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Seller assumes all responsibility for this listing.
Anthe Machine Works spindle carver head with bronze bearings from the early 20th century.
Spindle carvers were a very common tool in production woodcarving and furniture shops, at least up through the 1970's. I am an architectural woodworker and found this old machine with a good set of bronze bearings and started down the path of restoring it and getting it set up with an electric motor as this comes from an era when shops had a common drive train that powered multiple machines via leather belts. I had a an GE 3 phase motor rewound and put in great working order. At that point a complete machine that I had been eyeing for years became available and I no longer need to proceed with this as a project. It needs a pedestal of some sort (which could take many forms) on which to attach the head and the motor and a drive pulley of an appropriate ratio to attach to the motor's shaft. It is a fun project. It could be finished for its intended use as a spindle carver or it could also be fit with a sanding drum or a polishing drum. The tool was used for roughing out carvings, doing certain forms of finished carving or shaping curved parts like cabriole legs. It allows you to quickly remove wood in a free hand way. There are special cutters for these machines which must be acquired second hand as vintage tools as they are no longer in production. They do show up in old tools sales. The machine is not for use with modern shaper cutters. I have also seen them modified for metal polishing or freehand sanding.
Anthe Machine works was the original inventor of the spindle carver and was a major producer of the cutters up into the early 2000's. CNC technology has supplanted most of the hand carving work and made these sorts of machines largely obsolete. |
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Seller assumes all responsibility for this listing.
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Seller assumes all responsibility for this listing.
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