Here I am

South bend lathe

Attention: TDR Forum Junkies
To the point: Click this link and check out the Front Page News story(ies) where we are tracking the introduction of the 2025 Ram HD trucks.

Thanks, TDR Staff

Setting up air compressor

Shop heat

My dad passed down my grandpa's lathe to me today. Thought I'd share a pic for you... It looks like there are some old machinery fans on here.



Its pretty clean and works well. I've had the pleasure of using it a time or two in the past. It looks to be from 1929 from what I could find on the internet tonight. Its super heavy and totally overbuilt like many things from a previous era. I wish I had a project to try it out on!



Does anyone know if tooling is still available for this machine? It only has a basic assortment of tools with it.
 
South Bend lathes are great old machine tools. I have an old 9" precision tool shop lathe. It looks similar. 9" is the swing, try and find out what size it is. There is a lot of tooling and parts still available. Do a search on Ebay.



Cary:cool:
 
I got this from the factory this morning...



"Your 11"X5-1/2' South Bend lathe was shipped on June 24, 1929. "



I think its pretty cool they have kept records going back that far.



I've seen grandpa making tips on the grinder enough that I could probably repeat it. I've never seen him cut threads with it, and that is something I would definately like to learn. I see some how to run a lathe type books on ebay - I'll probably try to pick one up.
 
You might also check consider joining the South Bend Yahoo group. I get 50 or so messages in my inbox from the group every day. Depending on your tolerance for email traffic, you might enjoy it.

I have a 13" myself, not in nearly so good condition as yours. What you have there is very valuable if it's got good ways.

The first thing every South Bend lathe owner needs is a copy of How To Run A Lathe, by South Bend Lathe Works. Look on Ebay or your favorite online used book dealer for the 1929 printing. Some people consider it the finest lathe book ever written.

Ryan
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Back
Top