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Feeler Lathe

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Rick O Shea:
I have just pushed the boat out, spent most of the children's inheritance,  and bought a very nice Feeler lathe. Which is as far as I can see a Hardinge copy made in the far east , it has a very good write up in Lathes website and looks beautiful it is in fantastic condition having been rebuilt by Hardinge a few years ago.

I suspect lots of people use Hardinge  but do many have Feelers? I have a maintenance manual but not an instruction manual. can any offer any pointers or advice?
   

awemawson:
Looks very nice.

Quite surprised that Hardinge were prepared to re-build a copy of one of their products  :scratch:

Rick O Shea:
I am not sure about that either.

 Some authorities suggest that Hardinge licenced the far east copy? again all I can say is that the quality of the lathe is superb, not a far east knock off copy but a beautifully made machine. Did hardinge supply patterns ? I have no idea 

BillTodd:
I suspect ZMT rather than hardinge did the rebuild (don't think H.UK do rebuilds of anything) .

>Some authorities suggest that Hardinge licenced the far east copy?
Hardinge denies it ;-)

looks great :-)

ii think i have a manual somewhere....

It's a near clone of the Hardinge  so the HLV-H manual will tell you all you need:

https://drive.google.com/open?id=0BwXDcXKx2Kzld3BVak1tV2o3eGc

Here's a service/operation manual  for the cyclematic 618 english/metric  for anything different (e.g.  dials )

https://drive.google.com/open?id=0BwXDcXKx2KzlZVZ5NWdHeGdBYjA

Rick O Shea:
Thanks Bill the manual will be a great help. I think you are right it may well have been  ZMT who did the refurb.  I thought it was done in Exeter but Bovey Tracy is very close, so may be the sellers memory playing tricks

I am going to need a couple of back plates for the odd chucks I have got  where do you suggest I could try?

very best wishes and thanks
Mike

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