To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

Who's got lathes?

Kevin54

MEMBER EMERITUS
Joined
Jan 12, 2005
Messages
29,341
Location
Urbana, Ohio
Nice looking machine Kevin. How much did you pay for the Jet?

Cityhick> You got a great deal for $500.00. Enjoy it!

Nelson....It was right at $5000 new and free shipping. 3 jaw chuck & a 4 jaw chuck. When I retired I treated myself to it.
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

Kevin54

MEMBER EMERITUS
Joined
Jan 12, 2005
Messages
29,341
Location
Urbana, Ohio
That's a treat I want badly, like a G4003G from Grizzly. Nice machine!!

I may have mistakingly said mine was a 14x40, it is actually a 13x40. I did find a limit on it the other day and that is the through hole on the headstock. It's right at 1 5/8". It would be nice to have a 2" through hole. It wasn't a big deal, but I had to run between centers for a little while until I got turned down to where I needed. So fat, that is the only drawback I have found, and even at that isn't really a drawback, but just more of an inconvenience.
 

rdstr31

New member
Joined
Oct 15, 2010
Messages
2
Location
Ohio
I've spent the last few nights reading through this post; lots of nice lathes out there! I got my 9" SB Model A a couple years ago from my wife's grandmother. It had been sitting in her garage gathering dust so my father-in-law asked about it. She said I could have it! Even though it was fairly well tooled when I got it I'm slowly spending the money I would have invested in the lathe itself on even MORE tooling! That's how it goes I guess...


018_zps3b6d6b12.jpg


013_zps96299a2f.jpg
 

Panel Dan

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 21, 2013
Messages
77
Location
Melbourne, The live music capital of Australia
I just picked up a South Bend 9x30 with a bunch of decent tooling for $500. It's a Model C, which from my research leads me to ask: Can anyone definitively tell me the difference between models A, B, and C? I notice that there are less levers on the carriage, I'm guessing an absence of bed feed, but other than that, are parts compatible across the models? I'm looking at a quick change gearbox that is seemingly off a 9" South Bend, but I am not sure that it will definitely fit...
 

Falcon67

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 11, 2009
Messages
18,371
Location
Merkel, TX
I may have mistakingly said mine was a 14x40, it is actually a 13x40. I did find a limit on it the other day and that is the through hole on the headstock. It's right at 1 5/8". It would be nice to have a 2" through hole. It wasn't a big deal, but I had to run between centers for a little while until I got turned down to where I needed. So fat, that is the only drawback I have found, and even at that isn't really a drawback, but just more of an inconvenience.

That's the only thing I've seen about the 12~14x36~40 lathes that limits their work envelope - the spindle bore. Be nice to be able to stick a big fat axle through there for some trimming or some such. My 9x20 does good with little jobs but I'd like a bigger unit to do things like spin cranks for polishing, etc. When I bought the 9x20, I didn't know anything about lathes and wasn't sure about the whole deal. Like the mini-mill I bought, it was a short time before I figured I should have got the big one because these gizmos are extra cool tools. The 9x20 has paid for it's raising and the mini-mill was gone in a year, replaced by a big square column 3 phase mill-drill with a 9x30 table.
 

larry_g

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 28, 2007
Messages
16,872
Location
oregon
When I bought the 9x20, I didn't know anything about lathes and wasn't sure about the whole deal. Like the mini-mill I bought, it was a short time before I figured I should have got the big one because these gizmos are extra cool tools. The 9x20 has paid for it's raising and the mini-mill was gone in a year, replaced by a big square column 3 phase mill-drill with a 9x30 table.

Similar to what I did during the learning curve. I've said many times over the years when someone asks what lathe or mill to buy, just buy anything that runs and will do work. Consider it the cost of an education. You will soon learn the limits of the machine and what to look for in your next machine. Usually on a used machine you can get your money back out of it as you upgrade.

lg
no neat sig line
 

samthedog

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 25, 2012
Messages
95
Location
Norway
Sorry to dredge up an old thread but I figure that there are members who have not uploaded pictures of their machines. Her is my lathe:
chipmasterpainted_zpsbd4449ad.jpg


A Colchester Chipmaster in metric. By far the nicest Chipmaster I have seen anywhere. It was owned by an old tool maker from new and when he passed away I purchased it. It's a 65 model and still acurate within .01mm over 350mm. I love this machine. In case anyone is interested in buying a lathe, I made a bit of a buying guide on my blog:
Buying Guide

I did this to pass on my lessons learned and take some of the pain and mystery out of the process.

Paul.
 

Jon Jacobs

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 4, 2012
Messages
413
Location
London Ont Canada
Heres my Dean Smith and Grace. Stole it for $1600.00. Love it.
 

