speaking of step pulley lathes. I believe the Jet in question is a step pulley model. --Jerry
Geared head lathes are usually belt driven from the motor to the gear head. Even most belt drive lathes like the Clausing also have gears in the headstock.You have to go back quite a way to find any step pulley lathes and most were line shaft lathes and some revisions later. I have a 10" logan that is flat belt/step pulley, but it's old and way too small to do much serious work.I wonder why they call it a GH 1640 R then? GH being Gear head I thought? Weird marketing scam I guess. ?
Russel
Can you move it yourself and can you get 3 phase or figure your adapter cost into the bid . That is a nice set up , the headstock is a bit long . If it's gonna be your first lathe , it may be cheaper to purchase one from grizzly or enco . They (Chinese and Taiwan) have come a long way in the last 10 yrs . Plus you get to order parts easy . Just my $.02
A new 12x36 is aprx $2000 so I'd start at $1000 and stop at $1800 , that's cause I've set up a few new 12x36 Grizzlys and have grown fond of them , especially the ease at getting tooling and parts .
Jerry, I make things, too. I spent 3 1/2hrs. this morning 'driving' a 20" x 84". 12 3 phase horses. Turn the OD of a 8 1/2" chunk of 4350 NQT, face it and then drill a 1 5/8" hole through the 5 1/2" length, on shot. Center drill and drill. Drill on the tool post so I can use the power carriage feed. The 1 5/8 hole takes 5 minutes and 20 seconds from start to finish. You can hear it carrying the load. Can you hear the thing with the motor running, even when there's not a tool engaged? YA! 'Cause it's a production lathe. Would I want to have it for my gunsmithing lathe? Nope! It's just a little too large for that. I'm glad for the 'overhead' when I have to take the 3 jaw off and put the 4 jaw on. Glad you've got music to listen to.