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1.0 Man-Power Lathe?

Dennis J Gooding

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A friend recently gave me a 1907 Barnes Co. catalog of woodworking machinery. Among the items for sale was a one man-power lathe and some turning tools and accessories. It’s hard to read the prices in the old pictures, but the lathe cost $40.00 and ach of the tools and accessories shown costs less than $2.00. It’s hard to read the prices in the old pictures, but the lathe cost $40.00 and ach of the tools and accessories shown costs less than $2.00.
OldLathe.jpgTools.jpg
 
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Odie, they have your screw chuck for a buck fifty...


Ha,ha......I noticed that! :D

When I saw that, I wondered why they didn't offer a standard faceplate.......?

-----odie-----
 
There may be a lathe similar to that in the AAW office in St. Paul.
Notice that the tapered accessories don't mention a Morse taper size. I demo on a line shaft driven lathe at a Steam Thrashers Reunion in Dalton, MN and that lathe has a unique taper that is somewhere between a #1 & #2 Morse taper.
 
I've long wanted one of those Barnes lathes, but they're out of my price range. I do think its interesting, with all the talk lately about being able to sit down to turn, that Barnes had that taken care of 100+ years ago.
One of these days, I'm going to make my own treadle lathe.
 
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