Your oldest piece of machinery

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eribaMotters

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12 Feb 2010
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Location
Hatherleigh, Devon
As the title says. How long can we expect our machinery to last.

My contender is a Startrite pillar drill. It started life as a glaziers drill. It did not have a chuck but a diamond dust covered tube. It was gifted to me in a sorry state. Headstock and base were rusted solid onto the pillar which I had to cut out and replace. The motor was good, it needed a switch and wiring along with a good paint job.
The unusual bits are the 36" wide aluminium table, brilliant for woodwork. Secondly is the age. I contacted Startrite with the serial number and was told pre-war, that's pre WW1.

Colin

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The little symbols on snap on sockets (which i realise are not machinery) give their date.

I pulled a load from a skip once that were the war issue ones. I forget the date, 40s sometime.

My Machester Rapidor is 1940s design, but i dont know what date my actual saw is.
My Smart and Brown model M is 56, IIRC.
 
Junior Whitehead Planer, made in Yorkshire 1954; 230 Volt
Built in the style of Wadkin
Six inch wide by three feet long bed, three blades; still in good nick and used often
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Hobbies Royal treadle fret saw.
I hope you all understand that I didn't buy this new but from the research I have done it will date from 1895 to 1910.
 
Got rid off all my really old big Wadkin machinery a few years back this 1950’s surface planer was the last to go
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gave it away in the end as no one was interested in it :oops:
 
Other than hand tools, my machinery is all fairly new. 80’s probably the oldest.
 
I've got dad's Wolf Cub drill plus various accessories, but for oldest machine the battle would be between my partner's Hobbies fretsaw (date unknown) and my 1906 Drummond lathe.
 
Hi all.... a little of the track but still a machine...built 1911...serial number says so....I got this on market place....
Careful cleaning and detailed oiling...got the thing up and running.
Ok it’s slow but stitches wonderfully....🤓
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Well most of mine are older than I :oops: two Startrite tablesaws from the 60's, a Dutch planer which must be just after WWII , pillar drill from the 60's , a double tenoner from the late 60's or early 70's , got loads of hand tools older thean i too :cool:
Karl
 
I am still using an old combination saw/planer jointer from the 1950tes. Dont know the exact age. I picked it up about 15 years ago, cleaned it up a bit, new bearings in the cutter head and sharpened the blades. The saw at only 1hp is only good for small work but with a sled I cut tenons and things on it. I do have another table saw. The planer jointer gets a lot of work and does a good job.
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Regards
John
 
Just rebuilt this Dominion. It was used in the Blackersmill weaving factory. Does anybody know her age. Thanks
 
I think the oldest machine I have is my planer, a Bursgreen FS-2 from the late 50's. Almost as old as me and still working well....unlike me!

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My bandsaw, milling machine and lathe are all from the 50s. The bandsaw might actually be older than the 1950s so it might win.

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My oldest tool is a No 7 jointer which was made in 1890s, but it's not a machine, then an anvil from the 1910s
 
Mine is probably this lovely bandsaw from around 1918, I do have a few old wadkins from 1924, 1928

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