Ripstop said:
NEVER stand in front of the chuck.
It's machining time! Do you know where your chuck key is?
Play safe and have lots of fun.
Great thread, svt 40, you might be better off with a TAIG or Sherline. I've got a TAIG, except for the fact that it's a little small, and it won't cut threads, I have had no problems with it. You do have to jury rig it to get the proper speeds for metal working with an idler pulley that has to be made up, and all else that goes with that. I had one of those ones you had for a while and it didn't last very long. Gear spider broke, gears were plastic except for the ones in the headstock, none of the plastic gears would mesh, also the tailstock setover was a crude joke. I eventuall sold it to a person who worked at Hermes, he had access to the machine shop crew there, they basically rebuilt it for him so he could get into model steaming. You get what you pay for. Even one of the ones advertised in Home Shop Machinist would be better. Me and my friend went through the machine shop course at Dartmouth Regional Vocational School a while ago, he went on to go into engineering, I went into the Army, so since he had this course under his belt, when he started going to TUNS, they had a segment of the training where they learned how to operate lathes and mills. Since he had this course under his belt, he was teaching his buddies in the course how to use them. It was late in the school year, there was this guy who was operating a Colchester lathe about 10 inch swing, he had it cranked up pretty good, he was wearing one of those baggy muscle shirts which were popular back then, so this guy leans over the chuck and ZIP! no more muscle shirt, it was just like it magically disappeared! My friend laughed his arse off. I myself was once guilty of the crime of leaving the chuck key in a Harrison Lathe also about 10 inch swing and turned it on.

Damned chuck key narrowly missed the instructor! He kind of was leery of me for a while after that!
My TAIG is a very wee lathe, some would not consider it a lathe, it's so small. Nice to have regardless. Someday, I'd like to get a 'real' lathe. Have you ever looked in the old Popular Science and Popular Mechanics magazines circa 1950's and earlier? There's tons of ads for metalworking gear. Must have been a nice atmosphere for small metalworking shops and inventing! Too bad our government is turning it's back on this important part of the economy.
If you ordered one of these from the states the shipping etc. could be prohibitive. Might be better off getting one locally or maybe you could check out the gov't auctions. Just a little while ago, the NS gov't was selling off a few Colchester Bantam lathes and some other neat stuff including a heat treating furnace.