Attachments

  • IMG-20140411-02663[1].jpg
    IMG-20140411-02663[1].jpg
    139.8 KB · Views: 162
  • IMG-20140411-02666[1].jpg
    IMG-20140411-02666[1].jpg
    143.2 KB · Views: 232
  • IMG-20140411-02671[1].jpg
    IMG-20140411-02671[1].jpg
    148 KB · Views: 193

larry_g

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 28, 2007
Messages
16,872
Location
oregon
I'm curious what it cost you to get it hauled and placed? That's one of the things holding me back from such purchases.

A few years back I has a small crawler, 12k lbs, hauled by United Rentals for ~$200. He probably put 65 miles on the truck and spent 2 hours doing the job. I considered it a bargain.

lg

no neat sig line
 

lilscorpion

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 15, 2010
Messages
3,599
Location
Colorado
Mori Seiki MS850 w/ Aloris quick change post. Plenty of tooling.

MoriA.jpg


MoriB.jpg


MoriC.jpg


Bought the thing off of a guy who got it from his father who bought it brand new. Its like using a new machine. Love using it.
 

Jon Jacobs

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 4, 2012
Messages
413
Location
London Ont Canada
I'm curious what it cost you to get it hauled and placed? That's one of the things holding me back from such purchases.

Good questions, After I bought it we had a huge snow storm and I couldn't get it into the shop. The rigger had to hold on to it for me for 2 months.

With storage and moving it was $1200.00.

It was such a great deal and the bed was like new for its age, so I pulled the trigger on it.

It was about an hour away from my shop and his rate was $300.00 per hour so it added up fast, still I don't regret it.
 

zkling

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 23, 2007
Messages
16,939
Heres my Dean Smith and Grace. Stole it for $1600.00. Love it.

Damn :drool: Lathe envy. That is a capable machine. Great purchase. :thumbup:

Sorry to dredge up an old thread but I figure that there are members who have not uploaded pictures of their machines. Her is my lathe:

A Colchester Chipmaster in metric. By far the nicest Chipmaster I have seen anywhere. It was owned by an old tool maker from new and when he passed away I purchased it. It's a 65 model and still acurate within .01mm over 350mm. I love this machine. In case anyone is interested in buying a lathe, I made a bit of a buying guide on my blog:
Buying Guide

I did this to pass on my lessons learned and take some of the pain and mystery out of the process.

Paul.

Very nice machine. :beer:
 

RossABQ

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 5, 2010
Messages
4,139
Location
NM
Good questions, After I bought it we had a huge snow storm and I couldn't get it into the shop. The rigger had to hold on to it for me for 2 months.

With storage and moving it was $1200.00.

It was such a great deal and the bed was like new for its age, so I pulled the trigger on it.

It was about an hour away from my shop and his rate was $300.00 per hour so it added up fast, still I don't regret it.

I assume this was an actual machinery mover? Warranted for something that big. Rough handling could just about ruin it. Your cost is about what I'd have figured, thanks for the confirmation!
 

samthedog

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 25, 2012
Messages
95
Location
Norway
Very nice machine. :beer:

Thanks. I have a garage full of carefully selected machines but just need to extend it a little now as I am really pushed for space. I use my lathe to make parts for my obsolete machines as nearly all of them were manufactured between 1960 - 1970.

Nearly all of them are from European manufacturers as there is so much choice here in Norway.

Paul.
 

madjack

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 18, 2008
Messages
296
Location
black hills of south dakota
LeBlond Regal 13" swing with a 6' bed in the garage. My biggest complaint is The hole in the head stock is too small to put a car axle through. Not quite 1". Would like at least 1.5". Also have an 8" swing Craftsman (Atlas) in the basement for my gun stuff.
 

Attachments

  • DSCN0429.jpg
    DSCN0429.jpg
    142.5 KB · Views: 96
  • DSCN0430.jpg
    DSCN0430.jpg
    144.6 KB · Views: 80
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

RobSmith

Banned
Joined
Feb 5, 2009
Messages
562
Location
NSW Australia
I'm building a car so I use it at least once a week...Invaluable... get one and you will never regret it. as for "you ****"....that is a MAJOR insult in Australia..It will get you seriously injured here. I understand it is a cute thing in the USA so I don't mind.
Ha ha ha ..............get a decent lathe !
 

zkling

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 23, 2007
Messages
16,939
Thanks. I have a garage full of carefully selected machines but just need to extend it a little now as I am really pushed for space. I use my lathe to make parts for my obsolete machines as nearly all of them were manufactured between 1960 - 1970.

Nearly all of them are from European manufacturers as there is so much choice here in Norway.

Paul.

What mill do you have? Do you have any full shop pictures floating around?
 

Jon Jacobs

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 4, 2012
Messages
413
Location
London Ont Canada
I assume this was an actual machinery mover? Warranted for something that big. Rough handling could just about ruin it. Your cost is about what I'd have figured, thanks for the confirmation!

