I'm sure it will get plenty of work.Atb mick
...now when I say new, I mean new to me. It's still 50 years old, but it has a proper set of backgears so i can do screwcutting, micrometer dials, laterally adjustable tailstock, a stready, a 4 jaw, and a ton of other "modern" developments my old Winfield didn't
Oh, and an angle plate with vertical slide so it can be used as a horizinal mill.
The airgun world is now my oyster... well, it will be once I've set it all up properly.
Always looking for any cheap, interesting, knackered "project" guns. Thanks, JB.
I'm sure it will get plenty of work.Atb mick
Is it as good as my Student, Jon ?
So what beginners lathe would you guys recommend please for just making Delrin guides and small metal parts.
Pete
Far too many rifles to list now, all mainly British but the odd pesky foreigner has snuck in
Is it this one?
***Proud Member of Castleton Air Rifle Club***
Nice one Jon
I hope you have plenty of fun with your new Lathe.
I would like a lathe,once we move next year.
Atb
Les..
Congrats on the new (old) lathe JB
I really wish I paid attention during my younger years especially when visiting my grandparents at there farm in north wales.
My grandad had a huge building full of lathes and machinery the smells and noises were just superb but alas although he taught me to shoot back in the mid 80’s I never really paid much attention to his lathe working
Often wondered if it’s a path I should tread but maybe left it a tad too late to even learn the basics
What is this new old lathe?
Congrats on the lathe. I got a Chester 920 some years ago for various jobs. So far its helped me rebuild, restore, tune several guns AA SE90, Falcon FN19, 2x TX200s plus making air strippers scooe wheels. Great fun
A good lathe for a beginner would be a myford or a boxford
Gun control means using both hands.
Beginner....
Firstly I wouldn't go down the Myford route. They fetch mad money and almost all will need work to bring them back to any form of accuracy. The beds will be shagged and worn up by the chuck, as all the work modellers do is in that area. The bore is too small to get anything airgun, short of a falcon barrel through it. If you have experience, then yes, but even what I've learnt now I wouldn't bother with em.
Now a sorted Boxford AUD is a different colour of cat. I'd have one in an instant if I had the room.
I have a Warco WM180 and its a cracking machine. Dont be fooled by its Chinese origins, the Warcos are built and set up to a far better standard than anything else.