Just bought one of these and off to pick it up on Sunday. Anyone got an idea of the rough dimensions?
Thanks
Col
Thanks
Col
How rough dimensions do you want?
Wembley stadium would be large enough to accommodate one.
A 20 foot container would have capacity for five or six.
A standard 500mm kitchen wall cupboard would hold one if you took the shelf out.
Picture here:
https://ostiatools.co.uk/product/fobco-star-1-2-13mm-bench-drill-press-230v-single-phase/
You can look up the size of a standard building block and infer the size from that.
Too heavy to carry home on the bus or train.
Small enough to fit in any car or van you might use.
They'll go on the back seat of a car with some padding or in even a small hatchback with rear seats down.
Bigger than the little £30 supermarket bench drills of the 80's
Smaller than the bigger Jet and Axminster modern bench drills
Startrite Mercury is probably similar in size and weight.
If it's anything like the Walker Turner I have, then "B****y heavy" describes it exactly. Last time I put it on a bench I used rope blocks to lift it. I can move it around, but not really pick it up, it'd need two blokes for that.Mine is 34" high, 20" front to back and about 13" wide.. B****y heavy is the best measure of weight and awkward shape as well. Thirty years ago I had to get daughter's then boyfriend to help me lift it on to bench. Think the removal guys probably put it in place when we moved to Scotland17 years ago
I bought a big old floor standing pillar drill a few years ago. The seller had already taken the head off the top of the column, and warned me it was fooking heavy. When I got it home I had intended to lift the top back on with my engine crane.If it's anything like the Walker Turner I have, then "B****y heavy" describes it exactly. Last time I put it on a bench I used rope blocks to lift it. I can move it around, but not really pick it up, it'd need two blokes for that.
That's the trouble with all lifting gear, you need the headroom to use it. I've got an engine crane these days, but as you say, you still need the room above.I bought a big old floor standing pillar drill a few years ago. The seller had already taken the head off the top of the column, and warned me it was fooking heavy. When I got it home I had intended to lift the top back on with my engine crane.
Unfortunately the ceiling in my workshop wasn't high enough. Ended up putting it together laying on its side on the floor then lifting it upright, still took two of us to get it off the floor
I have an I beam across the middle of the main space in my big shed, and an old chain block running along it on rollers. Great for lifting stuff.That's the trouble with all lifting gear, you need the headroom to use it. I've got an engine crane these days, but as you say, you still need the room above.
What we could do with is some of those anti gravity sky hooks!
Very useful having a beam like that. I lifted the drill off a heavy wooden beam with a three pulley block I have.I have an I beam across the middle of the main space in my big shed, and an old chain block running along it on rollers. Great for lifting stuff.
When I got my milling machine I lifted that off it's pallet using the chain and plonked it on a hydraulic scissor lift. Then just wheeled it over to the bench and slid it across.
Not spectacularly heavy, about 90kg, but really awkward thing to get hold of.
The scissor lift is a little switzer one with about a 450mm square deck. I bought one of their bike lifts and got a discount voucher so the scissor one only cost me about £60. Great bit of kit.
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