Hi yes, hes a pro around here, Watching him move it effortlessly was like ballet.
 

samthedog

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 25, 2012
Messages
95
Location
Norway
What mill do you have? Do you have any full shop pictures floating around?

My mill is a Jungner VF600, made in Sweden. It is a very pricise machine and has a very small footprint. It doubles as a drill press as well which is nice:

PA1623271600x1200_zps79e7e794.jpg


PC0327081024x768_zps3955c7c8.jpg


I have an assortment of machines for metal and wood work. The pictures tell the story better than I can:

WP_20140705_002_zps5c552334.jpg


WP_20140705_022_zps58fa93f2.jpg


WP_20140705_003_zpsecb09147.jpg


WP_20140705_004_zpsd6adba92.jpg


WP_20140705_007_zps31f34346.jpg


And this is my latest machine, a Stenbergs KLE combination machine, also Swedish made:

WP_20140817_001_zps0d6b9f7f.jpg


WP_20140817_005_zps3f658e30.jpg


Paul.
 

maddawg1952

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 29, 2012
Messages
676
Location
Peabody.Ma.
my 10" Logan, bought it a few months ago from a neighbor. Still acquiring some tooling, I've used it about as much as I expected to . It's tucked away in a corner of the garage .
 

Attachments

  • IMAG0009.jpg
    IMAG0009.jpg
    142 KB · Views: 90
Last edited:

Shadowdog500

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 7, 2009
Messages
9,833
Location
Down the shore
Last spring I upgraded from my minilathe from post 40 of this thread to a 11-36 lathe and a Rockwell mill. I use these for the same purpose as my mini lath, which is to get me out of a pinch during a project to stop and make a part or tool that I need.

Chris

68fddcb8317c2412df26c00a8f84883a_zpsf39cd7d1.jpg


Here was the first use of the mill. I widened the opening of a cheap a HF O2 wrench I had to pull the riser off of the manifold of my nephews Trans am.
08c34c439806839ffad26973f4d202a9_zps6a933689.jpg


a6c525504cd21cf934cfee1827e22542_zps5fe6c1e8.jpg


85901f86a4222e85ec7709b3eda6faed_zps00a28f49.jpg
 
Last edited:

samthedog

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 25, 2012
Messages
95
Location
Norway
That area looks way too clean!

You can't have mess when using machines. They need to be taken care of and kept clean to avoid wear, plus you don't want the distraction of a messy shop on a machine that can remove limbs.

Paul.
 

A_Pmech

Well-known member
Joined
May 8, 2007
Messages
8,002
Location
IL
ysrchris said:
I know it is small but that is the type of work I like to do.

If they do the job then they're the right machines!

Welcome to GJ!
 
Last edited:

dozerbuilder01

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 20, 2011
Messages
180
Location
Far Northwest Burbs of Chicago
My first lathe was a 12" swing Craftsman (Atlas). Made in Kalamazoo Mi. It was a good beginner lathe but it was a little weak and didn't have a quick change gear box.
IMG_3215_zpsede93654.jpg

I recently picked up two lathes over the last year that I plan to restore and keep.
1950s Sheldon EXL. 10" swing, 42" bed length. 1-3/8" spindle bore. 60 speed gear box. Has some wear. Plan to have bed reground and other ways corrected. Best part....made in Chicago.
IMG_3967_zps448bd69f.jpg

1945 Southbend 16". 6' bed. Soft bedways so there is some wear. Plan to restore this one as well. Made in Southbend.
IMG_3232_zps00117f96.jpg
 

Guster

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 11, 2012
Messages
1,543
Location
Auckland, New Zealand
This was my first, a 9x20 that I got from a company that never used it. It was still strapped to the shipping pallet and coated in cosmoline when I picked up.
5822184637_946b542e8c.jpg


Sold that a few years ago and upgraded to a 12x36 for pretty much what I got for the 9x20. Compound needed a little work to get it shipshape but can't complain. This is the day I picked it up.
5822184643_6d3ca08396.jpg

Since added a 5c collet closer, Dickson/Rapid style QCTP and a whole lot more tooling.

Since many are sharing their milling machines also, my current milling machine is a little unusual in that it shares a bit of ancestry with a jig borer(http://www.lathes.co.uk/linley/ machine similar to mine at the bottom of the page). However it is much more capable than the RF-30 style mill drill I used to have and I actually made money in the upgrade.
12607522553_b033a18b0b.jpg

I also acquired a little horizontal mill about a year ago that I am in the process of rebuilding. Sure is a dirty little thing when I picked it up with a bucket of sludge, swarf and miscellaneous fluid in the sump.
12607531733_6c5033c278.jpg
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!
Top Bottom