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After some time as an independent organisation, Pratt and Whitney became part of the Niles-Bement-Pond group of companies. One of the most famous names in machine tools, the Niles part of the Niles-Bement-Pond equation came from two brothers, James and Jonathan Niles, who left their native Connecticut in 1845 to establish a company in Cincinnati to repair boats on the Ohio river. Their business grew rapidly and they were soon able to afford the luxury of designing their own power plants - which led them to building steam-powered sugar mills delivered to the booming plantations in Louisiana - by the very same river boats that had created their original wealth. By 1853 the firm was a major employer, providing jobs for between four and five-hundred workers. The firm's foray into machine tool building came about almost by accident for, during the Civil War, the firm, needing another lathe, found that non was available quickly enough, and so instructed two young mechanics, George A. Gray Jr. and Alexander Gordon to built one. So successful was their design that before long they found themselves in charge of a new department manufacturing nothing but machine tools. In 1866 the Niles brother were bought out by a partnership of Gaff (a wealthy distiller in Aurora, Ill.), Gray & Gordon . The Niles name was retained as the "Niles Tool Works" - since their main interest was in the manufacture of machine tools. The Niles factory in Cincinnati stood on a site needed for the new Pennsylvania Railroad station, and the Company moved Hamilton, Ohio, where water power was available from a canal along the Miami River. Expanded enormously, the Niles Tool Works was soon rivalling the Sellers firm in Philadelphia as a builder and exporter of large machine tools. In 1898 Niles purchased control of the Pond Machine Tool Works and, during the next year, a great consolidation took place with the Niles-Bement-Pond Co. being formed from several major builders of large machine tools including the Niles Tool Works, Bement, Miles & Co., the Pond Machine Tool Company and the Philadelphia Engineering Works. Pratt & Whitney were bought out two years later; the company was being torn apart by internal bickering and was unable to resist a take-over bid. Among the companies acquired later were John Bertram in Canada, the Ridgeway Machine Company (which built boring mills in Pennsylvania) and the Milwaukee Machine Tool Company, a lathe builder as well as numerous other small companies. As a result of expanding markets, improved exports, a strong home trade and their take-over activities, Niles-Bement-Pond became, for a time, the largest machine-tool company in the world. In 1920, the Company's catalog, issued from their headquarters in New York, was a huge 635-page hard-backed book, with full-page halftones of the company's main products. Some were series production items, but many were highly specialised machines designed for munitions and similar military work. The range of products was so great, from toolmaker's flats and slip gages to armour plate bending presses, from precision bench to vertical lathes with 42-foot diameter tables, that the company could offer to undertake the construction and complete equipping of new industrial plants with NBP machine tools, cranes, railway engines, track and associated services.
Pratt & Whitney No. 3 Precision Bench lathe
Long synonymous with the finest-quality American engineering, Pratt & Whitney produced a range of machine tools amongst which were a series of beautifully made and elegantly proportioned precision bench lathes. The machine illustrated below, and its immediate forebears (which lacked the large cast-in Pratt & Whitney letters on the bed and may have been sold under the model designation 880) were available from before WW1 until shortly before WW2. Later P & W plain-turning precision lathes, of the 3C Type and not dissimilar to the early models, had enclosed headstocks and were mounted on self-contained, underdrive cabinet stands. P & W were not the only American makers of such machines and firms such as Levin, Bottum, American Watch Tool Company, B.C.Ames, Bottum, Hjorth, Potter, Pratt & Whitney, Rivett, Wade, Waltham Machine Works, Wade, Pratt & Whitney, Rivett, Cataract, Hardinge, Elgin, Remington, Sloan & Chace, and (though now very rare) Frederick Pearce, W.H.Nichols, Ballou & Whitcombe, Sawyer Watch Tool Co., Engineering Appliances, Fenn-Sadler the "Cosa Corporation of New York" and UND..
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Pratt & Whitney 7" and 10" Precision Lathe (3.5" and 5" centre height) Prior to World War 2, this particular pattern of lathe was greatly favoured by professional tool, watch, clock and instrument makers for their critically-dimensioned work (see American patents: 1980336 and 210177) Also advertised in a now rarely found 10-inch version (5-inch centre height) the bed length was usually 32", giving 16" between centres. The spindle was made from tool steel, hardened and ground and running in a plain bearings of the same material with a double taper at the chuck end and a plain cylindrical bearing at the other. In order to achieve the necessary accuracy and long life associated with type of set-up in 1899 the American Machinist reported that P & W had built a set of specialised grinding machines that employed diamond laps to finish both the bearings and the spindles. As an interesting aside (although other companies had also developed successful models) P & W were also responsible for the design, again in 1899, of what was to become almost the standard machine for the manufacture of bicycle ball bearing cups and cones; it was capable of running up to 28,500 rpm and working to within limits of 0.00025". When equipped with the maker's two-speed countershaft unit and a 3/4 H.P. motor, the lathe had 6 spindle speeds from 144 to 1208 rpm. The left-hand face of the headstock cone pulley was equipped with a ring of 48 indexing holes - with the option of a 60-hole ring to special order. Although one catalog listed both headstock and tailstock tapers as a No. 4 Jarno, examples have been found with 2 Morse Taper headstock spindles and ones taking 3PN collets - the latter assumed to be the maker's original fitting. However, the common (hardened) 3C (and 3AT?) collets can be adapted to fit if the keyway is lengthened. Tailstocks with both the "maker's own" and No. 1 Morse Tapers have been found - though the latter may well be the result of "home modifications" by an owner keen to take advantage of readily available tooling. Many special accessories were also offered including: screwcutting, grinding, milling, power filing, special tailstocks, a "Complete Workshop" Unit, a Double Lathe Mounting and a Geared Countershaft Drive Unit. Even during WW2 there was a demand for this type of high-precision bench lathe, Pratt & Whitney producing, between 1940 and 1945, the Model M-1689 (shown below). Unfortunately, for today's owners, the lathe was unusual in having a miniature CamLock spindle nose in a size a D1-2 - a fitting for which it almost impossible to find chucks, faceplates or any other kind of fitting. A dimensioned drawing is here
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