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|    rec.crafts.metalworking    |    Metal working and metallurgy    |    215,367 messages    |
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|    Message 214,231 of 215,367    |
|    Jim Wilkins to Jim Wilkins    |
|    Re: Do I really need an arbor press ?    |
|    12 Apr 25 19:49:29    |
      From: muratlanne@gmail.com              "Bob La Londe" wrote in message news:vtepvd$1fud7$1@dont-email.me...              On 4/12/2025 3:20 PM, Jim Wilkins wrote:       > "Bob La Londe" wrote in message news:vtea79$120nh$1@dont-email.me...       >       > On 4/11/2025 8:35 PM, Snag wrote:       >> Well , the point is moot now cuz I got one ...       >       > I have three hydraulic shop presses, but for many small jobs my arbor       > press is much faster and more convenient. I easily use the arbor press       > hundreds of times more often than all the hydraulic presses combined.       > ---------------------------       >       > I tend to use the milling vise as a light duty press because alignment on       > parallels etc is easier. The handle force isn't excessive for 1000 Lbs of       > clamping pressure.       >       Did I mentioned I have a 6 ton (supposedly) arbor press.       --       Bob La Londe       CNC Molds N Stuff              -----------------------------------------       My equipment is meant for the relatively light work typical of electronics       and consists of machines appropriate to industrial model, tool makers or       prototyping shops, i.e. in the space between hobby and production where I       operated. An ad for the Heavy 10 lathe recommends it for short production,       tool-room and maintenance. The collection would have been an inventor's       dream in the 1960s when it was all new and tight, now it shows its 60+ year       age.              It is NOT money-making production machinery which is why it was available       and affordable. It's probably too small for practical ore processing       projects, the machines I've made with it challenged its capacity. Segway had       a 15" lathe and 12x48(?) Bridgeport, both CNC, which accommodated larger       projects. Both were more awkward to use than my machines for my usually       cut-and-try small parts and off-sized repairs.              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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