Thank you Niel and Brian for the welcome 
For an update, I've just secured myself a job, which will pay for the bills, hopefully my lathe can pay for itself and my hobby 
I did really well, ie I was lucky!! I set off this morning at 6am, later than I hoped, and due to some unfortunate incident at spaghetti junction, traffic was a nightmare around Birmingham. So eventually arrived at the gentleman's house collected inspected and he even ticked off every thing on the copy of the eBay advert he printed. I loaded up and spent about an hour at his place, discussing the lathe and machining on it. He reworks motors, so the motor had just been serviced two weeks ago apparently
The round journey along with a two hour pitstop with a friend which I'll come onto in a little while, after ive had some food, was a total of 643miles, which was done in three blocks, one down there a total of 313miles, one to Davids, which was 245miles and the remainder home, I now have sat on the kitchen table a big lump of cast iron and twirly
bits, which I need to get set up in the shed, (after its been cleared out. I don't want to twirl anything now because coming inside the metal is warming up, and the GiB adjusters have gone almost solid, due to expansion. So I've put it in a folded down state ready to install very soon in its final location. So I got around to tinkering and I've got my head around it all now I think and which lever does what, for instance.
1. The back gears wouldn't engage and they were very stiff to operate the lever, looked closer, and found that there was a bolt on top which wasn't related to the headstock bearing, I thought it was so didn't want to upset the bearings. Quick spanner and the back gears engage.
2. The slides were very very stiff, so I backed off the gib adjuster and crosslide from its mount, and also took it off its mounting, cleaned and oiled the thread and sliders, and put that back on, along with the same for the crosslide, and I tightened the GiB adjusters to allow its full travel, without binding, these will have to be readjusted in the shed, (cooler).
3. I couldn't get the half nuts to engage the leads crew, gave a squirt of WD40 and brushed some of the crud off there. Put some oil on the leads screw, and by turning the chuck by hand, got the half nuts to engage and move the saddle. Which leads onto no4.
4. While messing with the above, I heard a grinding sound from the gears, when I looked there was a gap between the two gears near the top of the change gears, so just the edges of the teeth were engaging, creating a horrible noise. Back to the spanner, slackened off the gear adjustor from the back of the bracket and moved it tight up against it, I then fed paper through the gears to leave a small clearance. Tightened it all back up and jobs a good one
5. When I was looking at the lathe, and the motor on the table I thought to myself, that's a really wide set up, it'll take away a lot of bench space, so I moved the motor nearer and thought I'll look for a shorter belt, then I just happened to push it backwards to pick something that was trapped under it. Eureka moment, build a pivot table for the motor mount to rest on, it will decrease the profile free up space on the bench and to boot it'll be a belt tentioner, this will be built into the bench I'm making for the lathe, and will simply be a 18mm ply double laminated, with a 16mm threaded bar, as its pivot, and two adjusting screws, basically a bolt turned upside down and a but either side of the plywood. It should give reasonable amount of adjustment to belt tension as well as holding the motor firm. I'm still on the kitchen table.at the moment the missus ain't happy, so need to get myself a bench built pronto!