- I don't have CNC anything in my basement tool room, all manual. Jig borers aren't used as much as they used to be but I have a Mitsui Seiki 4B down there. Do I use any of my Rotabs? Rarely. Stuck in the last century? Perhaps so.
I've no objection to re-purposing but it's a friggin Troyke FFS. It only hurts a little bit....
Once again, I get it. I have old obsolete tools that are really well made and a pleasure to use but hopelessly useless or inefficient in for profit shop. In your view, this is ruining the tool. Perhaps breaking some kind of code that this tool was only to be used in a fashion the manufacturer intended. As a maker of things I understand the apparent violation of the code of conduct that this appears to be.
Machinists and toolmakers view their tools as extensions of themselves, their abilities to make precise parts is directly related to the quality and precision of the tools they use. The machines are treated with a level of respect and care that is representative of the potential they hold. Whereas welders and mechanics usually see tools as the means to an end. I need to weld a circle, this thing makes parts go in a circle, ipso facto I can weld circles with this rotary table.
Lots of welders over the years have been viewed by toolmakers as crude hacks, nothing more than jack pine savages making sparks and hot slag. Nothing like the refined precision of the toolmaker. While working with both I've noticed that welders tend to be very creative people, solving problems and bringing unique or unconventional approaches to the trades. Toolmakers and machinists tend to be very particular fussbudgets, having an almost neurotic sense about them of right and wrong. They're cantankerous and ornery about the weirdest things. And they kinda have to be. You can't hold tenths on stuff without a very focused attention to detail and a personality that is inclined to notice or care about the tiniest little details. The most precise tool a welder usually uses is a dial caliper, and that's asking too much of some of these guys. Seems like some days I can't get them to look at the big numbers on the tape measure, forget about the little lines between them.
But all the same, if the OP will get more use out of it being a welding positioner than a rotary table, then more power to them. At the end of the day, this rotary table was either going to sit un-used for years, maybe to end up as scrap or now it has a new life as a positioner. OP probably didn't have a surplus of other positioners laying around. At least this way it isn't wasted or turned into Chinese car bumpers.
It's kinda like when the movies crashes an antique car for a stunt. Some see it as a waste, mindless destruction of some priceless artifact. The flip side to that coin is millions of people are enjoying the movie, bringing entertainment and value to the viewer that the original car could never do if it was just left as a car. A $50,000 car was sacrificed to make millions of dollars at the box office.
It's just stuff. If the guy had a bunch of kids running in circles on a treadmill to power it maybe I'd feel a little more broken up lol.