Delta Unisaw Serial Numbers 4,9/5 7861 reviews
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Photo © Martin King Photography Early Beginnings In 1919, Herb Tautz started Delta Manufacturing Company in his garage. In 1923 he started manufacturing a small scrollsaw based on a design licensed from its inventor, Carl Moberg. The saws were sold through a subsidiary, and wore the 'Delta Specialty Co.'

In the late 1920s and into the early '30s, Delta rebadged a 12' bandsaw made. Beginning in 1929, Tautz started identifying Delta Specialty Co. As 'a subsidiary of Delta Manufacturing Co.' In early 1932 the 'Delta Specialty Co.'

Name was dropped. A Period of Ownership Changes and Acquisitions In 1939, Tautz sold the company to a partnership consisting of Marshall Field, Charles G.

Unisaw Serial Number Lookup

Glen Huey is a former managing editor of Popular Woodworking Magazine. 8 thoughts on “ Delta Unisaw. By looking up the serial number you were able to. I've been combing the market for a good, used tablesaw, but I'm confused by the wide variation in Delta Unisaw model numbers that are out there. Clearly, the serial. I've been combing the market for a good, used tablesaw, but I'm confused by the wide variation in Delta Unisaw model numbers that are out there. Clearly, the serial.

Cushing, and H. Campbell Stuckeman; Tautz went on to run, which rebadged and sold Delta products overseas. The Delta name was difficult to trademark in other jursidictions so the Tauco name was used instead. We are uncertain of the ownership of Tauco and it is possible that it existed before the 1939 Marshall Field buyout. Tauco label from a scroll saw that was exported to South Africa In 1942, Marshall Field and partners sold it to Timken Detroit Axle Co., part of an early conglomerate controlled by Willard Rockwell.

In 1945, Delta was sold to, which had until very recently been known as the Pittsburgh Equitable Meter and Manufacturing Co., and which had just purchased In late 1945 or early '46, Rockwell bought; although both Arcade and Rockwell/Delta had a 'Homecraft' line of machinery, none of Arcade's Homecraft designs were ever sold by Rockwell/Delta; they did, however, use Arcade's foundry and machining facilities. Label from a Delta Homecraft machine. In 1948, Rockwell/Delta bought, makers of a line of turret-arm radial arm saws that competed well against radial arm saws. It appears that the saws and their motors were manufactured for Rockwell by, which had already been making motors for Rockwell, and possibly for Delta before the purchase by Rockwell. In 1953 Rockwell/Delta purchased the, a Canadian company that made the Beaver Power Tools line that dominated the Canadian hobbyist market. In 1960 they bought Porter-Cable Machine Co., maker of handheld power tools.

In 1963 they bought Buckeye Tool Co., maker of pneumatic tools. In the early 1970s, Delta manufactured the machines for department store chain J.

Saw

The Rockwell International Years In 1973, Rockwell Manufacturing Co. Merged with North American Rockwell Corp., and the resulting operation was Rockwell International Corp.

Serial Numbers Nero

The former Callander Foundry continued to operated as The Rockwell International era was marked by an emphasis on corporate financial performance and quality suffered on some products. In 1981, the line of handheld power tools was sold to Pentair Corp., which operated it as the Porter-Cable line—a name that had disappeared shortly after Rockwell had bought the Porter-Cable Machine Co. In 1984, Rockwell International sold the 'machine tool' (woodworking and metalworking machinery) division to Pentair. Pentair operated it as the Delta International Machinery Corp., which included the Canadian operations.

The Pentair Years and Black & Decker In the early '90s, Delta bough the subsidiary of; their main product was an edge sander that remains the basis for Delta's edge sander. Also beginning in the early 1990s, of Green Bay, Wisconsin, manufactured all of Delta's American-made drill presses, an arrangement that continued for about fifteen years. In 1995, Delta bought rip-fence maker In the late 1990s, Pentair merged Delta's and Porter-Cable's manufacturing operations in Jackson, Tennessee. In 2000, the two divisions were formally merged. On July 19, 2004, Black & Decker Corp.

Announced that it would purchase Pentair's power tools group, including the Porter-Cable, Delta, DeVilbiss Air Power, Oldham Saw, and FLEX brands. B&D already owned the DeWalt brand. In January 2011, Stanley Black & Decker sold the Delta brand to a Taiwanese power tool manufacturer, Chang Type Industrial Co., Ltd., that was already manufacturing benchtop tools for them. The new company is Delta Power Equipment Corp. The CEO has said that the Delta products currently manufactured in the United States will continue to be made there.

Delta Unisaw Serial Numbers

Delta Resources. The above history was cribbed from by Keith Bohn. Keith's history article also provides information on specific product: when they were introduced, and how they changed over the years., an article that demystifies the complex web of Delta serial number systems. Paint colors, how to rebuild a scrollsaw air pump, a type study of Delta cast-iron stands, information specific to bandsaw, lathes, Unisaws, and more. Keith Bohn's 1939 Unisaw, S/N A-100—the earliest Unisaw known Parts and Manuals Delta provides owners manuals and parts lists for a variety of machines, including many of those from the Rockwell and Homecraft lines. Check the first; some manuals are available there for free download. To request a manual and/or parts list, call the Delta Hot Line at (800) 223-7278.

Be sure to have either a model number or serial number handy. If you are calling from Canada and need information regarding Rockwell/Beaver machines, you can call Delta in Canada toll-free at (800)463-3582. There is a small fee for manuals sent by mail. Be sure to check out the 'Publication Reprints' tab, above, where you will find a list of over 500 manuals and catalogs covering the entire history of Delta, from the 1920s to the present. Well, there isn't much information past the mid-1980s but Delta can provide information on those more recent machines. Resources from other web sites.

—The home page for the modern Delta Machinery Company. —History of the company from the Delta Machinery web site.

Some of these facts are in dispute. —Delta Accessories and Parts.

—Delta Parts and information on rebuilding a Unisaw. —A nice article on just just what the title says. —Has lots of parts list on-line for Delta, Rockwell and Beaver machines. Delta-branded Products from Other Makers Delta mostly made their own products, but especially in the early years they sometimes OEM'd machines from other makers.

For example, Delta's No. 385 12' bandsaw was manufactured by / for Delta back in the late 1920s to early 1930s. And the Model 23-600 6' old-style bench grinder was made by Doerr Electric Corp. Information Sources. Thanks to Keith Bohn and many other members of the Old Woodworking Machines forum for contributing almost all of the information here.

A search of provided a few snippets from 1925 to 1930 mentioning Delta Manufacturing Company of Milwaukee, Wis. The earliest mention we have seen of Delta Manufacturing Company in an ad is: 'Delta Specialty Company / Division of Delta Manufacturing Co. / 1661-67 Holton St.

Milwaukee, Wis.' .

Delta Unisaw Serial Number Lookup Dm 6988

The 'Delta Specialty Co.' Name appeared in the April 1932 issue of Popular Mechanics: 'Delta Specialty Company (Division of Delta Mfg. The following month, the ad read, simply, 'Delta Manufacturing Co.' .

Information on the Marshall Field partnership comes from patent records; click on the 'Patents' tab and then search the page for Marshall Field. Information on the January 2011 sale of the Delta brand came from the. Further information on the January 2011 sale came from an. The buyer is Chang Type Industrial Co., Ltd., of Taiwan, a company also known as TOTY. 'The new company has been renamed Delta Power Equipment Corp.' PLEASE NOTE: VintageMachinery.org was founded as a public service to amateur and professional woodworkers who enjoy using and/or restoring vintage machinery. Our purpose is to provide information about vintage machinery that is generally difficult to locate.

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