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Taig or Sherline

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    Taig or Sherline

    So I want to make a few small parts and right now have a cross slide table with a dremel drill press and a little 3 jaw chuck that can fit in a normal power drill. I have been able to do a fair bit of stuff with these but I can never get more than a rough shape that I then have to either sand for file until I can make something work.

    so based on the research I have done it seems space and cash limited are people like myself are limited to a unimat or other tiny vintage lathe, a Chinese 7x14, a Sherline 4000 or a Taig micro lathe II.

    Also based on what I have read you need to do work on Chinese machines to get them to have good results and if I don’t really know much about a vintage machine it doesn’t sound really smart to roll the dice on eBay, so that really just leaves Taig and Sherline.

    I suppose on that aspect I am leaning a bit more towards Taig due to being cheaper and then selling a milling attachment for a reasonable price, as it really isn’t that much more than a Chinese mini lathe. Am I missing something, is there a big quality or feature difference between Taig and Sherline?

    #2
    In lathe (and mills) it all comes down to rigidity ...
    The taig and shereline are super light duty and made out of extrusion bolted together.
    Even a HF 7x14 lather is a cast base, which is going to be heavier and more stable.

    I think they are both great machines, but limited in how much you can do.
    Also, they resell pretty well and can be converted to CNC if you ever decide to switch it up ...
    Love my brass ... Love my SSR ... Hard choices ...

    XEMON's phantom double sided feed
    Keep your ATS going: Project rATS 2.0
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      #3
      I'd check your local used market. Where I am you can find an nice old American lathe for around the same price as a chinese 7x14. Gonna be a much better machine unless it's super dogged out
      Gas, Grass or Brass, no one rides for free...

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      • XEMON

        XEMON

        commented
        Editing a comment
        Keep in mind older lathe (especially the smaller sizes) usually don't have harden ways, no power cross feed, no variable speed (stepped pulley) and usually don't have gear box (change gear only) ...
        I'm not saying to stay away from older machines (I love my 1936 SB model C) but know what you get into. There is a quality of life you get from newer machines ...
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