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Crap.Now I want a lathe, though I'd have to have someone teach me how to use it . . . When I was in high school, I desperately wanted to take two classes: typing and machine shop. But back in the early 70's, you couldn't do that if you were designated on the "college track." Instead, I had to take a high-school physics course that taught me literally nothing I didn't already know or could easily learn from science treatises. Typing and machining, on the other hand were skills that you had to learn from someone that knew what they were doing, and required repeat practice on the appropriate machines.Maybe 50% of my "college track" courses in high school were useful in college. A few (actually, trigonometry was one of these) were useful for adult life. Typing would have been MORE useful, for college and now everything we do on computers. Machine shop would have been a useful skill for life. If I were king, everyone - male/female/gender neutral - would be required to take typing, machine shop and a basic course in auto repair in high school. No exceptions. Even a kid who ended up being a neurosurgeon would benefit from these courses.Sigh . . . John C.
Crap.Now I want a lathe, though I'd have to have someone teach me how to use it . . . Sigh . . . John C.
I know that this is about a lathe, but there has been a lot has been asked about milling machines. If any of you are thinking about a mini mill, make sure you get one with a R8 spindle. There is so much more tooling available of it over the others. And then plan on spending a lot more on tooling. I've spent about 4 times the amount for tooling as I paid for my machines.
The Central Machinery tools are okay in most instances, but require a lot of clean-up and some filing and fiddling to get them exactly right. With the MicroMark lathe, you'll be up and running the same day you get it on your doorstep.Just sayin'Cheerio!Bob Gilmore