Re: Atlas 10F motor step pulley, part 10-428
Motor companies make spacers to adapt half-inch shafts to 5/8" pulleys. You can make one, too! If you want to, anyway. They're usually bent/rolled from 1/16" steel sheet, but you can turn one out of
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Bill in OKC too
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#116048
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Re: Atlas 10F motor step pulley, part 10-428
Thanks Bill. My motor is a craftsman branded also with the 1/2 ID, but the prior owner replaced the step pulley with a single 2.5 OD pulley. I wanted to dust off the old math book and using the
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Bryan
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#116047
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Re: Atlas 10F motor step pulley, part 10-428
Careful on the bore diameter. I believe my original is 1/2 ID to fit the 40s vintage motor.
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Bill Pendergrass
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#116046
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Re: Introductions
That vise looks a lot more stout before than after seeing the main body from the bottom in the tube . Still a neato vise animal
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mike allen
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#116045
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Re: Introductions
I watched that youtube that vise is just crazy
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garilla
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#116044
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Re: Atlas 10F motor step pulley, part 10-428
Thanks so much, this is very helpful! [email protected]> wrote:
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Bryan
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#116043
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Re: Atlas 10F motor step pulley, part 10-428
Should be in the files section, but if not, I've got a drawing. I'm an info packrat, so probably downloaded it from the group.? Yep. Check
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Bill in OKC too
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#116042
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Re: Atlas 10F motor step pulley, part 10-428
I think there's a drawing of it in the files section . animal
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mike allen
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#116041
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Re: Atlas 10F motor step pulley, part 10-428
5/8¡± center
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Jim F
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#116040
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Re: Atlas 10F motor step pulley, part 10-428
Here are the dimensions.
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Jim F
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#116039
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Atlas 10F motor step pulley, part 10-428
Does anyone have a drawing or the dimensions of this pulley? Or know of a close enough COTS version? Ebay prices are eye watering... Thanks Bryan
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Bryan
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#116038
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Re: Introductions
That's it I believe. The bike is my girlfriend's. And she never rides it. Just in my way. Lol
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Sidebottom <Jeff.sidebottom@...>
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#116037
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Re: Introductions
Sidebottom, This youtube video shows a restoration of a vise that looks very much like yours, and does a good job of showing the drill option. https://youtu.be/yZQQhkFjVLM?si=y9t7lq6uzSuUCm1p
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Bryan
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#116036
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Re: Introductions
Is this it minus the bicycle crank?
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garilla
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#116035
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Re: Introductions
I don't see a brand name on my vice but it was patented Sept of 1914. Piece of history.
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Sidebottom <Jeff.sidebottom@...>
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#116034
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Re: Introductions
Hmm , I knew Campagnolo made a bottle opener , never knew they made a vise . That vise looks like its capable of some serious business. animal
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mike allen
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#116033
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Re: Introductions
Tour de France edition vise Get Outlook for Android<https://aka.ms/AAb9ysg> ________________________________ Sent: Saturday, September 9, 2023 6:10:03 PM To: [email protected]
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Andrei
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#116032
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Re: Introductions
I'll have to try that. Thanks.
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Sidebottom <Jeff.sidebottom@...>
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#116031
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Re: Introductions
Those old anvil/vise combos often had a slot in the dynamic jaw where the screw is, to accept a drill bit. Yours looks like it has two handles, which is probably why, one to rotate just the screw (for
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Bryan
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#116030
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Re: Introductions
That was an old vice for working on pipe, etc. is what I was told. I use it for small amateur blacksmith goofing off.
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Sidebottom <Jeff.sidebottom@...>
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#116029
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