Does any member own a metalworking lathe?
If so could i ask some advice as i want to buy one but dont know much about them.
thanks
If so could i ask some advice as i want to buy one but dont know much about them.
thanks
A tool post/tool holder needs to allow a certain amount of vertical adjustment so you can set the tool to centre height.
It does look like something is missing in that picture though. I can't see how a tool would be held at all.
I get that mate but how would that tool clamp hold a tool ?The red bit is the tool mount plate. Probably adjustable up and down to suit the tool bit holders requirements. But it isn't adjustable with the machine in motion, and the fine tuning will be done from above the plate by way of the tool.
i suspect the tools are held in a separate bock that is then held in the too post ringed in red. Is the seller offering some tools with it? If so there should be the missing part attached to one of them in a picture
I bought myself a lathe last year, having wanted to for a long time. I like old toos because they are sturdy and often simple mechanics to fix and maintain. BUT with precision tools like lathes and mills, they wear and unless you know what is wrong and how to fix them (aso have the facility/ability to do so), then they are incapable of accurate work. So in the end I bough a new machine. OK I couldn't get 'as much' machine for my money but at least I got something that worked properly out of the box, has a dealer that can answer my stupid questions and supplier parts should I need them. Also, it is all in metric so I can get/make/understand bits easily!
In the end I bought one from Amadeal, the AMA 240-550, with belt drive rather than variable speed (incase I had trouble with the VF due to my power supply). I looked around at similar and smaller lathes by other makers and they are all made in the same factories, so you pay more or less depending on where you buy it, the most expensive being Axminster of course. So far it has been faultless as has the customer support from the 12 year old in the showroom when I call up asking something silly. I've not used a metal lathe since school, so to begin with I was needing to use the instruction manual to work out what does what and the Chinglish transations weren't too bad!
Happy playing