Britannia Lathes.

Advert

Britannia Lathes.

Home Forums Manual machine tools Britannia Lathes.

Viewing 12 posts - 1 through 12 (of 12 total)
  • Author
    Posts
  • #188164
    Ralph H
    Participant
      @ralphh

      I would like to know if anyone on this forum has experience of using lathes manufactured by the Britannia Company in Colchester around the turn of the last century. Were they well made? Would they still perform well today in the context of accuracy? Did their operation differ in any way to other conventional machines? Any comments regarding them would be greatly received.

      Advert
      #12473
      Ralph H
      Participant
        @ralphh
        #188168
        martin perman 1
        Participant
          @martinperman1

          My brother has our grandfathers Britannia treddle lathe and I used it for a while and it did what I wanted it to do, our grandfather built his steam engines on it with no trouble and never had an electric motor on it until he died and his grandsons fitted one.

          Martin P

          #188201
          Ralph H
          Participant
            @ralphh

            Thank you, I'll infer from that it was a pretty good machine and capable of working to some degree of accuracy. What size is it, out of interest

            #188209
            Ady1
            Participant
              @ady1

              5-10 years ago there were tons of them on ebay, presumably as older guys gave up or passed on

              It seemed like no two were ever alike and most were of a simple basic layout

              Loads of them had that u-bend type gap bed and were solid looking lumps of cast iron

              Tonys place has a page and there's a book

              Colonialism, the Empire and WW1 probably had a big influence on the firms outputs which lasted until the 1930s

              They never caught the imagination for some reason, unlike many other brands

              Edited By Ady1 on 30/04/2015 15:16:49

              #188210
              Ralph H
              Participant
                @ralphh

                Yes his page is quite interesting but is unfortaunely incomplete due, we assume, to the limits of his source material. I am considering buying a book very similar to that. There does seem to be a lot of variation in design but the finish quality on many looks very good. It isnt very obvious if they have hollow spindles although their steadies are of a rather nice if basic design

                #188213
                martin perman 1
                Participant
                  @martinperman1

                  Ralph,

                  The bed of ours is 3' 6" to 4' long, the chuck stands at about waist height.

                  Martiin P

                  #188214
                  martin perman 1
                  Participant
                    @martinperman1

                    Ralph,

                    The bed of ours is 3' 6" to 4' long, the chuck stands at about waist height.

                    Martiin P

                    #188272
                    Ralph H
                    Participant
                      @ralphh

                      Thank you Martin, that makes your words even more useful to me

                      Thank you both for the replies

                      #188274
                      Ady1
                      Participant
                        @ady1

                        Graces can have useful info on old companies

                        Good quality PDFs of "The Engineer" can be downloaded which are full of old pictures of gadgets from a bygone age, plus they are all pdf searchable

                        Edited By Ady1 on 01/05/2015 09:40:09

                        #188275
                        KWIL
                        Participant
                          @kwil

                          Be cautious in relying upon Graces, a Halifax company Willson Lathes, formed in the late 1800s is shown as being established in the 1940's!!

                          #188279
                          Ralph H
                          Participant
                            @ralphh

                            There is some interesting stuff on there, particularly some of the older adverts but yes, many records are incomplete and if they cna be that far out then everything must be taken with a pinch of salt.

                          Viewing 12 posts - 1 through 12 (of 12 total)
                          • Please log in to reply to this topic. Registering is free and easy using the links on the menu at the top of this page.

                          Advert

                          Latest Replies

                          Home Forums Manual machine tools Topics

                          Viewing 25 topics - 1 through 25 (of 25 total)
                          Viewing 25 topics - 1 through 25 (of 25 total)

                          View full reply list.

                          Advert

                          Newsletter Sign-up