> Thank heavens for that. Now I can stop having to resist the temptation to
> respond.
[quoted text clipped - 3 lines]
> Mark Rand
> RTFM
LOL!!
The machines are in a school which has had an attack of elfinsafety.
The lathes have had the power feed and screwcutting disabled. backgear
selectors screwed down etc.
The saw vice has been marked because it is at shin level. The power is
padlocked off.
It is being disposed of as if it jams they say it can throw the job
across the room. The replacement - a band saw just stalls and breaks the
blade which is safer according to the head of dept.
Regards
Bob
Christopher Tidy - 07 May 2008 22:12 GMT
>> Thank heavens for that. Now I can stop having to resist the temptation to
>> respond.
[quoted text clipped - 13 lines]
> across the room. The replacement - a band saw just stalls and breaks the
> blade which is safer according to the head of dept.
I cannot see how a bandsaw is safer than a power hacksaw. Those vices
have deep jaws and grip very firmly. Usually the hacksaw blade will
break before anything jumps out of the vice. Some bandsaws are also
enormous and clumsy, but then I've never been a fan of bandsaws. And if
a hacksaw is dangerous because a piece of work can jump out of the vice,
surely a lathe is dangerous for the same reason?
The only hazard I can see with that machine is that it doesn't have the
finger guard at the rear end of the bowslide which was fitted to later
machines. This isn't a problem when the machine is mounted with its rear
against a wall, but it could pose a threat if the rear of the machine is
accessible. I wouldn't regard this as a major threat, but it's something
that it's worth being aware of.
That machine is the little brother to mine. Possibly a slightly earlier
model. Mine has a more angular base. That one is certainly 1960s or
earlier. It looks like it has been well looked after. Should provide
many years of trouble-free service in a home workshop.
If the new owner needs any help, feel free to pass on my details.
Best wishes,
Chris
Austin Shackles - 08 May 2008 13:00 GMT
>> Thank heavens for that. Now I can stop having to resist the temptation to
>> respond.
[quoted text clipped - 13 lines]
>across the room. The replacement - a band saw just stalls and breaks the
>blade which is safer according to the head of dept.
I'd love it but the logistics and cost are against it.
it's one of those that sits there going "gronch,gronch,gronch" and chewing
through unfeasibly big lumps of steel, isn't it.
and IME, it's bits of blade that fly all over the shop when you get it
wrong, not the job itself.
Broken blades, suitably ground and fitted with handles, make vicious kinves
for piscatorial types.

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Austin Shackles. www.ddol-las.net my opinions are just that
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