I've got a lifetime of mechanical "skills"...but absolutely no experience with metalworking machinery- lathes or end mills.
None of the Community Colleges within range have classes (that would have been my first choice).
I'd really like to learn the skills needed to operate a lathe, with an eye towards doing my own amateur smithing- primarily barrel/receiver work.
Main question- can this be self-taught, or would it be an exercise in frustration? Books, DVD's... anything suitable?
If "yes", or "maybe"...
Then the question of what machinery I'd "learn on". Not knowing anything about them, if a critical (and expensive) part of a lathe can get FUBAR by a novice's learning curve- is it smarter to buy a cheap hobby lathe- like a Grizz 8688 Mini-Lathe, to learn basic operation, parts, and skills- and then move up to a "real" lathe when I have a clue?
Normally I'm of the "buy once, cry once" mindset, just don't know if that principle would be wise in this application.
And if the answer to the first question is "NO", I guess I'll drop back and punt...
None of the Community Colleges within range have classes (that would have been my first choice).
I'd really like to learn the skills needed to operate a lathe, with an eye towards doing my own amateur smithing- primarily barrel/receiver work.
Main question- can this be self-taught, or would it be an exercise in frustration? Books, DVD's... anything suitable?
If "yes", or "maybe"...
Then the question of what machinery I'd "learn on". Not knowing anything about them, if a critical (and expensive) part of a lathe can get FUBAR by a novice's learning curve- is it smarter to buy a cheap hobby lathe- like a Grizz 8688 Mini-Lathe, to learn basic operation, parts, and skills- and then move up to a "real" lathe when I have a clue?
Normally I'm of the "buy once, cry once" mindset, just don't know if that principle would be wise in this application.
And if the answer to the first question is "NO", I guess I'll drop back and punt...