Oh he is pretty German when it suits him10:1?
But maybe his wallet is only 1:10 German?
Weiler is still making manual lathes. They have a bunch of well paid German Machinists and Mechanics working there. As one might expect.
You want to have a really solidly built chair handy when you price one out though. Not a terrible investment for the right business, but well beyond the reach of someone on a hobby budget!
It is one of the somewhat mixed blessings of the modern machine tool scene, that the cheap machinery from China has driven the prices for machine tools down until many companies no longer wish to manufacture any.
The other side of that coin is that the prices of some of the once VERY expensive to procure machines, have been dragged down to the levels where a working guy can afford to buy one and keep it in a hobby shop.
A decent example is a Monarch 10EE lathe. Worth the price of a pretty significant portion of a new subdivision when new, now available as a rebuilt machine from Monarch (circa $100K US), or used, for about what a new pre- worn-out new Chinese machine of similar capacity, but vastly lower capability will cost.
Trevj, I fully agree with this but not all people's minds work alike. Some people can read a manual, go directly to a machine, remember all of the names and functions of the levers and dials, then proceed to do functional work. Not me. I need to read the manual, take it with me and get my eyeballs on the system to correlate the information in the manual to usable information to apply to what I want to do. After I've done it a few times, it's locked in.
Some folks like the "idea" of working with precision machinery. They purchase them on whims and often these machines end up collecting dust while perched on unstable foundations. Usually if these folks had mentors, they would have continued on with their "idea."
These days, I don't "need" the extra cash that was generated by my machines. Now, I mostly just play for my own benefit. I do odd jobs for some of my farmer friends but don't charge them. I don't want to be their go to guy, every time they have a break down. I REALLY LIKE BEING RETIRED in a manner where I don't have to count every penny and can play. These days, work is the crabgrass in the lawn of life.
Having the machines helped me get to this point.
I suggest to anyone out there that is contemplating getting a lathe/mill to assess very closely how much you will use these devices. Get some books and peruse them first. These machines aren't just turn them on and go. Parts/pieces will not just magically reproduce themselves without your personal/hands & eyeballs on assistance. Some of the new CNC equipment will do this but only after a program is installed. That's another skill set altogether.
Ayup. The learning curve for this stuff can feel like running into a brick wall at times. If you cannot grasp the basics, the odds of getting any further are pretty low.
That is part of the reason that grinding one's own tools is a real deal. You start to understand cause and effect, while so doing You have some vested effort involved, rather than simply walking over to the cabinet for yet another insert. It tends to focus the user's mind on getting working results. Aside from that, you are never at the mercy of what might be available, when you need a one-of, for a job that needs done here and now, either. Inserts are wonderful time savers, but so many guys think that they offer a means to skip learning a basic skill, when they should be learning it, then understanding when and why to use inserts to save a bunch of time if that is what you wish to do.
Unless you are a button monkey with no skills, hired to load and unload parts on a CNC Production floor (where you will soon enough be replaced by a parts loading robot), you need to understand what is going on in the machining process, in order to assess the results, make any changes, or make any programming variations in order to make parts that meet spec.
Retired. Yeah. They call it that because you end up tired again and again, and again...

Re-tired!
Cheers
Trev