reible
03-22-2009, 05:32 PM
Hi,
As some of you may know I have a Shopsmith 10ER I just got. It is the first one I have seen up close and personal... touching and hefting as well. I will be giving this one to my brother as a birthday gift but if I EVER have space I'll get one for myself too.
I'm really having trouble not digging and and working on it but then part of the gift well be for him to do that so... But I did power it up to make sure it at least ran. I also decided to check the bearings. While they feel tight and I don't think they are damaged they also feel stiff like they are running in 58 year old grease. Not sure what I want to do about that. In the pictures you will see I have both the quill and pulley side bearings out. When I get it back together I might add a picture with them just for completeness.
This well be several posts due to the 5 limit of images per posting. I may not do them all today as it takes a while but I think some of you are going to find this very interesting in light of some discussions in the past.
So off we go with an image of the hole where the quill should be. As you can see it looks a lot like the current design as far as the gear system.
3614
Next is the other end where the bearings set that are for the drive portion of the machine. A little later I have a picture of what the missing piece looks like but for now think of it as a pair of bearings with a pulley attached to a shaft.
3615
Check out the tubes on this beauty... makes you want to go park a Buick on them. They look to be just short of a 1/4" tube thickness. This is the end that goes in the air when setting up in drill press mode, the tubes come though the tie bar and a threaded knob is used rather then the latch idea of the newer models.
3616
Yes the pulley is the drive and yes it is exposed on the lower end. As you can see you need to move the belt from pulley to pulley to change speed. This was the stock setup but they had a speed changer you could add... this machine didn't have that option.
3617
The lever is the quill lock. The quill spring I haven't had apart so I can't tell you how that works but in general it is about the same in function.
3618
Ed
As some of you may know I have a Shopsmith 10ER I just got. It is the first one I have seen up close and personal... touching and hefting as well. I will be giving this one to my brother as a birthday gift but if I EVER have space I'll get one for myself too.
I'm really having trouble not digging and and working on it but then part of the gift well be for him to do that so... But I did power it up to make sure it at least ran. I also decided to check the bearings. While they feel tight and I don't think they are damaged they also feel stiff like they are running in 58 year old grease. Not sure what I want to do about that. In the pictures you will see I have both the quill and pulley side bearings out. When I get it back together I might add a picture with them just for completeness.
This well be several posts due to the 5 limit of images per posting. I may not do them all today as it takes a while but I think some of you are going to find this very interesting in light of some discussions in the past.
So off we go with an image of the hole where the quill should be. As you can see it looks a lot like the current design as far as the gear system.
3614
Next is the other end where the bearings set that are for the drive portion of the machine. A little later I have a picture of what the missing piece looks like but for now think of it as a pair of bearings with a pulley attached to a shaft.
3615
Check out the tubes on this beauty... makes you want to go park a Buick on them. They look to be just short of a 1/4" tube thickness. This is the end that goes in the air when setting up in drill press mode, the tubes come though the tie bar and a threaded knob is used rather then the latch idea of the newer models.
3616
Yes the pulley is the drive and yes it is exposed on the lower end. As you can see you need to move the belt from pulley to pulley to change speed. This was the stock setup but they had a speed changer you could add... this machine didn't have that option.
3617
The lever is the quill lock. The quill spring I haven't had apart so I can't tell you how that works but in general it is about the same in function.
3618
Ed