…As for the Boxford vs Myford question, Myford lathes on the used market are overpriced (driven it seems by foolish old men, or their greedy descendants, who think the Myford name will garner them more moolah).
Mostly the other way round I think, naive buyers relying on the name and what’s on offer being reassuringly expensive!
For about 40 years Myford held pole position in the hobby market due to a good combination of size, features, ergonomics and affordability. When it first appeared the ML7 dropped a bomb on all other affordable lathes, many of which were comparatively simplistic, crude and over-priced. Then the even more versatile Super 7 arrived! In short, for many years the simple answer to “what hobby lathe?” was “Myford”. Ideally a Super 7, but a ML7 was good too, and even the down-to-a-price ML10 is reasonable. (Myford’s best lathe, the 254, is rarely recommended – too expensive for hobbyists!)
Nowadays though Myford don’t hold pole position, folk memory lingers! And there’s something about the psychology of age that causes old chaps to believe everything made in yesteryear was top quality whilst everything modern has gone to the dogs. I respectfully submit this is an illusion.
Anyway, we’re left with a mythos that Myford is the right answer, strong enough for people to ignore condition when the Myford brand does not magically protect against historic wear and tear. In truth, a clapped out Myford is no better than any other lathe!
Myford lost pole position due to stiff competition from other lathes, and in the end the firm was crushed between two changes:
- Modern (1950’s) lathe designs can be made more cheaply than Myford’s more traditional layout. Whist early Far Eastern examples were often ‘too cheap’, these days they are better made and delightfully affordable. Lots of choice! Not just lathes in many sizes, but milling machines and other goodies too. These tools appeal to many purchasers.
- CNC caused industry to dump large numbers of manual machine tools in good condition into the second-hand market. When new these machines were too costly for hobby use, at least twice the price of a Myford, so they were never recommended. Forget that! Now hobbyists can afford them.
Bottom line: in 2025 the answer isn’t automatically “Myford”
Oddly there always seem to be a fair few Boxford C models wildly overpriced given the state of the lathes (cosmetically at least; rusty chucks, traps full of chips, dear God alive, do none of these sellers even consider giving the thing they’re asking over a grand for a quick wipe over and a flap with a brush?!)…
I think this another example of time marching on. For about 30 years smart hobbyists have been taking advantage of cheap industrial lathes made redundant by CNC, but this source must be drying up. And availability is falling because industrial lathes aren’t immune to wear and tear either. Supply and demand: most manufacturers got rid of their manual machines decades ago, with educational establishments following suit much later. In 1950s Britain there must have been hundreds of thousands of manual lathes beavering away, now almost all gone. Last time I looked, I got the impression that ex-industry manual machine prices are rising.
My view is that simply advising people to buy Myford based on past experience has become unhelpful. Beginners should focus more on condition, what the lathe is for, value for money, and what happens if they buy a lemon! Not the brand! Simply rushing to buy other than Myford isn’t the answer, for example, a lot of bother results from buying ex-industrial if the machine needs an industrial power supply! And though ex-industrial lathes are cheap, watch out! spares will be full price and maybe unaffordable.
Dave