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07-07-2009 #1
It's getting to the point now where I have to admit defeat & seriously consider shelling out for a mini lathe (her indoors isn't going to see the funny side of this one at all).
To justify the purchase to myself, I need to be convinced that it is possible to turn Stailness A2 rod.
i'm talking here, skimming (is that the right term?!) 2mm off M10 diameter ...to a length of about 20mm.
Someof the more recent mini lathes have decent sized motors (by mini lathe standards).
here's one at 400W I'm thinking about....
http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/Mini-Lathe-Bra...lenotsupported
or a slightly larger model for £50 more...
http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/Mini-Lathe-Bra...lenotsupported
In the main, I'll likely only be turning acrylic, aluminium & perhaps a bit of brass ...but just wanted to know if stainless is do-able in small bite size chunks approach?!
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07-07-2009 #2
Hank
If all you want to do is turn small pieces i would consider second hand. Save yourself a fortune. i have a tiny unitmat that will only take up to 20mm in the chuck that does well enough. Decent cutters and cooling (bucket, small bore hose and a windscreen washer motor with sponge over the end) is priority. The lathe you see there is the same as clarke, axminster and sealey in the same clothing. I must admit i do have a bigger lathe but by the time you buy all the other tools to go with it-----phew fortune blown.
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08-07-2009 #3
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08-07-2009 #4
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08-07-2009 #5
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08-07-2009 #6
Hank i wish had one to show you as it was only a suggestion to improvise. Like John said it is to stop cutting being sucked back up. We have a chap here in Swindon selling a lathe for £150 from his business workshop, sounds great till you see it. Its huge and would require a forklift to shift it and no room for that???? One place people forget for cheap secondhand are the papers like 'Loot'. Hope you find one for the right price.
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08-07-2009 #7
Hank,
Either of those lathes are the ones to go for (i'd go for the larger motor). They're a different manufacturer that the Axminster, Chester, Clarke, etc.
Differences (improvements) over the Chester, etc include:
Heat treated ways (if you believe the sticker)
Rectangular saddle (Chester etc has rough-cast "H" shaped saddle)
Way oilers in saddle
Way wipers
More powerful motor
I have a 4yr old Chester, and would buy the one you've linked to next time.
I've never cut stainless, but it work hardens so you need to take as big a bite as you can each time. I've turned 5inch diameter alu before (bolted directly to the spindle face), so they're pretty flexible. Motor power would be a problem if you tried steel in the same diameter.
It almost certainly won't cut stainless "out of the box". I was very disappointed with my lathe to begin with. I even struggled with (small diameter) steel until I'd done a fair bit of adjustment. With a sharp bit now though I can take 2mm off a steel diameter without too much bother (I changed the spindle bearings to taper rollers before doing this). They're great lathes as long as you treat them as kits for finishing, rather than production-ready.
Enjoy!
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08-07-2009 #8
Hi 2E0poz ...alas whatever I buy has to go through a loft hatch!
Tom, thanks for the input - I think they're from the Real Bull factory in China (SPG tools is slioghtly cheaper, but out of stock for a week or two ...plus he's in the Midlands whereas this seller I linked to is only 20 mins drive away here in London.
The seller has been very clever with the lathe price points.
Yes The £340 lather is the better buy, but he also does a lathe with some useful accessories deal for a sneaky £395 (http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/Mini-Lathe-Bra...lenotsupported) ....it can all end up getting a little more than I'd expected to pay!
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09-07-2009 #9
Having spent too long researching these over the past few days, I'd learnt that an independent 4 jaw was going to be the most useful, therefore I'll probably take the package & just flog the 3 jaw chuck on (most comments I've read suggest that you never go back to a 3 jaw after using an independent 4 jaw!).
I genuinely don't know what size tooling it uses yet (I'm hopefully going to see these at his premises tomorrow)
Here's my initial shoppinng list...
the lathe ith independent 4 jaw chuck.
tailstock chuck
A cutting set! (was just going to go HSS as I have a grinder and read that it's easy to maintain these youirself)
nice to haves...
lever tailstock
Quick change toolpost.
proper boring rod.
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09-07-2009 #10
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