Well , this gives me some more to think about thank you guys .
Helps enormously to know the type of work the lathe is intended for but a beginner may not know where his interests will take him. For example:
- For clockmaking, best to buy a watchmakers lathe.
- Something up to Super 7 size is good for general purpose work in a small workshop.
- For motorbikes and above, Super 7 size is a bit small, and too small for repairing railway wagons.
In ye olden days, buying a lathe was a lifetime investment. When the ML7 appeared in 1947 it was by far the best option within a hobby budget, and then the even better Super 7 was affordable at a stretch. Myford held pole position for 30 years, but today there are many alternatives.
I started out with a Chinese Mini-lathe. I bought one to learn on, not as a keeper. Several advantages: an easy 2-person lift; quiet enough to be used indoors; all basic functions; powerful enough to cut steel; big enough to tackle many jobs (80% of a Myford); widely available with delivery sorted; buying new means condition is low risk; and affordable!
Using a mini-lathe for a couple of years taught me a great deal about what to look for in a lathe, and I also settled on the type and scale of work I was going to major on. I discovered that mini-lathes are nowhere near as bad as many fervently believe, certainly not “a kit of parts”. They are far from perfect. I could be unkind about the change-gears, which work OK, but are a pain to set-up, gritty feel, and various other shortcomings. In short, getting the best out of a mini-lathe takes more skill and time. In my case the mini-lathe’s chief sin was being too small for about 30% of the work I do.
So, I sold it and bought a bigger Chinese lathe. I wanted the replacement to be about 20% bigger than a Super7, and have speed control and other modern features. A WM280 was just the right size and weight to fit in my workshop alongside a bench, mill and other machines. Runs off an ordinary power socket so no fuss with the electrics. Expecting to do heavier work, I intended to upgrade again later to an ex-industrial machine but never happened – a WM280 and WM18 mill between them do everything I need.
You might consider a similar approach. Buy a Chinese lathe to gain experience, and change it if it’s no good.
Have you discovered lathes.co.uk? Lots of good information about the pros and cons of older lathes and mills. It doesn’t cover Far Eastern machines.
Dave