HomeMachine Tool ArchiveMachine-tools Sale & Wanted
![Adcock Shipley 2s Manual Adcock Shipley 2s Manual](/uploads/1/3/3/6/133683987/439645204.jpg)
Models '0' and '1'
Adcock & Shipley Home Page
Vertical Model '2'Adcock & Shipley Horizontal Millers
Adcock & Shipley Combination Machine
Manuals are available for most Adcock & Shipley millers
Adcock Shipley 2s Manual Download
Camtasia torrent mac. Like their range of older Horizontal and Universal lathes, Adcock & Shipley distinguished between their early vertical millers with a simple sizing system, staring with the Models '0' and '1'. Although small, the '0', was very heavily built with a head of massive construction - indeed, some would say over-engineered for the needs of its modest 27' x 7' table. However, this was a machine designed not for the delicate fingers of the university technician, but the horny hands of an impatient, unskilled operator striving by brutal means - and behind the foreman's back - to improve his or her end-of-week production bonus.
The arrangement of spindle speeds and table feeds was very similar to that employed on the Model '0' horizontal miller - with the hand feed to the table movements being supplemented by a power system of either conventional or 'Mulitform Semi-automatic Cycle' type.
Four ranges of spindle speed were available, all direct belt driven on the high-speed range and, when fitted, through a lathe-like backgear assembly on the low. The all-high-speed models had speed ranges of:
'A' Speed Range (1450 rpm motor): 750, 1000, 1300, 1700, 2250 and 3000 rpm.
'B' Speed Range (960 rpm motor): 500, 675, 900, 1200, 1550 and 2000 rpm.
'C' Speed Range (1450 rpm motor): 500, 750, 1150, 1750, 2670 and 4000 rpm.
'D' Speed Range (960 rpm motor): 330, 500, 750, 1150, 1750 and 2670 rpm.
On the power-feed machines the table size most commonly fitted was 18.5' x 5' - and on the hand-operated versions 12' x 4.5'.
The Model '1' was unusual for a semi-production miller in having not just a conventional elevating knee but also a vertical head (with an integrated motor drive) which could be slid up and down the V-ways of the main column in the manner of a jig borer.