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Pictures of your Lathe Setup

Jackie trumps all of us!!

Anyway, my backyard "Doghouse":

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Oh Yea! 1907 vintage, still tight. Learned lathe use back in the 1950's on this gem.
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Tooling is King!

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Yep, there are dogs in the shop:

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Mauser work.

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Front sight band fitting. 416 Rigby.

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Removing those $#@^ Factory warning stampings on a NOS new 338 Ruger barrel.

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Amazing you don't have any dust with all those sanders. I have a heck of a time with sanding dust.
 
The Mazak mostly sees all the barrel work these days.

View attachment 1549671
I've ran a few Mazak's over the years. Some can't get used to the Mazatrol conversational programming and prefer to do it offline with a dedicated cad/cam program. But for the job shop type work we did the Mazak's were tough to beat. You could go from a sketch on a napkin to writing a program and making chips right at the machine in no time at all.
 
I've ran a few Mazak's over the years. Some can't get used to the Mazatrol conversational programming and prefer to do it offline with a dedicated cad/cam program. But for the job shop type work we did the Mazak's were tough to beat. You could go from a sketch on a napkin to writing a program and making chips right at the machine in no time at all.
I use Mazatrol on the lathe for most things and offline Powermill for the mills. Lathe stuff is just so easy with Mazatrol.
 
These shops look nicer than my first apartment. Carpet? Man, my Logan shoots chips 10 feet when I'm contouring. That carpet wouldn't last a month.
When I moved down here I was trying to figure out how to a build a shop and get my money out of it if I ever moved. So I built a house. 30X60 that includes a 16X30 garage bay that I left a big opening in the wall. I need a place to park vehicles when hurricanes come. With about 30 minutes work I can get a car, zero turn mower and my truck inside. I plumbed it for a 3 bedroom/2bath house and finished off the master bedroom and bath. All someone has to do is stand up some walls , install a bathroom and kitchen and they're up and running. Or have one hell of a man cave.
New shop in the mountains will be 30X50, 30X20 will be conditioned space, with a lean-to off one side. Hope to be up there next spring.
 
I just got a new lathe (used like new Taiwan) Don't have pics but here is my old setup. You can kind of see my Kent USA behind my welding/machinist table. I just picked up an Enco Turnpro in like new condition, Same lathe as the ACER 1440G. Haven't had a chance to get it into place yet.

Edit to add:

My new lathe weighs 2000 lbs. Meehanite castings. This is a stock pic of it.

View attachment 1549303
I have that exact same machine, branded as a "Top Turn". Replaced my old clapped-out, knackered Clausing 6300. It does EXACTLY what I tell it to do! 500 Lbs heavier than a PM 1440GT from Taiwan and wider bed ways to boot, for same money.
 
I have that exact same machine, branded as a "Top Turn". Replaced my old clapped-out, knackered Clausing 6300. It does EXACTLY what I tell it to do! 500 Lbs heavier than a PM 1440GT from Taiwan and wider bed ways to boot, for same money.
Yeah they weigh close to 2000# You can really see where the extra beef is by looking at the bottom of the bed casting, It's the same thickness/width all the way down to the end. Most lathes are thick around the chuck and then taper up at the bottom until it gets to the tailstock end then tapers down to thick again. Plus these lathes are 3 horse power.
 
That looks quite interesting.
Have you got a wood floor with concrete floor poured where the machinery is?
Was there a reason for doing it that way instead of a full concrete floor?

Boring story.

I had a big patio poured for my house... Asked the guy how much extra they could do a 14x36 pad for on top of it... 2,000. Hell of a deal. The building is one of those amish steel buildings a couple of guys in hats put together in half a day. It's built on skids, and sitting on the concrete pad.

I did all this before I knew I'd have a lathe in there. So... I cut the floor out and poured 10 inches of concrete there for the lathe.

The city sees it as a "temporary" building so I didn't need any permits or permission. I'm probably only 10-12k deep for the building and got it done in a hurry.
 
I just got a new lathe (used like new Taiwan) Don't have pics but here is my old setup. You can kind of see my Kent USA behind my welding/machinist table. I just picked up an Enco Turnpro in like new condition, Same lathe as the ACER 1440G. Haven't had a chance to get it into place yet.

Edit to add:

My new lathe weighs 2000 lbs. Meehanite castings. This is a stock pic of it.

View attachment 1549303
I notice that Shenwai to the left of your table, I just picked up one of the Taiwanese belt drive lathes which is in excellent condition as a second lathe, the lathe was made by Wey YII Corp that make the Microweily lathes
 

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Boring story.

I had a big patio poured for my house... Asked the guy how much extra they could do a 14x36 pad for on top of it... 2,000. Hell of a deal. The building is one of those amish steel buildings a couple of guys in hats put together in half a day. It's built on skids, and sitting on the concrete pad.

I did all this before I knew I'd have a lathe in there. So... I cut the floor out and poured 10 inches of concrete there for the lathe.

The city sees it as a "temporary" building so I didn't need any permits or permission. I'm probably only 10-12k deep for the building and got it done in a hurry.
Interesting, so you could pick your workshop up and take it somewhere else, but your lathe would stay where it is. The wood floor is probably easier on the body than concrete floor.

It cost almost that much to get some dirt dug out so I could lay a concrete floor and get more useable space in my basement.
 

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