Posted by PipesandStuff on 27/04/2023 20:46:19:
Good Evening. Just came across this on ebay and did not know that it is still possible to buy new Myfords? 4674 pounds just for lathe without motor or any accessories! Seems like alot of money compared you can get a Warco 250 with VFD for roughly 2700 pounds. I actually have thought of saving up for one though it is alot of money for a basically mini lathe. What are your thoughts?
I have a real soft-spot for Super-7's, its the lathe I first got to use on a regular basis, I made a variety of really interesting and challenging parts with it, and they are generally a really well made machine which is a joy to use.
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But, unless both space and robustness were both at a massive premium, I wouldn't buy one new or used.
Even then a used Boxford, Smart & Brown, or South Bend would be more attractive, and you'd need to be going into the purchase knowing you were planning to really push the limits of the machine to warrant going for one of those options over a modern mini lathe.
The price premium is impossible to justify when you consider that the functionality on offer is significantly behind other manufacturers, and they're not particularly well equipped to make use of all the modern advances in tooling (although few mini lathes are either in fairness to Myford).
When I was still using the Myford regularly I had bouts running various "full-size" lathes and it was obvious that the core functionality all those lathes shared like a screw-cutting gearbox, lever controlled gears (or variable speed) and sliding/surfacing feeds all made things just so much nicer.
They may not have been as ergonomic or nicely finished as the Myford (although the Lang and DSG put them to shame), but I was rewarded with the joy of getting parts made quickly without fuss or stress, rather than the "joy" of how smoothly the compound slide ball-handle moved perfectly in my hand a zillion times as I painstakingly bored out a taper in stainless steel 0.005" at a time.
Given the choice between a Warco with power-feed and a gearbox, or a Myford without I would go for the Warco every single time.
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IMO, the best lathe purchasing strategy is to set a budget, establish what size of parts you'll be working on and then go search out the most heavily built and feature rich one that has the speed range you will want for your size of parts, and is practical for you to have in the workshop, that will fit your budget.
If you have a concrete floor and good access that's likely to be a small "full-size" lathe either in good used condition or new from the far-east, if you're more constrained for space or in a smaller workshop it's most likely to be a new mini-lathe or if you're lucky enough to run across one a nice condition Boxford or South Bend.
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For me there's a real gap in the market for Myford to undertake some meaningful product development to offer a lathe the size and quality of the Super-7, but refreshed with the features of the 254, and geared to offer speeds appropriate to modern tooling on the size of parts you'd expect to use a 3.5" centre height lathe for; that would actually differentiate them from the competition from abroad.