Bridgeport Mill Serial Number Identification

Bridgeport mill serial number identification guide
A full view of a Sharp Machinery 3 axis vertical mill. An example of a Bridgeport clone. The head is mounted on the ram by joints that allow it to swivel in two directions. The ram can slide back and forth on the turret, which can swivel on the column. The table sits on the knee, and it can move horizontally in the X and Y axes. The knee rides up and down the column (one form of Z-axis movement), and the head contains a quill in which the spindle can slide up and down (another form of Z-axis movement or, when the head is swiveled, an additional axis).
The Bridgeport logo as cast into the head of a Bridgeport Knee Mill.
Bridgeport mill serial number location
A Bridgeport variant that has been retrofitted with motors and controls to function as a CNC machine. Sharp Machinery brand mill and Anilam brand CNC controllers.

Bridgeport is a historic brand of milling machine and machining center produced by Bridgeport Machines, Inc. from 1938 to 2004, and machine tool conglomerate Hardinge, Inc. since.

Further Bridgeport Company History. Bridgeport puts the same serial number on matching parts. As with its knee-mill operations, Bridgeport has streamlined. I just bid on a Bridgeport Mill and my wife says that 15 seconds before the auction ends someone will outbid you. Perhaps but if they don't and I really own this thing, does anyone have some data on serial numbers and date of manufacture? Again, if, I'm looking at a variant of the collet size, not R8 but ER 32.

History[edit]

The original corporation was founded in Bridgeport, Connecticut and started selling its machines in 1938. It became famous in the following decades for small- and medium-sized vertical milling machines, with an iconic form of quill-equipped multiple-speed vertical milling head with a ram-on-turret mounting over a knee-and-column base. The American Precision Museum's biography of Rudolph Bannow[1] reports that he conceived the iconic design in 1936 as the logical machine on which to mount the milling head already being built by the Bridgeport Pattern and Model Works (which he owned with partner Magnus Wahlstrom). The first Bridgeport milling machine (serial number 1) is on display at the Museum.[2]

The company’s manual milling machines have been so successful that the term 'Bridgeport' is often used to refer to any vertical milling machine of the same configuration, regardless of make. Many other companies have cloned the form. Today the Bridgeport brand still produces this configuration in both manual and computer numeric control (CNC) versions, although tool-changer-equipped machining centers are now equally prominent members of the product line.

Bridgeport manual milling machines have come in many types and sizes over the years, including (but not limited to) the C head (original), R head (heavy duty C head), M head, J head (and high speed, 5440 RPM version), 2J1 1/2 head (1.5 HP Vari-Speed), 2J2 (2HP Vari-speed), and Series II head (4HP Vari-speed). All of the heads offer variable speeds, the earlier ones via a step pulley (cone pulley) and the later ones via either continuously variable transmission (CVT) systems or variable-speed drive. Typical table sizes are 9″ × 49″ (Y and X, respectively) and 10″ × 54″. Machine tapers for toolholding include Morse tapers (on early models) and the R8 taper (a widely used standard that Bridgeport created) on most models. Both Morse and R8 allow for both collets and solid holders; and a drill chuck can be held by either of the latter. Machine slides are of the dovetail type, and rotary bearings are mostly of the roller and ball types.

Bridgeport Machines Inc. timeline[edit]

