Here's a good example of what I am talking about: I found a smoking hot deal on a very used Mori lathe - $18K. After the transformer, wire, electrician, etc. I was at about $25K to get it to spin with ZERO repairs. over the years I have tooled it up and that's easily another $10K once you add in various jaws, consumable tools (inserts), toolholders, lok-lines, coolant ($1500-$1800 per barrel - cheaper per gallon), chip bins, etc. This doesn't include crash repairs, etc.
Think that's expensive? We haven't even started talking about mills yet. Once you get a lathe, you will need a mill. Trust me on this.
If all a man wants to do is turn a couple barrels a year and there is no other use for that equipment just have someone else do it. If you intend to pursue it as a hobby, for sure do it and enjoy it. But don't go into it thinking it will be cheap or you will be continually frustrated. What I am saying is that this skill will require dedication, time and money to learn. Just go into it with that expectation and you will succeed.
Regarding the moving of a machine - this is absolutely no joke. What a damn nightmare - shipping, levelling, wiring to local code. None of this is optional.