Posted by Hollowpoint on 21/07/2019 12:02:53:
This kinda confirms what I suspected. It seems most people own several lathes before they settle on one.
Pretty much inevitable given that most folk starting out don't really know what they are going to end up doing or what they really need to do it with. Not to mention the usual real world affordability and accommodation issues that tend to trample all over our dreams.
Mine :-
Portass S :- Cheap, bought with smokes'n beer not money, broken bearing cap and as built used the leadscrew as a guide on one side rather than the bed. Clean, refurb, paint and trade on.
Pools Special :- Pretty good really but lacked dials and had to go when the first SouthBend appeared.
SouthBend 9C :- Bare machine with worn out countershaft unit. Clean, refurb, build bench with improved 6 speed countershaft incorporating clutch and used happily until sold at a profit when next SouthBend appeared.
SouthBend 9A :- Bare machine sans countershaft but a gearbox at last. Clean, refurb, built bench added 15 speed countershaft with clutch. Amazed how little wear in bearing and bed considering the feed drive key was narrowed down to almost nothing. Eventually Franken-lathed with Boxfor saddle and compound. Sold at a profit to fund
SouthBend Heavy 10 Toolroom version with all the bits. Late type on rectangular cabinet stand with D1-4 spindle. No wear beyond a little backlash in the screws. Previous owner had painted the stand in the worlds worst purpley-blue-mauve colour. So horrid that no camera would capture it! Chased a few errors of assembly out and learned to live with the colour. This was gonna be my keeper so it got a brand new P-B precision three jaw costing more than the lathe.
But the short travel tailstock drove me nuts as I frequently popped things out. Not good for the ever uncertain Clive temper. On a particularly bad day I saw
Smart & Brown 1024 VSL, metric version, advertised reasonably locally for just over £1,100 with pretty much all equipment but only a partial set of transposing gears. Was asked to find a lathe for a mate of a mate same day. He bought the Heavy 10. After paying transport et al the swop cost me £300. I kept the good chuck of course. 1024 got a taper turning attachment, the missing transposing gears and some re-engineering in the banjo / drop gear area to make switching from metric to imperial threading easier. I'm keeping him.
Pratt & Whitney Model B 12 x 30. Actually swings almost 14". Scrapyard rescue when I needed a heftier machine in Heavy 10 days. 1943 or 44 build date and had a fairly hard life but still accurate. Desperately needs a re-paint, some scars attended to and proper go through but time is the enemy and a sensible maintenance routine keeps on top of things Splendidly steam-punk set of oil immersed contactors in the two speed motor control gear. Found a NOS integrated D1-5 mounting 3 jaw chuck of suitable size at £ very reasonable. Not daily driver but he has more than paid for himself.
Clive