I think the wait paid off nicely.
Have you put power to it yet, Herb? The first time is always magical.
Well, that's the thing. I've come to realize over the years that you get the best deals when A) you don't NEED it and B) when you could take it or leave it. I was actually about 1-2 months short of having my machine shop space ready/finished, but this lathe came up for the right price in about the right area (was a 250 mile drive to get it, which beats the pants off of Pa, Mi, Oh, Il, where most of these machines are coming from).
Consequently no, I haven't powered up this OR the $150 mill I bought, the space/power/stuff ain't ready, and until then I'm tripping over their rather sizable bulks as I build-out. On the plus side, the $170 pallet jack I got from Northern for this stuff has REALLY paid off.
My dream is life it to be able to buy stuff that I would have no idea how to use.
I go through cycles like this. First it was guns, did that for a while, got bored. Then it was Jeeps (still doing that). Then as part of Jeeps it was metal fabrication. Lately it's been building this shop for a place to DO all this stuff. As a natural extension of all this stuff, I decided I'd like to know how to machine my own stuff. So far I've got a bandsaw I'm working on, a mill, and this lathe.
I would like to see some more pictures up close if possible.
At the moment, this is all I have:
View through the head-stock.
Pics of the ways.
Asset tag from former life.
Controls
Steady rest.
Quick-change toolpost.
Ridiculously large chuck for tail-stock. Biggest taper I've ever seen.
The tailstock that herniated me... Must be 100-150#'s
Nice score! I hope you got the tailstock????
Yeah, you can see it above but I had them take it all off when we were loading it, the rigging was getting caught up in it.