WWII hand-powered lathe from Liberty Ship - photo
WWII hand-powered Paxton Mitchell lathe from a Liberty ship.
https://s3-us-west-1.amazonaws.com/h...ship_lathe.jpg
Description:
Quote:
Hand Powered WWII Liberty Ship Metal Lathe made by Paxton Mitchell. These lathes were made in 1945. Came with the original paperwork. Each lathe comes with: (1) Packing Chuck for Boring 3 3/4 Packing. (1) Packing Chuck for Boring 1 5/8 Packing. (1) Spare Feed Nut. (2) Wrenches for Above. Wrenches are specific to the parts on the lathe. Weighs 154 pounds. New old stock. Never been used, but some surface rust from sitting around.
$300 from HarryEpstein.com: https://www.harryepstein.com/index.p...tal-lathe.html
Liberty ships were the iconic American WWII ship; over 2,700 of them were produced, which I believe is the most ships ever made to a single design. Liberty ships represented the American WWII manufacturing drive that formed the war-winning trinity of: American manufacturing, Russian lives, and British intelligence. These guys:
https://s3-us-west-1.amazonaws.com/h...berty_ship.jpg
Does anyone know more about these lathes? Why were they hand-powered? Were these intended as general use lathes, or were they made with specific tasks in mind?
Previously:
https://www.homemadetools.net/forum/...3090#post77418
https://www.homemadetools.net/forum/...0596#post72786
https://www.homemadetools.net/forum/...9694#post89851
https://www.homemadetools.net/forum/...9698#post89865