Got the pulley off this afternoon, it put up a real good fight. It’s seen 62 harsh English winters and a little bit of corrosion fused the pulley to the motor shaft.
I had to call upon my Burke bar I made a number of years ago (I don’t know what I’d do without it now) and my dad. I had the puller on it, heated the shaft up nice and hot with the torch, then got my old man on a long crow bar one side and me on the other and it eventually came off.
The end of this is an old fork off of a digger bucket (good quality carbon steel that’s able to be hardened and tempered) still have a great lump of it left as it was huge. I cut it and then heated it in the forge until it was glowing orange and then shaped it and then re-hardened and tempered it. The handle is some 20x40 I welded to it. Reason for showing this is it is immensely useful to the practical person.
If you find yourself needing to move something that’s immovable, lift something that can’t be lifted, pull something off that can’t be pulled off, then this is the tool. Marshalltown make one (it’s expensive) or if you can make one yourself you get double the satisfaction. I loosely copied ‘essential craftsmen’ version of it.
It’s been terrific in the couple years I’ve had it and it got me out of many a sticky situation.
Pops giving a hand. What a hero.
The motor is being rewound and I’ll replace the bearings for new so i wasn’t overly concerned with having it large on the thing. It’s a beast of a motor, to be comfortable I used the forks to get it In the back of my van.
The dual pulley is off.
And the motor is gone. The machine is starting to lose most of its fat now.
I have removed the block from the machine too, 3/4w bolts (x4 each side) secure the bearing housings to one another to keep it all in one piece and 3/8w bolts hold the bearing end caps on (x3 each side)
The block is in fantastic condition and should clean up to a high shine. Pictured here is the section where moulding cutters can be fitted into the cutter block. Dated practice now but what a piece of engineering all the same.
The bearings are totally shot, the cages have broken down and they’ve fallen apart. Obviously they were always going to be replaced. Next big job and nearing the end of the tear down is lifting the table. Won’t be too long about I don’t think
Scotty