Busy day. I listed the Delta lathe two days ago and had 2 lookers and one buyer come by today. In between, I went into Norfolk and picked up the new lathe. It was tough paying that much for a new tool, and I haven't bought anything new in power tools in a very long time. All my purchases have been old iron, generally American but with a couple of Euro machines and one Japanese. But as mentioned, there is really nothing in vintage machinery that does what this lathe does.
Unboxing:
Lathe comes crated up in a plywood box and is pretty well packaged for shipping. The legs are bolted together with some steel plates and they are bolted down to the bed with some "T"s that hold them tight. They also use Styrofoam to keep parts from banging together. And the bed is through bolted to the base of the crate to keep it from moving.
I left the box in the back of the truck and pulled the parts off one by one. Once inside the garage, I managed to get the bed up on some sawhorses with the help of the guy buying my old lathe. Then it was just a matter of maneuvering the legs underneath the bed and getting the bolts started. I had mounted the feet on the bottom of each leg. One of the feet had the screw threads covered in some sort of white corrosion, similar to what you get on a car battery. I went ahead and wire brushed the corrosion off and put it on the leg
And for my next gripe, one of the holes was buggered up with either swarf mixed in with paint or it was never machined correctly. I had to drill out the hole before the bolt would even get through. But that was pretty much it for manufacturing boo boos. I will also say that the paint is pretty soft and chips easily and the base primer is some type of white so it shows right up.
I'm very impressed by the way this motor runs. Very smooth, a small hiss as it starts up and runs. In normal use, I don't think I'll even hear it run over the noise from turning. I've got it moved into its final spot, and will take some more pics tomorrow when I will actually make some chips with it. Thanks for following along.