agree. Mill it flat🤦
@Erick Cohen wow don't give a shit
When my daughter was in grammar school
They were having a science fair
My daughter asked me to help her with a project so we looked together and came up with a project that shows how people move their arms and hands to help tell a story
And if forced to keep their arms and hands at their sides how they are unable to remember details of a story they are trying to tell people
It is a very nice drill press with high quality, probably one of the later ones. The older ones were a little rounder. It will benefit you all your life and allow the children to inherit.
How fantastic to give this beautiful old machine a new life! Well done!
I had the same drillpress on school where i Learned welding And work With metal!! This kind of drillpress machines are the best ever Made! Quality.
Really nice restoration! If you didn't know - you're missing two parts in the handle, a spring and a small pin that holds the handle in place so that it doesn't fall down, a really nice feature when it's installed! That's what the hole is for on the end of the holder!
You might want to check that no tapping chips got inside the machine when you threaded those holes. Or you will be replacing bearings.
I thought I was the only one worried.... Not really how I rebuild machines that's for sure!
Same here, I was shaking my head when I saw him doing that
Double Dare Fan same here. That’s going to end badly.
Went down into the comments straight after watching to point this out. There were a lot of oil inlets aswell, some chips are bound to have gotten in somewhere.
Greasing your tap helps a bit when chip are an issue, but yeah should have taken some care when tapping those holes
MAN! You're LUCKY! You have a TON of really nice space.
Excellent workmanship and attention to details. Videography is very nice, too.
can't believe the work you've done, it's new
Folding the sandpaper back on itself in the lathe is a good way to get your hand pulled in with mayor damage as the result. With the speed of the lathe it is better to have the sandpaper go back and forth while slightly angled.
...and also ALWAYS protect the lathe ways when using abrasives.
very nice work you have done there, repairing a machine that would otherwise be of no use anymore, thanks I learn lots of things from this video
That was an awesome restauration 👍🏼 Greetings from Sweden.
Great restoration and super drill press!!!!
Really cool! Also another very cool way of havibg smooth lines or even not havibg them is by gasifying some acetone…depending on the material you extrude though..
Alexandre, Is there anything that you can't do?
The range and the scope of the projects that you tackle are quite remarkable and they cover many engineering, industrial, and construction fields. Your shows are quite informative and fun to watch. Also, where do you get all that energy? Good luck my friend. Peace.
Yo I really like how you made a table out of scratch and with no previous design. I wanted to tell you the reason your metal plate was warped was nkr because you didn’t clamp it. It’s because you welded in ine big straight line and the heat warped it next time alter side you weld and make sure not to weld the same area for to long
Awesome video, very nice to see that these things are getting restored!
Hi from Sweden. Yeah, it´s really a great machine. I´m superhappy with mine. It is made 7:th of march 1977 and in great shape.
I have the big brother to that machine. Great quality and top notch design.
I watch your videos and I love them but they make green with envy though! More power to you and thanks for creating these videos.
Nice video! On these arborga drill presses there is a spring with a steel ball on the inside of the shaft so the doesnt slide by itself. You will see a small hole where it is supposed to be.
Had my doubts at the beginning but that restore looks great
Long live 3D printing... Yeah...! Well done..!
great, now you have metal shavings in all the bottoms of the fill ports ready to grate in to the rotating surfaces they're supposed to oil!
That paint looks awesome! Great job mixing those together!
If it were me I'd put an "Emergency Stop" switch at the top right side where the other electrical box was.
Or a foot-pedal flipped down from the MDF board.
The biggest "problem" is that that motor wont stop directly when power is cut, it will continue to spin.
@@zapy-85 But it will lose power. works perfekt. we have emrgency stop in headhight so you can hit it with your forehead. ex if you get cout in the shirt.
I have a similar driller, badged as an Ajax And there is a reverse polarity switch on it which stops the spindel very quickly this is linked into a telescopic limit switch , but to fit this on the dill would cost a lot of cash .My drill press cost £1600
Hi. I have exact same model Arboga G2508. Its great machine! 2-speed electric motor is wounded in dahalander connection, u need special switch to operate it.
Do you know what kind of switch and hpw to wire it?
damn. impressive color match with the paint.