  • 1927 Rudolph F. Bannow purchased the Bridgeport Pattern and Model Works
  • 1929 Rudolph F. Bannow and Magnus Wahlstrom began business Association
  • 1932 First Universal Milling Attachment shipped (to Atlas Tool of Bridgeport)
  • 1938 Aug. 8, First Bridgeport Turret Milling Machine shipped (to Precision Castings Corp. of Syracuse, N.Y.)
  • 1939 Incorporation of Bridgeport Machines
  • 1941 Addition to Factory – 2,400 square feet
  • 1944 Addition to Factory – 4.200 square feet
  • 1945 Jan., 5,000 Bridgeport Miller sold (Machinery Sales of Calif.)
  • 1946 Addition of Factory - 5,190 square feet
  • 1948 Oct., 10,000 Bridgeport Miller sold
  • 1951 Bridgeport Machines Inc. moved to 500 Lindley Street (Dec. 1951 – First Bridgeport Miller shipped from here – 14,476th Miller)
  • 1953 April 30, Profit Sharing Plan started
  • 1954 March 17, 20,000 Bridgeport Miller shipped
  • 1955 Sept., Addition to Factory – 3,968 square feet
  • 1957 Additions to Factory totaling 22,821 square feet
  • 1959 Jan. 30, Adcock-Shipley licensed (England)
  • 1960 Jan., Opened Plant II at Remer St. (in original plant)
  • 1960 March 17, True Trace Corporation of California purchased
  • 1960 June 6, 50,000 Bridgeport Miller came off the assembly line
  • 1962 June 23, Death of Rudolph F. Bannow, President
  • 1962 July 30, Magnus Wahlstrom assumes Presidency of Bridgeport Machines Inc.
  • 1963 Spring, Addition of Factory - 17,075 square feet
  • 1963 April 30, 500th employee hired
  • 1963 Sept. 20, First Open House at Bridgeport Machines Inc.
  • 1965 Feb., 80,000th Bridgeport Miller came off the assembly line
  • 1965 Aug., Auditorium, cafeteria and additional office facilities completed
  • 1965 Nov. 1, 600th employee hired
  • 1965 Nov., Finished renovating and built addition for Plant 3
  • 1966 Dec. 12, 700th employee hired
  • 1967 March 6, 100,000 Bridgeport Miller came off the assembly line
  • 1967 June 11, Open House for employees and families
  • 1968 March 1, Bridgeport Machines Inc. sold to Textron Inc.

References[edit]

Bridgeport Mill Serial Number Guide

  1. ^American Precision Museum 1992.
  2. ^Earls 2010.
  3. ^'A Brief History of Bridgeport Machines Inc'. The Bridgeport Room brochure. 1968.

Bibliography[edit]

  • American Precision Museum (1992), 'Rudolph Bannow (1897-1962)', Machine Tool Hall of Fame, American Precision Museum, retrieved 2013-02-10.
  • Earls, Alan R. (November–December 2010), 'Celebrating America's Love Affair with Machining', Today's Machining World, 6 (9), archived from the original on 2011-02-17.

External links[edit]

Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Bridgeport_(machine_tool_brand)&oldid=867623897'
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  1. Cast Iron
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    Location of J Head Bridgeport Serial Numbers

    I have a J head vertical mill with a 1 HP motor and speed change via pulleys.
    Where do I find the serial number for this machine? If it's on the knee, it's hiding well.
    The serial number on the head - on the data plate and casting - is J-148488.
    I'm assuming I'll need this information when I order parts.
  2. Diamond
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    The s/n is stamped in the top of the knee under the chip shield in large letters.
    Move the table all the way to the rear, then move the chip shield to the rear to reveal the number.
    - Leigh
  3. Cast Iron
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    Thanks, good thing it wasn't a snake!

    The chip guard is missing. The serial number was obscured by a nice thick layer of congealed brown oil.
    The list at metalwebnews ages the machine at 1972.
    Does the 12 over BR have siginificance?
  4. Stainless
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    That indicates its a 12' knee. The older 'BR' serial numbers are for the 9' knee (including round ram body mills).
  5. morsetaper2
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    Originally Posted by AeroE
    I'm pretty sure it designates travel of knee way. I believe there was both a 9 & 12 inch knee available??
    Edit: I see Ohio Mike is faster on the keyboard than me :-)
    Last edited by morsetaper2; 12-27-2010 at 06:40 PM. Reason: Ohio Mike Types faster than me :-)
  6. Stainless
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    Following up with a question of my own... Does anyone know when they introduced the 12' knee travel?
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Bridgeport Mill Serial Number Identification

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Bridgeport Mill Serial Number Identification Guide


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