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A very successful machine-tool manufacturer, the R. K. LeBlond Machine Tool Company of Cincinnati, Ohio had, since its founding in 1888, outlived five production plants, each in turn being replaced by a bigger and better-equipped facility. By 1929 their 440,000 square-foot factory, set in pleasant grounds at the corner of Madison and Edwards Roads, Hyde Park, was employing some 900 people, all devoted exclusively to the manufacture of heavy industrial lathes from ordinary "engine" types (backgeared and screwcutting to the UK reader) to massive, 60,000 pounds crankshaft-turning models equipped to finish all eight crankpins on an eight-cylinder engine at the rate of twenty cranks per hour. Whilst that might be considered a modest achievement set against 21st century machining times it was, for the era, a significant technical achievement and enabled LeBlond to offer state-of-the-art manufacturing equipment to automobile and other mass-production makers. Unfortunately, in 1930, LeBlond faced, as did all manufacturing industry, the Great Depression and its accompanying slump in trade. In order to survive, the company decided to widen its market and introduced, alongside it's long-established range of heavy engine lathes, a range of lighter, more-affordable models designed to appeal to the lower end of the market: better-off home-experimenters and model-makers, research departments, training schools, motor-repair garages, the self-employed and similar buyers. However, even with keen pricing and the backing of the respected LeBlond name, success could not be guaranteed for the new range, branded "Regal", entered a section of the industry already dominated by, amongst others, such well-established makers as South Bend, Sheldon, Barnes and Seneca Falls. Thankfully for the shareholders, LeBlond's approach was well thought out: although the lathes would only weight from one-third to one half as much, they would all mirror the quality and desirability of the company's industrial equivalents. They would have the most up-to-date specification possible, be easy to operate, come equipped ready for use and be introduced as a complete range with 10, 12, 14, 16 and 18-inch swings (actual capacity was always slightly more) Headstocks would be all-geared (no alternative flat or V-belt drive versions would be offered) with lever-operated speed changes and the exclusive use of built-on, self-contained motor drives with power transmitted to the headstock input shaft by the use of the recently-introduced (circa 1930) V-belt. All would have a proper screwcutting gearbox, a separate feed-rod to drive the sliding and surfacing feeds (engaged by a fool-proof, snap-engagement system) and a robust carriage assembly whose design was not compromised by having to allow for a gap bed. As the sole concession to hard times, the least expensive model, the superb and compact 10-inch, could be had to special order with a set of changewheels instead of the standard-fit screwcutting gearbox and without the power sliding and surfacing apron. Very popular in the UK during WW2 (and with many examples still in use in the 21st century) production of the 10-inch was to end as early as 1945 - though other models, constantly developed and refined, continued into the 1980s. Notable changes in design occurred in approximately 1944 and (in very much more radial form) during the late 1950s when an even wider variety of models and types was introduced (these lathes also being built by Sheraton in Australia as the Cub, Cadet (6.75" x 28") and Diploma (7.7" x 22") with the larger industrial models being called Challenger (7" x 35.5") and Defiance). The two earlier types of regal are easily distinguished by the disposition of their headstock controls and the final model (in standard, Servo-shift and sliding-bed forms) by its modern, very angular lines. Although the larger Regal lathes in 21 and 24-inch sizes were enormous machines, comparable in some respects to the proper very heavy-duty LeBlond engine lathes, unfortunately there was an attempt to stretch them beyond their limits with the introduction of what amounted to very large-bore "Oil Country" headstocks. In the 1980s LeBlond had tried to produce their lathes, particularly the lighter "Regal" models, all (or in part) at a low-cost plant in Singapore. This was the last gasp for the company and, when the new Japanese owners, Makino, had finished with them, they had built their last proper engine lathes. Unfortunately the patterns, core boxes, jigs and fixtures had all been shipped to Singapore and, when the end came, all were ordered to be burned or scrapped - a decision that precluded anyone from trying to resurrect the machines. Continued below:
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