The issue with some of the Vevor's is due to their cost cutting, they have engineered in some custom parts. That might be ok, if they sold spare parts, but for the most part they don't, especially the electronics. On the machinist board that I frequent, about 30%, give or take, have significant issues with Vevor lathes. If you get a good one they can be decent. A poor one, let's just say they became expensive lessons in getting what you paid for. Their lack of QC becomes your problem.
To the best of my knowledge, some of the Vevor lathes use a custom integrated motor, and you can't get a replacement. To fit a standard replacement motor requires a lot of fabrication.
That being said, many lathes can be adjusted to reduce their slop, including an HF one. There's quite a few screws and adjustments that always seem to get loose over time. It's worth your effort to go over your lathe every so often to keep it in good condition.
I have 2 lathes, a mini-lathe 7x16 and a G0752 10x22. Neither are work horses, but both can do serviceable duty, within their class. I got into machining due to my interest in airguns. Think my first job was to convert a P-17 to 0.22 by machining a Crosman barrel. Also extended the piston to get more compression. (JBWeld to piston face, then machined.). Did all the work on the mini. Great fun tinkering. Made lots of threaded adapters, cutting threads is easy, once you learn how.
Don't think machining is a cheap hobby. The tooling adds significant cost. But there's an immense satisfaction to making things, or improving them.
To the best of my knowledge, some of the Vevor lathes use a custom integrated motor, and you can't get a replacement. To fit a standard replacement motor requires a lot of fabrication.
That being said, many lathes can be adjusted to reduce their slop, including an HF one. There's quite a few screws and adjustments that always seem to get loose over time. It's worth your effort to go over your lathe every so often to keep it in good condition.
I have 2 lathes, a mini-lathe 7x16 and a G0752 10x22. Neither are work horses, but both can do serviceable duty, within their class. I got into machining due to my interest in airguns. Think my first job was to convert a P-17 to 0.22 by machining a Crosman barrel. Also extended the piston to get more compression. (JBWeld to piston face, then machined.). Did all the work on the mini. Great fun tinkering. Made lots of threaded adapters, cutting threads is easy, once you learn how.
Don't think machining is a cheap hobby. The tooling adds significant cost. But there's an immense satisfaction to making things, or improving them.
Upvote 0