We bought this baby out of Government Surplus through a dealer.
It might be a tad large if weight is an issueView attachment 1652807
What is the spindle travel on that machine????
RADIAL ARM DRILL??? THEY ARE AWESOME OLD MACHINES TO RUN!!!
I ran two 40" or 42" (radial travel) SUMMIT brand radial arm drills (set at 90° to each other) at a time in a hydraulic value manufacturing company!!! They were gear box spindle speed controlled and geared feed rates!!! I believe they were 15hp motors driving the gear boxes!!!
They had the quick couplers in the Morse Taper spindles tor running various tools in one clamping of the value bodies!!! Run a pre drill in 2, 4, or 6 different location by releasing the swing clamp and moving the head radially, once centered lock clamps and power feed the drill!! The power kicks out with an adjustable depth setting on the feed dial!! Unlock clamps, recenter, lock clamps, engage power feed!! Once all ports are predrilled, QUICK CHANGE to a form tool with/or without stopping the spindle, and form all the ports unlocking and relocking clamps while manually feeding the form tool!! Quick change to a tap, tap all the ports with reversing dog setup, backing the the tap back out of the port!! Drill, form, and tap 4 cast iron ports in about 3-4 minutes!!! The ports were various sizes of SAE or NPT formation and associated taps!!!
Values were made for heavy forestry equipment down to small lawn and garden tractors with agriculture and heavy equipment being the main market!!!
I see your machine has a sump and a pump for running coolants in the machine base!! If it was my machine, I would use oil coolants!! We switched to water based coolants and started getting mold and bacteria growth!!! Cleaning the sump in this condition was nasty!!! Plus, the growth leads to possible skin burns and/or irritation!!! Plus, the water and coolant additive tend to separate overnight!!
By the way, that is one mean looking bore bar in the engine lathe!!!
Looks like you could build small canons with that set-up!!!
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