Very useful video for me as I'm about to do some maintenance on my 1982 Colchester Student 1800, which is similar to the Master 2500. I use it almost every day. I'm thinking it's time to do some work on the cross-slide leadscrew. Maybe replace it with a ballscrew and add a servomotor drive for machining elliptic, parabolic and hyperbolic antenna reflectors using a big faceplate and with the bed gap removed. Looking forward to your next video on this refurbishment
@seamusbolton2158 ай бұрын
Another excellent video, you have become my favorite machining channel from Germany (don't tell Stefan) I trained on one of those lathes more than 35 years ago and if you can get one in good condition you have a real gem. I always thought they were a bit big for smaller work, until I seen what Joe Pieczynski can do with one Thank you again for all your efforts and I look forward to the next video in the series
@Arckivio8 ай бұрын
That was definitely a quality machine at one point, hope it still is. There's an old promo film from the fifties(?) about the Colchester lathe company. Really interesting & one part shows why the headstock bearings are so expensive!!!
@chrisbay87708 ай бұрын
I have the same machine circa 1970. I look forward to watching your progress on her. They are an excellent machine, very will made. An absolute joy to run. I've had my lathe for 7 years now, never any trouble. It came out of a maintenance shop and I don't think it saw much use. I run a small jobber shop and it sees steady but gentle use. The machine I have is a mirror image on the apron to your's, it was made for the North American market. Apparently driving on the wrong side of the road isn't the only thing the British do differently😊. Cheers, and great video
@ProfSimonHolland8 ай бұрын
wow...what a perfect lathe. very good machine and it will be perfect for your shop.
@Rustinox8 ай бұрын
That's a very nice machine. I'm sure you will have tons of good times using it.
@OmeMachining8 ай бұрын
Looks great. Can't wait to see the Colchester M2.5K being brought back to life again 😍 Subscribed. Hope you will as well on mine. The world turns on Colchester lathes 💪 Best regards
@jeffanderson49797 ай бұрын
Looking forward to part to. I have a 15x50 of the same model. Great lathes! You did very well
@badjuju65638 ай бұрын
Nice job but please buy yourself some spanners and buy or make some pin wrenches.... seeing that much adjustable wrench & punch and hammer action on the lathe was traumatising 😟😟😁 The narration was excellent btw, it made it more engaging.
@whittysworkshop9828 ай бұрын
An adjustable; AKA, a Swedish nut lathe 😂
@s7courier8 ай бұрын
Excellent video. Thanks for the audio explanations. Thanks again.
@hansnoeldner18617 ай бұрын
Thank you! This is an excellent video, and it is perfect for me. I have a Clausing Colchester 11 inch lathe which is a lot like yours, and I want to do some restoration work on it at some point. Your video will be a big help? BTW are you from Karlsruhe region?
@rlschow8 ай бұрын
Wow, your timing couldn’t be better for me: I just brought home the 1970’s, American market version of the same lathe. I’ll be doing the same kind of tear-down and cleaning, as it sat idle in a damp trailer for a number of years. Needless to say, I’m subscribed and looking forward to your upcoming posts on this project. Thank you!
@PhilEngineering8 ай бұрын
That’s awesome! Did it come with a DRO ?
@rlschow8 ай бұрын
@@PhilEngineering It did come with a Newall DRO, but only a single axis one (Z). I’d like to add a scale to the cross slide and find a 2 axis display.
@col2lin8 ай бұрын
What you are doing very few lathe owners have done or likely to do, This is why I asked you to talk while working (engkish isn't your first language, it will give you a chance to get more used to it). Before you know it you will be able to talk off the hind leg of a donkey. I think that you are doing a great job it is just a pity that you don't show us more sooner Please it you know what the parts name & a bit of what it does, & it is possible please tell us. It all goes to help build up your subcribers
@greenshortscouk8 ай бұрын
Super job, looking forward to more from you. This is making me want to do the same to my Master 6 1/2" MK4 square head. Which part of Germany are you based? Greetings from NRW.
@hansnoeldner18617 ай бұрын
My guess: Karlsruhe area
@nokstabln8 ай бұрын
great improvement with the narration, top video!
@youtubiuttoni8 ай бұрын
Please more content! Please!
@efektmurowany8 ай бұрын
Looks like great series 🎉🎉 what spray fluid/ cleanser you used to clean?
@PhilEngineering8 ай бұрын
It’s machine parts cleaner in the spray bottle and of course WD 40.
@RutherfordRyan17 ай бұрын
Congratulations… Great machine good acquisition…! Your English is fantastic and accent a joy… Best wishes from Australia
@darkwinter73958 ай бұрын
Schmooo. They're *always* covered in schmooo. Yuck.
@blazingmatty1237 ай бұрын
Oh nice, I learned on one of these for my apprenticeship about a decade ago, really really good machines though
@nbprotocol54068 ай бұрын
Score! since it wasn't used in an industrial environment it's probably like new in most areas. The only thing i can think of is sometimes if these old lathes sit on a floor that wasn't level they can take a set so it could be difficult to level them perfectly but for 99.9% of parts that shouldn't affect anything anyway.
@davesden2 ай бұрын
What do you spray to clean the machine?
@PhilEngineering2 ай бұрын
Just normal machine parts cleaner.
@LCalleja5 ай бұрын
This is getting interesting I have the same mill now same lathe :)
@xavermaier96258 ай бұрын
What did you pay for the lathe? Seemed to be for a reasonable price (~2500 €???)
@PhilEngineering8 ай бұрын
I had to buy an entire tool cabinet with the machine, I sold 90% of it, so yes, the machine itself is around 2 grand.
@harlech28 ай бұрын
I think you have a winner here!
@AW_DIY_garage8 ай бұрын
Very nice work!
@Narwaro8 ай бұрын
For cleaning precision surfaces I use the scrubbing backside of kitchen sponges and WD40. It cleans rust and oxidation better than rags but doesnt attack the surface
@gorak90008 ай бұрын
I don't think scotchbrite should do much to hardened precision surfaces. I've heard that some cnc machines are rebuilt by their manufacturers by scrubbing boxed ways with scotchbrite, and even with powdered kitchen cleanser to get oxidation off. If the surface is in pristine condition anyway, and just greasy, I probably wouldn't use it, but if it's oxidized, your best bet is to scrub it back to shiny with scotchbrite. A random orbital sander with the scotchbrite on it works really well and saves a ton of elbow grease!
@Narwaro8 ай бұрын
@@gorak9000 Most machine ways werent hardened well into the 80s and sometimes 90s, even the best and most expensive ones. Scotch brite does remove material, very little but it does.