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Hypothetical Question - lathes

JPSmit

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Much like welders, one day I would love to have a metal lathe. Looking at the interweb, I think a Unimat hobby lathe would cover about 95% of my (as yet entirely fictional) tasks - has anyone used these (or other similar brands)

thoughts?
 
Following, asI've always wanted one. I'm always looking, but don't really know much about them.
 
The old Unimats were high quality machines. I don't know anything about the current Unimat products but they look entirely different. You might want to look at the Sherline product line - they have small lathes & mills and attachments to mill using the lathe. These machines use lots of aluminum and are very light so aren't super rigid but they're fine for hobbyist use. For more rigidity (and weight) you could look at a MicroMark lathe.

I've used a small Sherline lathe/mill for years and it's handy to have around - very good for spacers, oddball washers, collars, etc. It cuts plastics, aluminum, and brass very nicely. I've cut some steel with it - time consuming but it'll do it. They'll even do threading and knurling with attachments. Accuracy isn't great but you can hold about .002 without much trouble. The machine itself is easily moved, weighing only about 20 lbs attached to a base.

Both MicroMark and Sherline have excellent web sites and a full range of tooling and accessories. Plan on spending at least twice the machine's cost on tooling. Also, be sure that the leadscrews are "inch" rather than metric if that's a consideration.

Warning: These machines introduce you to a whole new set of hobbies. Plan on spending a ~lot~ of time just playing around.
 
I have had , and still have a few small metal lathes. I just sold my unimat 2 months ago. They a wonderful little lathe but can be pricey. The only advice to offer is think about what you REALLY want to do with the lathe then look accordingly. A good selection of accessories can exceed the price of a basic lathe many times over. If you don't need real accuracy and just want to make "stuff" even the HF lathe should work. FYI, I do 90 percent of my work on a watchmaker lathe.
 
I have had , and still have a few small metal lathes. I just sold my unimat 2 months ago. They a wonderful little lathe but can be pricey. The only advice to offer is think about what you REALLY want to do with the lathe then look accordingly. A good selection of accessories can exceed the price of a basic lathe many times over. If you don't need real accuracy and just want to make "stuff" even the HF lathe should work. FYI, I do 90 percent of my work on a watchmaker lathe.

I am sure you are correct - pre thinking - and accessories - this strikes me as the sort of thing that can easily sit idle - or get a lot of hobby money!!
 
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