Posted by Ian Bradley 7 on 02/04/2019 13:40:03:
Thank for all your replies guys you put my mind at rest. Now I have seen 7 x 12 and 7 x 14 on Ebay from the Czech republic, is this a risky purchase ? where did you guys source your lathes ? Ian.
Just now is a bad time to buy from any member of the European Union, Iceland, Lichtenstein, or Norway.
The UK voted to leave the EU in June 2106 and is committed to exit in 10 days time. Unfortunately Parliament is struggling to agree terms and there is currently no agreement – all the exit options have been rejected.
This may result in a 'No Deal Exit' on the 12th. If 'No Deal' is executed, then all current trade arrangements with the EU become undefined. This effects consumer protection, payments and liability for tax. With one exception, which has been firmly rejected, the other options are unclear too.
At present the government cannot provide any detail, rather it puts the onus on purchasers to check: government advice can be read in a few minutes here. At the moment buying from a clearly British supplier is much less risky.
The problem is uncertainty – no-one knows what the rules are. Uncomfortably, whilst the relationship with the EU is getting most attention, 34 of 40 other international trade arrangements have also failed to agree on time.
Europeans and other nations wishing to buy British Goods and Services face a mirror image of the same issues.
In any case I'd advise against buying cheap lathes direct from the Far East or any vendor without a track record, here or in Europe. Yes you can save money, but if you happen to get a dud from a fly-by-night, all the advantages of buying locally under UK Consumer Law from a seller with a valued reputation are missing. You're on your own, and a cross-border dispute will be worse until the practical consequences of Brexit are nailed down.
Most of my stuff came from Warco and ArcEuro.
Dave
Edited By SillyOldDuffer on 02/04/2019 16:00:11