Mitchell Of Keighley Lathe [portable] 💯 Essential

It is for the , the pump repairer , or the vintage tractor restorer . It is for the person who needs to turn a rusty axle down to size, or re-sleeve a hydraulic ram, and doesn't want to take 20 passes to do it.

In the pantheon of British machine tools—alongside Colchester, Harrison, and Myford—the holds a unique, gritty corner. These lathes aren't pretty. They aren't flashy. But ask any toolmaker over the age of 60, and they will tell you: the Mitchell is the lathe that won the war. mitchell of keighley lathe

Do you own a Mitchell? Share your serial number or restoration photos in the comments below. We’d love to see the old beast still earning its keep. It is for the , the pump repairer

If you treat a Mitchell with respect—keep the oil wicks wet and avoid crashing the carriage—it will outlive your grandchildren. These lathes aren't pretty

If you spend any time in a "dark satanic mill" turned makerspace, or browsing the used listings for a lathe that won’t fold under pressure, you have heard the whisper: "Get a Mitchell."

Production peaked roughly between the 1930s and the 1960s. The most common survivors today are the or the "Mitchell 8-inch" center lathes—referring to the center height (14" to 16" swing, in modern terms). The "Built Like a Bunker" Engineering Why do people hunt for Mitchells today? Simple: Mass.