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The Metal Lathe
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 136

The Metal Lathe

Using castings from your charcoal foundry (see Book 1 in the series: The Charcoal Foundry by David Gingery) and simple hand methods (no machine tools needed!) you can build a sturdy and accurate bed for a metal lathe. Then additional castings, common hardware items and improvised equipment will add the headstock, tailstock, carriage and all the remaining parts to complete the lathe. Illustrated with photos and drawings to show you all you need to know about patterns, molding, casting and finishing the parts. The lathe specs. include a 7" swing over the bed and 12" between centers. Adjustable tailstock with set-over for taper turning. Adjustable gibs in sliding members and adjustable sleeve bearings in the headstock. A truly practical machine capable of precision work. Once you have a foundry to cast the parts and a lathe to machine them you can tackle more exotic projects.

The Charcoal Foundry
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 81

The Charcoal Foundry

Charcoal Foundry, the first book in the "Metal Working Shop From Scrap Series", gives you plans for building a metal melting furnace and instructions on basic pattern making and molding. All the information needed to set up a foundry in your work shop can be found in this book. Simply stated, if you can build a sand castle or make a mud pie, you can make a sand mold to produce castings for your metal shop projects. The main ingredient in these projects is scrap aluminum and pot metal. The only tools you need to get started are ordinary home shop hand tools, many of which are probably already in your possession. Much of the remainder is found as salvage or cast-off and little expense need be ...

The Metal Shaper
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 196

The Metal Shaper

Build your own Metal Shaper. Exotic is a mild adjective when applied to this shaper. It will cut splines, keyways, gears, sprockets, dovetail slides, flat and angular surfaces and irregular profiles. And all of these with a simple hand-ground lathe tool bit. Obsolete in modern industry, of course, because milling machines do the work much faster and cheaper. But you can’t beat a shaper for simplicity and economy in the home shop.The shaper has a 6" stroke and a mean capacity of 5" x 5", variable and adjustable stroke length, automatic variable cross feed and graduated collars. You will be proud to add this machine to your shop.

The Drill Press
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 128

The Drill Press

Drill Press is also known as book 5 from the best selling 7 book series, 'Build Your Own Metal Working Shop From Scrap'. If you have done the projects progressively as the author did you will have done all your drilling with an electric hand drill up to this point. That’s tough and tedious work to say the least and you will really appreciate a drill press. In fact it would not make much sense to proceed to the deluxe accessories without one. You could buy one of course, But anyone could do that.... It drills to the center of a 12" circle with a quill travel of 2 1/2". Two stage speed reduction gives a low speed of 260 rpm for serious large hole drilling. Ball bearings in spindle driven pulley and idler make it smooth and quiet running. Quill feed is by cable or chain drive so there is no rack and pinion to cut.

The Milling Machine
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 166

The Milling Machine

The Milling Machine is also known as book 4 from the best selling 7 book series, 'Build Your Own Metal Working Shop From Scrap'. Especially designed for the developing home shop. It’s a horizontal miller, but it has the full range of vertical mill capability when used with the angle plate on the work table. Extremely rigid and versatile. The work table is 2 3/8" x 12" with a 3/8" T-slot and it travels a full 12". Eight speeds from 43 rpm to 2430 rpm. The spindle raises as much as 6" above the work table and the transmission is designed to follow the vertical travel without straining the column or changing the belt tension. Accessories included in the project are angle plate, face plate, fly cutter, tail-stand and compound slide assembly with which you can do large swing lathe jobs. Still no need to look for outside help. It’s a miller and more, and you can build it your self.

How To Design & Build Centrifugal Fans For the Home Shop
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 135

How To Design & Build Centrifugal Fans For the Home Shop

Build Inexpensive Powerful Blowers For Many Uses. Build a Dust precipitating cyclone, design sheet metal transition pieces, balance a dust collection system, build a static balancing stand and more. Learn how to build a simple manometer and pitot tube and actually measure and fine tune your custom air system. This book will show you how to take pillow blocks, shafting, plywood, sheet metal and other common materials and build a dirt cheap blower that will outperform just about any make-do blower you might find on the surplus market. Let Dave Show you how easy it can be to design a fan that will provide the volume and pressure you need for the system you are building.

How to Build a Pipe Bending Machine
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 48

How to Build a Pipe Bending Machine

Plans for Building a pipe bending machine

How I Pour Babbitt Bearings
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 43

How I Pour Babbitt Bearings

Instructions for pouring Babbitt bearings

The Secrets of Building a Plastic Injection Molding Machine
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 128

The Secrets of Building a Plastic Injection Molding Machine

Here is a book that brings the art of plastic injection molding to the home shop level. Working with plastics can be a fun and profitable hobby. If you have ever wanted to produce custom made plastic parts or just want to know how it’s done then this book is for you. Included are complete step by step instructions on how to build a small inexpensive table top injection molding machine capable of injecting up to 1/2 ounce of plastic into a mold. Sources for plastic will be those things normally thrown away. Stuff like plastic milk jugs, soda pop bottles, plastic oil cans etc. You will learn the basic principles of injection molding and how to design and make your own molds. Begin by making ...

Li'l Bertha a Compact Electric Resistance Furnace
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 69

Li'l Bertha a Compact Electric Resistance Furnace

Li'l Bertha is Dave Gingery's eighth book and was originally published in 1984 by Lindsay Publications. This second edition has been published by David J. Gingery Publishing, LLC. The book Li'l Bertha describes the construction of an electric furnace that can be used as an alternative to a charcoal or gas fired foundry furnace. Although designed with the foundry in mind, the general design details can be adapted to a wide range of furnace needs from creating ceramics to heat-treating to calcining of investment molds and more.