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By 1974, after 37 years of production, the 6" Atlas (now catalogued as the Model 3950) had been extensively redesigned and, in an effort to keep the price competitive was being sold direct from the factory. Two versions were available, one Imperial (English) and the other metric; the latter machine, known officially as the Atlas 150, was able to cut only metric threads - of which 23 were available from 0.1 mm to 3.0 mm. The leadscrew, cross feed and top slide screws were also of metric pitch and the feed dials, tailstock barrel, threading chart were all in metric calibrations - in other words, a complete metric machine rather than just a simple screwcutting conversion. The version with English calibrations offered threads between 8 and 96 t.p.i. (or optionally, at extra cost, from 5 t.p.i.) using, in addition to ordinary changewheels, a novel and ingenious system of "Gearsettes" - combinations of changewheels (sold in 6 different sets) marked with a circular metal disc that indicated the thread and feed range - together with an indication of which other gearwheels would mesh with them to provide the correct set up. As a comparison the Myford ML7 will only cut down to 8 t.p.i. with the changewheel cover closed - if coarser threads are required the cover has to be left off and gears larger than 75t used on the exposed bracket. A major change involved removing the expensive countershaft assembly, bolting the motor directly to the bench behind the lathe and fitting the headstock drive pulley in an overhung position on the left-hand end of the 17/32" bore, 1" x 10 t.p.i., headstock spindle. To tension the belt, in the absence of any means of moving the motor, a simple adjustable jockey pulley, sliding on a stud, was fitted above the belt run. Unfortunately this "modern" method of engineering a headstock drive had the effect of reducing the number of spindle speeds from 16 to 8 - but with a still-respectable range of 55 to 2300 rpm with the maker's recommended 1/3 hp 1725 rpm 60 cycle motor. Although the Emco Compact 8, Myford 254 and various modern Chinese lathes also use a similar drive system they were not the first makers of mall-lathes to employ this cost-saving set up, the EXE Company of Exeter, England, used exactly the same idea on their machines in the 1930s, as did several makers of cheaper, less highly-stressed wood-turning lathes. To save money the design of the carriage seems to have been carried across unchanged from the Mk. 1, though new patterns were used that gave a more modern, square-edged look. The cross slide still of the "short" type (which wore just the central portion of its ways) and the saddle-to-bed gib strip fitted at the back instead of the front where, though far less complicated to engineer, it provided a flexibility that would have been absent if the saddle had contacted the back of the bed directly. Although, with its chrome-plated handles, the compound slide rest looked very handsome, lurking beneath the surface was a drawback: the gib strips were made of plastic and the metal-reinforced dimples for the adjuster screws tended to snap. This did not affect the side-to-side play by allowed the slide to lift when a heavy cut is made; making, or having made, a new set of metal gibs is the obvious, low-cost solution. The tailstock could be adjusted to set over for taper turning, was solidly built and, happily, used a proper compression fitting to lock the 3/4" diameter spindle. The travel however was only 1.25 inches and the Morse taper a No. 1 - these (together with the very short cross slide) being the only serious specification failures in an otherwise well-designed little lathe sold at a price affordable by the amateur machinist. On its introduction the lathe was painted in a traditional machine-tool grey but at some unknown point, before production ceased in 1980, this was changed to a bright blue. Mechanically the early and late versions of the Mk. 2 Atlas 6-inch are identical, however, early versions appear to have been fitted with Japanese-manufactured NTN ball bearings in the headstock whilst later models used Timken tapered-roller bearings. The lathe was 34" long, 17" deep and stood 11 inches high; it weighed approximately 92 lbs without its (extra-cost) electric motor. Additional Atlas 6-inch Mk. 2 pictures can be found here..
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