Posted by Nicholas Farr on 10/08/2020 18:43:59:
Posted by SillyOldDuffer on 10/08/2020 15:08:48:
Posted by Simon Williams 3 on 08/08/2020 19:48:17:
Posted by Vic on 08/08/2020 18:47:43:
I’ve got extension leads with both yellow and blue cables. I didn’t know there was any particular convention.
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It appears UK domestic appliance leads can be any colour wanted. Black, White, Grey, Blue, Yellow, Orange, Brown, Red, Stripes, whatever. They can suit the decor! More usefully extension leads could be colour coded to highlight trip hazards, or different colours used to identify ends.
Dave
Hi, I've done work in many industrial places and a few civil engineering sites and unless your 110V gear had the yellow Artic cable and any 240V gear had the blue Artic cable, you wouldn't be allowed to use those items…
Regards Nick.
Yes, but I said 'domestic', which is where this mill would be used. Hard to imagine it allowed in an Industrial or Civil Engineering setting because of all the other questions. Cable colour is way down my list of professional H&S worries!
Realistically, the machine is a 'bitsa'. In the past someone's converted another mill-like machine (or parts) into a home workshop tool. Probably done back when when milling machines were rarely found in amateur workshops. Looks promising but the only way to know the build is any good is to test it. It has a mix of good and questionable features:

Positives:
- Table height adjusted by knee wheel
- Power Traverse on table
- Table swivel feature?
- Whoever made it wasn't a bodger, but he may have pushed his luck.
Potential Issues:
- Narrow table with limited Z movement.
- Horizontal spindle not connected.
- Rigidity of vertical head due to relatively thin column and rotating axle arrangement.
- Vibration due to motor mount on top of a plate-and-bolt frame.
- Access to belt for speed changes
- Slightly flimsy looking head
Although it has a drawbar, might be intended to be a precision drill rather than a mill. Testing with a milling cutter would reveal if it's not rigid enough. I think it will be OK for light work at least.
Just like every other machine tool, it is what it is! If it runs and cuts, even with limitations, any mill is an asset. But if it doesn't cut, it's either junk or a restore project. Whether it's worth restoring comes down to how much time and money the owner is willing to spend on it. It depends: replacing the expensive pancake motor in an otherwise superb Bridgeport is surely worth the effort. Replacing the motor or other pricey parts on this baby might be a complete waste of money if the machine is a poor match to average workshop needs.
The only way to know if it's a gem or a disaster is to test it! Good chance it's a runner because it's lasted this long, but I guess we've all got projects not quite bad enough to scrap. Not everything survives for good reasons!
Anybody recognise which machine this is based on?
Dave