Great job young man out in my shop ive got 8 machines waiting for restore to use or complete restoration. When and if i can get my pain under control they will be getting done. I hope thanks for the great videos
Gary Wills thanks! And good luck with your machines! :)
Fantastic job my friend! Enjoyed this video a lot.
Thank you :))
Yes, we need more "Hammerlak" on youtube :D you can't trust a piece of machinery if it's not painted with "Hammerlak".
Great job!! Beautiful drill press.
Great video. I am enjoying your channel. Thank you
I got almost the same model - switch is in different place. Great machine. I got it for just 200 USD mare complete and ready for work. On auction I see some of them go for over 600 USD. Same model as ours.
Great video! I love that you brought this Arboga drill back to life. I have one myself. Maybe the best drill press ever made 😀
Great video, I was just a little surprised you never pulled the quill & spindle to clean, regrease, and check bearings. Do you have a dial indicator, I really like to see how these things test out with regard to runout after a restoration. A lot of times these old machines run more true than anything new. Thanks.
Outstanding work, thank for sharing
this is starting to become my favorite youtube channel
I love all these old tools. Unfortunatly in France most of them run on 380V which is difficult / expensive to have at home...
If they dont need the full power of 3 phase you can probably get a somewhat affordable variable frequency drive to run them off
@@legallyfree2955 you are right. I saw a few new devices that could run such tools in 220V but with a lower power.
Nice job,that's a lovely drill
I think the part I was most impressed with was your colour matching skills, very well done with that I would have been there for a month. Another wonderful old machine saved and probably looking better than it has done in half a century.
I mentioned on your Bridgeport Milling Machine video that I’m totally ignorant when it comes to engineering, and when you drilled and rethreaded the oil ports you got me a bit confused sorry. Will this not do any harm having the metal chips in the oil? Or will any of the chemical in the paint not impact on the viscosity of the oil? I’m probably wrong on both points but please can someone explain why I am wrong so I can learn?
It looked absolutely brilliant when you finished and I'm sure it’s good for another 60 years. I love your enthusiasm for your work, you have the passion that’s important for all creatives. Subscribed.
You did a really good job mixing the color! I believe the color you were looking for is called "hammerschlagblau" (literally "hammer blow blue") in german. If you google it it looks pretty similar to the color of your drill press. It's a common machine color I believe :)
Arboga is one of the best. Its from the quality age!
Kristian Jonsson absolutely! The Sweds made some great machines :)
Filming level PRO... Great job man cheers.
Where's your PPE when you're sanding!!? Love your videos. Thank you for sharing your work!
Wouldn’t you adding those threaded oiling ports have thrown some metal chips from the threading?
He used Q-tips to clean up.
@@Helveteshit Those Q tips don't get the tiny crap out that fell into the hole while drilling and tapping. Bearing replacement guaranteed to happen in a year or two.
I'm sure he pulled it out using little neodyne magnet (behind the scenes)
dude your videos are super fun, please keep it up! Thanks for the content :p
Thank you so much! :)
I remember these! that gearbox! oh how i miss it.. 35 years ago and the machine probably had a few years of service then in the shop class.. Everytime today when i think: Maby I need to change speed on my dp... (find the right socket, hold back the motor, undo the belt without damage, move it ba... nah.. it will be fine..
If a tool takes longer to set up than actually work with it; its not a very good tool.
Nice video, I have an Arboga milling drill, those machines are made to last.
You can thread MDF directly you know...On a 3 cm thick MDF and 6 big screws threaded it will be rock solid. And you've left the center portion of the MDF unsupported...EXACTLY where the pressure is applied!
3:16 Here we see an example of the infamous "Safety Squint".
It's not a perfect "Safety Squint", but better than no squint at all.
here in sweden arboga machines are the rolls royce among drill presses, you would easy get 1000 us dollars for it in that condition, maybe even 1500
Fantastic job man, keep doing the good work, hugh fan.
Hi bro 👋👋👋 good project 👍 good job 👍 good restoration 👍
Кошмар Кошмар hey dude! Thanks ✌️
It boggles my mind that you don't have more subscribers... You earn them... Quality video!
these Argoba Maskinen are wonderful machine that worth finding a cast iron table and adapt it to find the true potential of this drill.
