Re: New Chinese lathe or old south bend?
<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Ratbert</div><div class="ubbcode-body">I'm in the early stages of planning to satisfy my craving for a lathe of my own, to be used primarily for gunsmithing hobby. I'm torn between getting a new chinese model like the 4003G Grizzly with all the neato up-to-date features like gearbox speed selection, DRO's, water jet, et al or place my faith in the old world craftsmanship of something like a South Bend 10x28.
Anyone here used a 4003G and have a comment on how satisfied I'm going to be with the long term quality of a somewhat low-end chinese lathe? </div></div>
If it were me: (salt shaker standing by)
I would skip both and go with a Hardinge tool room lathe.
Specifically, something like this:
Ebay auction; Hardinge lathe
I've used one of these very machines for threading and chambering before. If it wasn't for the CNC turning centers I now own, it would be my 1st choice.
Reasons:
Variable speed spindle. Dial it and your there, no gear changes, no transmissions. Very simple/elegant to operate.
Hardinge spindles are as tight as they come. Great machines.
Force multiplier. You can go from a chuck to a 5C collet in about two minutes. That means screws, estucheons, brakes, etc all become easy to make/alter/tune with one machine.
Threading; The rapid pull out feature on the compound is the coolest feature to ever be offered on a manual lathe. Dive right in at 1200 RPM (where carbide loves to run) and be able to cut threads like a CNC with a weekend of practice. No half nuts to time, you bang her into gear and snatch the tool out and bang into reverse at the same time. It's that simple.
The bore of the spindle WILL fit a 1.25" cylinder barrel. You just use the 4 jaw and a spider and your dialed. The cylinder portion will be out of the bore and in the chuck so you won't have any issues. Short barrels, long barrels, doesn't matter.
I did all the barreling for Nesika using one of these for about the first 8 months till the Harrison showed up.
Great machines!
Good luck.
C