Honestly, I like the drill press itself. It's fault lies in materials really...
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Delta DP350 Variable Speed Drill Press Issues...
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Originally posted by MyrtleLake View PostFWIW, are those pulleys bigger or smaller in regards to bore, OD size, etc.?Last edited by Stu; 05-18-2023, 08:41 AM.
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Originally posted by MyrtleLake View Post...the great irony is I have a beautiful, Reeves-drive operated, floor standing drill press with backgear in my home shop. This is what happens when "employers" make decisions on purchases! Haha! Oh, well.
The point is, I actually appreciate Reeves drives. They're not really that complicated. They simply need to be built well. And the pulleys should not be pot metal.
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Heh....... not as much faith as an easy-out requires.
I just had penetrating oil work twice in one day, on rusted parts. Of course it was old-formula Liquid Wrench, not one of the new versions with all the good stuff removed.CNC machines only go through the motions.
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Stu is awesome. 'nuff said
As for the earlier comment on lack of space around the cam / front pulley/etc. I watch these videos where people can sneak their belt through the exceedingly small space between the front pulley OD and the front panel of the machine. Not mine! Haha. There's no way I can find to do that short of removing the top half of the sheave. Tight quarters, indeed!
A random thought: The rear pulley top half slides on the keyed motor shaft. The insert on the sheave doing this is plain steel... Wouldn't bronze actually be better? I realize it is transmitting torque on the key--and bronze is softer than mild steel, but... It was just an offhand thought.
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After receiving the motor pulley (both halves), I used a bearing puller to get the stuck steel sleeve off the motor shaft. It was coated thick with dried up grease (?) mixed with copious amounts of dirt. That was the origin of my problem, it would seem.
Cleaned off the motor shaft. Put the steel sliding sleeve in the parts washer, reamed it out, lined up the fixed lower half keyway with the sleeve keyway and the upper sheave half. And used a load of superglue to fix the sleeve in place in the upper pulley half. Then, for good measure, applied some Loctite gap-filling metal retaining compound--which was also used on the starting cracks on the replacement parts.
Greased up the shaft; installed; then some spray white lithium lube on the spring + exposed motor shaft.
The drill press works like a charm now!...perhaps for the first time in its existence. Haha.
Stu is awesomeThanks again, Stu!!
Last edited by MyrtleLake; 05-25-2023, 06:40 PM.
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