Just wanted to throw this out there and see what opinions arise. What is the least you can practically get by with?
TIA
TIA
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Join the contest Subscribe@GasLight Hardinge 11x18 is the smallest between centers dimension lathe I am aware of that is practical for chambering through the headstock (yet it weighs thousands of pounds and go for not insignificant $ for ones capable of threading).SOUTHBEND 9'S or similar atlas's are the lightest, most toy like lathes capable of being carried by a couple of guys and still do barrel work between centers, but it will need sufficient bed length ,cause the spindle through hole is so small....If a person was only going to have 1 lathe , none of the above would be my recommendation....
By small are you looking for a tight shop footprint requirement or getting it into a basement or budget or ?
Small for weight on a second story instead of on concrete, and electrical requirement of 220v. Budget as well, I have been looking at the smallest Grizzly gunsmith lathe, but if I can a used lathe under around $2K, I would rather...
OP- if you could change your location to a part of the garage or down in a basement, your choice of lathes opens up a lot. If your 2nd story floor isn't up to holding the dead load of a larger lathe and that is the only space you have, don't let it stop you. While people never regret going bigger with machinery, as alluded to by myself and @Wannashootit - adapting your machining strategies to the the task at hand with the tools you got can get you there with smaller stuff, it just takes more time and sometimes, more skill. The freedom that comes from being able to do your own thing cause you have the tools is hard to describe. How much are you going to budget for tooling? Lathes aren't as bad as mills to go from placing the machinery to doing real work but if you don't budget enough in the startup tooling you will severely limit what you can do wth any machine you pick....
It's the satisfaction of doing it yourself and saying good-bye to 12 week lead times. No one buys a lathe to save money.For the price of a quality machine...you could buy lots of prefits from top end smiths
It's not for everyone. But if you are mechanically inclined and are willing to invest in the lathe, tooling, and fixtures, there's a well worn path to successfully threading and chambering a rifle blank. A number of "Pro's" started this way.It's fun till you start wrecking $350 blanks or your machine breaks and you get to have the final of fixing it. I can run a mill/lathe but I'll leave the chambering up to a pro. Rather know it's going to be a laser than take the chance. Factor in time and materials and it's just not worth it unless you plan on doing it for a living. And then you will want something bigger/faster/Ridgid anyway.