Net Machinery Home View Machinery for sale Index of Sold Archive
You are viewing a list of sold machinery in the NetMachinery Sold Archive. If you are looking for available machinery click View Machinery for sale
Home > Sold Machinery Archive

User Search

Your search results (if any) appear below in groups of 75 for each section.

Manual Milling Machines

We found 1 matching ad. Now displaying the final ad.

Year Make Model Condition Price Details

Ad # 14711Vertical Bed Mills
Ad to Checklist
1991 EMCO FB4 Excellent sold small camera icon Photo / More Info.
—: Standard EMCO FB4 vertical end mill. Comes with collet set, key chuck, vise, positioning blocks. This machine has seen very light use. All models had a head that swivelled through 360- degrees (with a vernier scale for precise setting), a No. 2 Morse taper socket and a quill under the control of a quick-action, spring- return lever working through a rack-and-pinion drive. The quill (together with the bolt head for the draw bar) protruded though the top surface of the head and, while protected by a flimsy plastic cover on the 6-speed models, was left exposed on the 4- speed version. The head had a fine-feed drive, but only at 90-degrees to the table and by winding the head up and down the column; hence, with feeds along the axis of the quill limited to rapid- action the machine's capacity to handle very sensitive angled jobs was restricted to setting them up in an angled vice, or similar. Although resetting the head's vertical position on the column took much twirling of the control handle it was (unlike the competing Taiwanese mill/drills) guided by a gib block and so stayed in perfect aligned throughout its travel. If the head needed to be rotated around the vertical axis of the column the latter could be unclamped from its housing by two socket-headed screws and, guided by a ring of degree markings, swung to whatever position was desired. While quill travel on the geared-head models was 40 mm, on the belt- drive types this was increased to 50 mm. The 4- speed head had a throat of 145 mm, the necessarily deeper 6-speed FB2 version had 163 mm of clearance and the belt-drive units - which required an even greater spacing between their pulleys - 195 mm.

View Detailed Ads


Content copyright © 2011 NetMachinery.com. All rights reserved.
Please send your questions, comments, or bug reports to the Webmaster.
Website Hosting & Development by IndSite.