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Stephen Cherry
01-11-2012, 4:12 PM
Here is a super long lathe!:

http://www.govliquidation.com/auction/view?auctionId=4988568

Steve Vaughan
01-11-2012, 4:23 PM
Well, I was interested until I saw the "buyer load" part. I knew there was no way to handle it and my truck ain't long enough. Pretty cool though. I'd sure like to see it working.

Dan Forman
01-11-2012, 4:34 PM
Need a really long tool rest, and a sharpening station or two along the length. :)

Dan

ray hampton
01-11-2012, 4:44 PM
732 inches , is this distance between centers ? what is the total length ?

Jim Burr
01-11-2012, 7:25 PM
I'd guess 3-4' longer than the BTC distance...but that's only a guess. Don't let Hutch see this...he is crazy about these phone pole monsters!!

ray hampton
01-11-2012, 8:20 PM
I have seen poles that were badly bowed in the center, too bowed to turn

curtis rosche
01-11-2012, 11:24 PM
wasnt this orginally for turning ship drive shafts?

Ed Morgano
01-11-2012, 11:51 PM
wasnt this orginally for turning ship drive shafts?
No, this is only a wood lathe. Not nearly heavy enought for ship drive shafts. I've seen one of those lathes and there's no comparison.

Dave Ogren
01-12-2012, 12:32 PM
No this is not a wood lathe, It has two cross slides. It looks like a very light duty engine lathe.

Dave

Mike Cruz
01-12-2012, 4:12 PM
Don't let Dan Hintz see that thing! :eek: :D

James Boster
01-12-2012, 8:30 PM
It is a wood lathe. It was custom built by Oliver for the Navy. It's built on the model 20B wood lathe with several bed sections. The Oliver pattermaker lathes have cross slides very similar to a metal lathe but not for metal.
It was called the model 18A. Not sure if its the only one or if them made more than one. Some old Oliver catalogs and repirnts show this lathe with about 30 men stading behind it. Supposedly delivered in 1919.

Nathan Hawkes
01-12-2012, 10:28 PM
Here it is: 219531



I can't imagine there were many of these built if more than one.

curtis rosche
01-12-2012, 11:21 PM
No, this is only a wood lathe. Not nearly heavy enought for ship drive shafts. I've seen one of those lathes and there's no comparison.

older wooden drive shafts for the first powered boats?


what else could you economicaly put on this lathe? phone poles would take too long and dont need to be that accurate. i guess building columns?

Scott T Smith
01-13-2012, 10:01 AM
I would hazard a guess that the lathe was used for turning wooden masts for sailing ships.

Nathan, thanks for sharing the photo - that's pretty fascinating.

John Toigo
01-13-2012, 9:04 PM
Spars more likely would be my guess.

Jon Lanier
01-14-2012, 1:16 AM
Bid on it is $150. I imagine they'll get way more than that in scrap.

Scott T Smith
01-14-2012, 1:07 PM
The challenge is going to be in moving it, as the base appears to be a single casting. 60' long trailer decks are not very common.

Mike Cruz
01-14-2012, 1:17 PM
No, Scott, the problem ISN'T in moving it. Heck the problem isn't even coming up with the money. The problem IS 'splaining THIS one to the wife!!! If you can get that third one done, the other two will fall into place. ;)

Scott T Smith
01-15-2012, 10:53 PM
No, Scott, the problem ISN'T in moving it. Heck the problem isn't even coming up with the money. The problem IS 'splaining THIS one to the wife!!! If you can get that third one done, the other two will fall into place. ;)


Mike, I guess that I'm lucky, but moving it would pose just a little more difficulty for me than explaining it to the wife. All I need to do is come up with a way that it will benefit her animals and the hard part is over! (grin)

And if it were just a tad bit shorter, I could move it myself.

The thing is, I can't figure out what I'd use it for...

Mike Cruz
01-15-2012, 11:12 PM
Build a castle for her animals!

curtis rosche
01-15-2012, 11:13 PM
if you got it, you can put a hole tree on it. turn a peice, part it off. seal the end of the tree for the next day and the continue. no need to store blanks anymore :D

Nate Davey
01-16-2012, 8:50 AM
You need it for turning fence posts for the corral, Scott!!


Mike, I guess that I'm lucky, but moving it would pose just a little more difficulty for me than explaining it to the wife. All I need to do is come up with a way that it will benefit her animals and the hard part is over! (grin)

And if it were just a tad bit shorter, I could move it myself.

The thing is, I can't figure out what I'd use it for...