I have an old Arboga radial arm. They are a stout drill, built to last :)
I like your channel. Keep up the great work.
Thank you :)
You should be able to download an app onto your phone that will analyze the color of something and give you the paint code for it. Since you've already come up with the paint through a different method, testing multiple apps would give you the chance to compare and contrast accuracy of paint codes from different apps. Good job, keep up the great work! Subscribed.
Great job. I have the exact same arboga maskiner geared head drill press. Mine is complete with the table if you need any details. It has two forward (electronic) speeds plus the gearbox. They don’t reverse.
Always like a good restoration.
i got the exact one in my garage ;) Solid machine
Awesome work
Snyggt jobbat :)
Hi, great rebuilt! I'm rebuilding one myself, do you have the stl file for the knobs. I have the same drill press and missing the knobs on the long handle. Many thanks
nice. my dad has one of these, i learned how to use it at the age of 10 or so :)
Peep the fronius just chillin in the background, badass! Nice videos man, like the content, rock on.
19:52 - That doesn't screw in, you will need to extend it with a tube.... Oh there goes! 😀👍
Ali Salih haha, jeah... Didn't plan to, but no way back once the hole was threaded :P
You are indeed a man of many talents. I love your enthusiasm! Could you please share which exact model your drill press is? I am looking for something very similar for myself. Keep building things!
That should be an Arboga G2508 :)
There are several very similar models with minor differences.
I have a GM2508, this is a bit bigger and has an automatic feed.
65 grams of silver, 25 grams of green and 11 grams of blue. I just got another drill press, now I have same model G2508 as on this video. Getting 3 cans would cost more then I paid for the drill press (!)
BOSE... please sponsor this man, jaja
aww you have a massive great bridgeport right there... you could have levelled the metal plate! (not meant as criticism, love your videos!)
You should get your mill of the pallet so it doesnt wobble when u crank the handles and tranfers the vibrations down into the earth :)
OK that *is* super cool.
whoa that machine became rusty real quick 4:56
This is an EXCELLENT video man. Instant sub. The drill press turned out so nice!
4:55 Smooth flip :)
Nice project
Dear Alexandre
may I know where did you buy the spring and if you know technical data about it ?
thank you
nice work!
know this is a few yrs old, but looks friggin sweet!
A little warning. It looks like that press doesn't have a drawbar to hold the taper in. This is fine(superior in some ways), however, people often rig up sanding drums or wire brushes to work in a drill press. You can do that if you have a drawbar or a chuck that screws on to the quill rather than the taper system this one has. Do not do this. Lateral forces on that taper can loosen the taper and send it flying.
i really like that you restore old great tools and bring them back to life for ur workshop!! those are great content and inspiring videos. I like ur style, u are really smart and you have a really good method for working on your designs, i really like it and inspires me. I really dislike though the heavy loads of plastic you use in your projects. Plastic is not a good resource, maybe for big and strong parts is not a bad idea to use high quality plstic but for the other prints u should definietly switch to recycled plastic filaments, it would defenietly mke more sense for your project and you would inspire others to use such filaments. Just my opinion. have a good day :)
what is the whistling track you use during your time lapse montages???
Good job bro
We have one of those on the slöjd
Wonderful
MDF Query - Which oil are you using to finish it? I'd like to make my MDF worksurfaces stronger but thought any liquid (other than primer) would warp it?
Hola Alexandre! Algún error de compaginación o edición? Limpiaste de óxido la columna, y ahora que estás con el caño torneado, vuelve a estar oxidada la columna del taladro. No lo entiendo.
We're all three paints rustoleum hammered? I can't find the blue.
You should’ve just stripped the whole press and refurbished it properly and painted it all with a color matched paint, that would’ve been EPIC!
Edit: WTF, I had forgotten you actually drilled and tapped the oilers in situ, that’s terrifying considering only oil is supposed to be in those areas. I really hope the oilers work out ok and that you didn’t get any metal flecks/pieces in the mechanisms.
Awesome!
19:38 How do you know you're not filling the oil system with chips? Can you clean it later? or it has a filter?
Хорошая работа 👍
That is cool!
Great, so this year we wil also see how to replace all the bearings in that machine, thanks to all the chips from drilling & tapping going into to the oiling ports.
great job looks great