Great, the carpet should help protect the lathe bed when you get onto doing that.
The plaque pins, are you sure they're not screws with their slots full of paint ?
Heh heh, do you think I'd point a sandblaster at a lathe, without first protecting all the precision surfaces?
Yes, the roll of carpet will be useful.
Those pins - nameplate fasteners are virtually always hammer-in pins. Very hard steel, with spiral flutes that cut into the base metal. The pin heads are deliberately featureless domes, to make them impossible to grip. The best way to get them out is with a pin punch from the other side, if the holes go all the way through.
Turns out the holes on this motor frame
don't go all the way through, so that left the fallback methods:
1. Grind small flats on opposite sides of the head, to give something for vicegrips to grab. Then pulling and turning at the same time, they unscrew. But this way the pins lose their original appearance.
2. If you want to not damage the pins, so they can be reused: Cold chisel with a sharp cutting edge. Put the edge where the pin head rests on the plaque, tap sharply with hammer. Trying not to dink the soft brass plaque, while working round the head of the pin. The idea is to loosen the pin in the hole, and also work it out a tiny bit. That tiny bit gives vicegrips a lip to grab, and then you can twist the pin out.
Anyway, they're out now. See pic. Very minimal damage to the plaques. One pin head was already partly sheared off, I think from when it was initially hammered in. I got the stub out, fortunately.
Will you turn a step (spigot) on the 2 socket pieces for the tubing ?
More like a groove, to position the tube. I'll run a bolt through the middle of the set to keep them tight, while it's in the pipe welder thingy (a rough improvisation from a while back.) The steel of the impact socket really doesn't like machining with a silversteel cutting bit. Have to dig out some tungsten bits.