…Mark has landed on a good used British lathe, but has made the mistake of working backwards from that outcome to a suggestion that buying a used British lathe is a no-brainer inasmuch as you will automatically get a better lathe than a new Chinese alternative and buying one is never going to be any less straightforward.
… however using a Chinese lathe is akin to using a 4×4 lump of wood to hit in a 6 inch nail, it will take longer to do, its not pleasent & you will have to faff around doing it but it will get the job done, eventually ,,,
Generalisations are unhelpful. Please name names so we can avoid these horrible lathes!
Possibly Mark was unlucky though? I started with a mini-lathe and it did the job apart from being too small! I swapped it for a Warco 280 which is still going strong after 10 years. It is not, repeat not, “akin to using a 4×4 lump of wood to hit in a 6 inch nail“. Perhaps I was lucky!
Compared with the pre-owned ex-industrial lathes I’ve played with, my WM280 is mid-range. It performs better than worn industrial examples and not as delightfully as those in good nick. Reason: condition matters far more than Brand or country of origin. My WM280 is not so rough that I’ve felt the need to improve it, and it’s much more rigid than Mark believes – heavier than a Super 7. I confirm a new WM280 is far more pleasant to drive than a well-bashed Harrison L5A; that said I don’t believe all L5A’s are rubbish because the one I tried was in poor condition.
A great deal of what’s said about lathes seems based on belief rather than a technical assessment that considers cost against a Use Case. The Use Case may be vital: identify what you need and try to satisfy that within a budget. Not smart to start in Formula 1 by buying a Vauxhall Corsa! Or to buy a F1 car to go shopping in Tescos!
My hobby Use Case is different to Mark’s: Chinese hobby lathes meet my needs; I didn’t want to waste time hunting down a second-hand machine; the choice of size and features available off-the-shelf was helpful; and I wanted vendor support and consumer protection in the event something went wrong. Above a certain price, I like to keep purchasing risks down by buying locally from sellers with a reputation to protect.
I suggest potential buyers should keep their needs in mind when looking at internet advice: reasons that make sense to others may not apply to them.
Amadeal and other UK suppliers provide vendor support rather than unique machines. It’s what they do when things go wrong that matters, customer support, not how sexy the machine is. Extreme example: I once came across an online vendor selling lathes at bargain prices, marvellous! The devil was in the detail: in the event a dud was delivered, the purchaser had to return the tool at his cost to a depot in Germany : major hassle and money! Nor was it clear the price included tax and import duty whilst a close look at what else was on sale revealed the seller was a box-shifter, offering no technical support whatsoever. UK consumer protection did not apply. Buying bargains from folk like this is much riskier than buying from Amadeal; painful if anything goes wrong!
I don’t know how well, or not, Amadeal respond to problems because I’ve never bought from them. No reason not too. They aren’t criticised much and pop up here occasionally offering sensible advice. I have an untested warm feeling about them.
ArcEuro get a consistently good press and they sorted a minor problem out for me with no fuss. Their range of machines is small though.
I bought all my big machines from Warco, and they replaced an expensive lost in transit item without blinking My experience is positive.
A few years ago Chester scored several black marks on the web by not sorting problems out quickly, but that seems fixed – I’ve not noticed any complaints recently. No personal experience.
Axminster offered an extended guarantee and ran courses, but I think they stopped. The one item I bought from them just worked, so their customer service is untested by me. Ditto RDG and several others.
MachineMart often have machines on display so you can see what you’re buying, except they’re pricey. The salespersons in my local didn’t know anything about lathes, whereas I’ve had good pre and post sales advice from both ArcEuro and Warco.
Important I feel to manage expectations. A £20k industrial machine is carefully inspected and comes with a lot of support. Chance of a faulty machine being delivered are low, and if the worst happens the maker will be all over it. Big money involved!
Not how inexpensive hobby faults are managed! To keep costs down lathes are lightly inspected at the factory and sold by a retailer, so there’s a somewhat higher risk machines might be faulty on delivery. If so, it’s treated as a consumer purchase. Contact the seller immediately, and, if the problem is serious they replace or refund. Instead of expensively guaranteeing quality, defective hobby tools are just swapped. A duff machine arriving is annoying, not a financial disaster.
Sorting out a faulty second-hand purchase is a different game entirely.
I get the impression the market is changing. Ten years ago there were plenty of ex-industrial machines about, fewer now, and prices have crept up. Myfords used to be in high-demand, over-priced in my opinion, but that seems to have changed too – more about, and people aren’t pushing prices up by chasing them aggressively. Chinese lathes were assumed to be greatly inferior when I entered the hobby, less so now. I think that’s because many buyers found them to be much better than the knockers believed. Far from perfect though. I expected to upgrade from Chinese to British, and it wasn’t necessary. Buying new Chinese got what I wanted at a reasonable price and the lathe does all I need. It’s the simplest low-risk way of entering the hobby, not necessarily the best.
Dave