Yes, why? Are you having trouble fiinding a manual too?....
Just need a motor-
lathe machine, power depends on the size and power of electric motor and gearbox lathe.
A lathe in a small wood or metal shop has a motor that connects to the lathe by belt. In a "direct drive" lathe the motor connects directly. I assume that "all gear" means direct drive, no belt. A belt drive protects the motor from damage and reduces vibration of the lathe. In addition, the belt allows you to change the gear ratio and thus the speed of the lathe without changing the motor speed. Belt drive is superior in terms of both performance and longevity.
They were built from 1968 to 1981 I beleive, I have the same model number and it is a 1970
Contact Sears or check their web site.
Single phase induction motor ( usually capacitor- start type)
Single phase induction motor ( usually capacitor- start type)
230V/1Ph/50Hz 1HP (0.75 kW)Motor Capacitor start induction motor ( single phase)
which 42" Craftsman riding mower is made by Huskvarna
Rj19lm or j19lm
No, you'll burn your lathe motor up immediately. (it might last 30 seconds before it literally smokes.) You'll need to buy and install a "buck-boost" type transformer to drop the voltage from 480 to 420V. Best to have a qualified commercial electrician wire it up if you value your lathe.
Mine is running using a Champion J19LM. You might be able to cross reference from that number
All gearboxes work the same way: there is a gear on the motor, a gear on the thing you're trying to drive, and sometimes a set of gears between the two. The ratio between the gears, plus the RPM of the motor, determines the speed of the workpiece. If the gear on the motor is larger than the gear on the workpiece the RPM of the workpiece will be higher than the speed of the motor. If the workpiece's gear is larger, the workpiece will turn slower than the motor. Given that, though, I've never seen a gearbox on a wood lathe. Wood lathes use belt drive for two reasons, the most important being safety--if you get a catch, a workpiece on a belt driven lathe won't damage you as badly as a workpiece on a gear-driven lathe. Also, belt drive won't feed vibration from the workpiece back into the motor and damage the bearings. Gear drive is used on metal lathes.