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For Jackie

I worked for Farrels in Rochester ,ny. One fun lathe I helped build was an 80 foot drive shaft lathe for the US Navy. I made a ton of money on that job and they moved me to building an air lifted steady rest.I put on about 20 feet of rotor racks which the saddle drove off of and this idiot I called johnny lathe put the rest on. They moved the saddle to test movement and when it got to where I left off it stalled a 200 horsepower motor. They started measuring and realized they were all on wrong. Sooooo they had me plug every dowel and threaded hole only to drill and set them up upside down. I made 80 hours bonus on that job alone and all was well.I also worked on a 120 foot borring mill rail and table and bed in Lachine quebec doing the instal.I scraped the ways for 6 months.
 
There should for damn sure be a plate under that jack.
See the cracks in the concrete floor ?? LOL

In my younger days, I toured the Erie Forge and Steel plant
just north of me. It makes new, and refurbishes, shafting for
the US Navy's subs, carriers, and support vessels. The current
lathe will handle up to a 70 ft long forging sent up from
Leheigh Forge. I've seen the shafts come in on specialized
wheeled flat beds. Big chips !!
 
I worked for Farrels in Rochester ,ny. One fun lathe I helped build was an 80 foot drive shaft lathe for the US Navy. I made a ton of money on that job and they moved me to building an air lifted steady rest.I put on about 20 feet of rotor racks which the saddle drove off of and this idiot I called johnny lathe put the rest on. They moved the saddle to test movement and when it got to where I left off it stalled a 200 horsepower motor. They started measuring and realized they were all on wrong. Sooooo they had me plug every dowel and threaded hole only to drill and set them up upside down. I made 80 hours bonus on that job alone and all was well.I also worked on a 120 foot borring mill rail and table and bed in Lachine quebec doing the instal.I scraped the ways for 6 months.

Stalled a 200hp motor....converting electric to diesel, that's 300hp...damn....
 
As an young Apprentice Electricain I saw a lot of the heavy Industry in the Trenton NJ area. I was always amazed at the massive piece of steel being turned to pression measurements. I fear this is long gone from this country! And it shouldnt be!!!
 
The tailstock looks to me like it has 2 giant nuts 3 times the size of my fist holding it in place and I assume that there are 2 more in the back doing the same thing. If that place is like my shop the jack is sitting there so that I won't trip over it while running the lathe. I am thinking that a lathe and piece of work that big and expensive would only get a competent operator and he knows what he is doing or he wouldn't be there.
 
It may be bigger than yours but nothing makes yours look like a tinker toy. We split my tractor wheels on a Summit that my friend owns and I thought it was huge. I was mistaken.
 

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