If you're still looking, I have a very capable Central Machinery (Harbor Freight), lathe with stand. Doesn't have all the bells and whistles of higher-end units but it's a great starter lathe. $300Exploring options atm. New this type of tool.
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If you're still looking, I have a very capable Central Machinery (Harbor Freight), lathe with stand. Doesn't have all the bells and whistles of higher-end units but it's a great starter lathe. $300Exploring options atm. New this type of tool.
Thanks for the link to Vintagemachinery.org.Second hand tools, if acquired at the right price can be as addictive as firearms. The trick is knowing what you are getting into.
Vintages Machinery.com is a wonderful resource for information on them.
You may find this link to the owners manual for a similar machine useful.
It will give you an idea if all the critical parts are present, and how to set it up
http://vintagemachinery.org/pubs/detail.aspx?id=28687
The lathe pictured is a relatively common lathe, and not super old, but I would not plan on getting parts from Sears or Emerson Electric is something is missing. You might find them on E-bay, but chances are you will be making or sourcing yourself anything that's missing.
Bench top lathes like this need a stout bench, with a lot of mass.
I don’t knowNothing says 'F-that!' faster than a piece of 2x2x36 bouncing off two walls and the ceiling before finally coming to rest in shop class. Never looked back. Lol. ...but a metal lathe...
Had a basketball player shorten his thumb on the tablesaw in the same shop class and the shop teacher/coach had one of his own digits stewing in formaldehyde in a jar above his desk.... good times!I don’t know
I recall a 2x4 being ripped bind and kick back on a table saw in shop class. It hit operator in the groin. I think he got to “ F that” a bit faster than 2 bounces.
I’m not certain what happened to him but I bought the saw a few years later at a school auction. Still own it.
Any tool will bite you if you don’t respect it and treat it correctly. Operator training and attitude are the least consistent part of tool performance.
Wood and metal lathes are very different beasts.
I enjoy both, but the skills and attitude to run a metal lathe are quite different than a wood lathe.
I had a good friend who lost the first part of his index finger right behind his finger nail in a planer accident. He would show people his hand and tell them he could count in fractions.Had a basketball player shorten his thumb on the tablesaw in the same shop class and the shop teacher/coach had one of his own digits stewing in formaldehyde in a jar above his desk.... good times!
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