Ron A wrote:
> mini lathe. Have been looking at getting one for a few years. What is
> the wrecks' opinion?
Years ago, I decided to build a lathe. I had a good motor and some pulleys
and a belt from a treadmill. I bought some lathe tools on eBay. I never
found any Round Tuits..
I finally used the lathe tools for the first time, after five or six years
of watching them collect dust. I bought a lathe, and tossed that stupid
treadmill out of my shop.
I needed a small lathe for my small shop, and the small work I intend to do
on the thing. The JET mini is in transition now. You can buy the old
model with manual belt changes for $199.95 (exactly that if you go for free
shipping from Amazon.com), or the new model with VS for somewhere closer to
$400.
At $199.95 this is one hell of a nice little machine. Light years ahead of
anything I could have made myself, and built much better than any of the
cheap full-sized machines.
Depends on what you want to turn though. This isn't a big lathe by any
stretch, and $200 is a long way from free. It was more than I had
budgeted, but I'm glad I ponied up the extra $50 for this thing, and didn't
miss my shot to get such a solid hunk of cast iron at that price.
--
Michael McIntyre ---- Silvan <[email protected]>
Linux fanatic, and certified Geek; registered Linux user #243621
http://www.geocities.com/Paris/Rue/5407/
Ron,
Like you, I looked at the Shopnotes lathe and contemplated building one that
would be easily transportable. Several negatives come to mind:
1. The Shopnotes version uses "off-the-shelf" hardware. This is good for
the nuts and bolts etc., but not so good if you want to use aftermarket
lathe accessories such as faceplates, tool rests, scroll chucks, etc. Plus,
that particular design seems like an incredible amount of work.
2. With the JET mini going for about 200 bucks, and you can probably find a
used JET, Delta, or other mini lathe with standard threads and morse tapers
on eBay for less, it almost seems like a waste of money. If you don't have
all that baltic birch ply, or the hardare, or the motor floating around your
shop, it could get expensive.
3. My lathe is what I'd call a small, but not mini, lathe - an old Delta
Homecraft that I can turn 11" diameter and about 34" long on it. I have
several hundred dollars into the accessories (faceplates, scroll chuck and
jaws, good quality lathe chisels, sharpening stones and wheels, a grinder) -
actually closer to about a thousand when all said and done. The lathe cost
me nothing, as an inheritance, but you could get a reasonably complete old
lathe for a hundred bucks or so, throw a half-horse motor on it, and blow
the big bucks on everything else you'll need.
My opinion, take it for what it's worth, is that the Shopnotes lathe is nice
to look at, but the precision required might be a bit out of some people's
skill levels, and the whole process might be better off spent buying a
decent basic lathe and spending the time turning. I think Shopnotes is
getting desperate not to repeat past articles by creating items like this.
Jon Endres
"Ron A" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Just received my ShopNotes and was pleasantly surprised to see a shop
built
> mini lathe. Have been looking at getting one for a few years. What is
the
> wrecks' opinion?
>
> Last post for the night, I promise
>
> R
>
>
Here is a picture of it.
http://www.shopnotes.com/main/sn73-toc.html
Tony D
"Jon Endres, PE" <[email protected]> wrote in
message news:[email protected]...
> Ron,
>
> Like you, I looked at the Shopnotes lathe and contemplated building one
that
> would be easily transportable. Several negatives come to mind:
>
snip
Larry Jaques wrote:
> and building tools can be a lot more fun. Free motors can be
> had from dumped washers and dryers. A sheet of baltic birch
> ply is $20, and hardware another $20 or so. Have fun!
Anybody wants it, I have a treadmill motor, two pulleys and a V belt. Only
one speed. I think it ran off a variac originally, but I don't have the
electronics, so I hard wired it. Ran it as a huge ass belt sander for
awhile, which was cool, but hard on expensive belts.
Good motor. I'm never going to get around to doing anything else with it.
You pay shipping.
--
Michael McIntyre ---- Silvan <[email protected]>
Linux fanatic, and certified Geek; registered Linux user #243621
http://www.geocities.com/Paris/Rue/5407/
On Wed, 31 Dec 2003 11:42:09 -0500, Ron A wrote:
>
>> mini lathe. Have been looking at getting one for a few years. What is
>> the wrecks' opinion?
I just got my #73 copy today so I see what you're referring to.
Go for it. Build a super cheap lathe and see if you want to
continue with turning. It's much cheaper than buying a lathe
and building tools can be a lot more fun. Free motors can be
had from dumped washers and dryers. A sheet of baltic birch
ply is $20, and hardware another $20 or so. Have fun!
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