Well for that much money, I take it that this is a Mk I/II blue one, not a Mk III green one. Mind you, even the blue ones in decent condition have been known to go for a lot more than this recently (check out Home and Workshop Machinery’s website, but make sure you’re sitting down…), and there’s what looks like a grubby old CUD going on Ebay for £280 so far, and the bidding hasn’t stopped yet.
So even if it’s in pretty average condition and you can get it for £200, I’d say you weren’t doing badly, even if the bed needs a regrind and the headstock needs new bearings. But ady’s so right about the real costs – with any lathe, you can easily end up spending stupid money for all the tooling, when you’ve added it all up. It’s well worth making sure that you really do get everything that’s going with it (if anything is), and at a bare minimum make sure it has a 3-jaw chuck and some sort of tool post, just to get you started.
I don’t think that having failed leadscrew and cross-slide nuts is
quite a disaster – there are plenty of people around who’d be happy to help you out there, I think. And if all else fails, then why not just buy replacements from RGD tools? Look
here.
Edited By Steve Garnett on 09/10/2010 14:38:53