A friend has a Powermatic lathe ( I think it is a 42 something). he needs to replace the belt. The owner's manual and U -Tube are of no help. Anyone know how to do this. Thanks
How about a link belt. Avoids the hassle of pulling the spindle/bearing assembly. I did this on my General 260 about 15 yrs. ago - works fine. Only problem on my General with a 4-step pulley is trying to change the belt to the largest pulley - not enough room between the pulley and the headstock casting is a chore. But I rarely use that pulley anyway.A friend has a Powermatic lathe ( I think it is a 42 something). he needs to replace the belt. The owner's manual and U -Tube are of no help. Anyone know how to do this. Thanks
The multi web v belts used ( similar to the serpentine belts used in automobiles) cannot be replaced with a link belt.How about a link belt. Avoids the hassle of pulling the spindle/bearing assembly. I did this on my General 260 about 15 yrs. ago - works fine. Only problem on my General with a 4-step pulley is trying to change the belt to the largest pulley - not enough room between the pulley and the headstock casting is a chore. But I rarely use that pulley anyway.
My bad! My lathe is 26 years old ... guess today's lathes don't use V-belts anymore!The multi web v belts used ( similar to the serpentine belts used in automobiles) cannot be replaced with a link belt.
The motor bearings I put in my 3520B motor were SKF, made in India. I did a search and it appears SKF many years ago started three bearing plants there as well as many other countries. I have concerns about the bearings I put on the spindle, bought them locally but not SKF, to me they were not tight enough on the shaft nor in the headstock. I watched a video of someone changing their bearings on a Jet lathe and I was amazed how loose those bearings were. I can;t remember the name of the company that produced those lathes but it is or was when my lathe was made the same company. My bearings were fine until I washed the grease out of some of them when cleaning inside the headstock with PB Blaster. The new bearings went in as loose (to me) as the original came out but appears to be okay. I've roughed in three pecan bowls since the bearing change out and the bearings seem fine, see no grease easing out on the ones I cannot touch, time will tell.
Some of the lathes like Robust and Oneway have a removable headstock spindle so you don't have to take the bearings out to replace the belt, at least in theory. I haven't tried that yet. Oh, you can remove the motor before you take the headstock in for repairs.
A friend of mine was contemplating a Oneway purchase so I took him on a tour of the lathe assembly facility. I asked Kevin about how to change a belt and he had one of the assemblers come over and proceed to remove and replace a belt on one of the finished lathes. Took him less than 10 min. for the whole process. Al bought a Oneway 6 months later.Oneway have a removable headstock spindle so you don't have to take the bearings out to replace the belt,