graduate_owner
Established Member
Hi everyone,
I was browsing through my Axminster catalogue (as you do - I am going to miss the good old Axi catalogue, browsing online is just not the same) and I noticed their specifications for their various grades of machinery. The spec for hobby equipment is 100 hours per year Maximum. This works out at about 2 hours per week. I think 2 hours per week might be fine if you were making say a coffee table because you might use a planer thicknesser for a short while, then table saw etc but with a lathe you would do the entire job on the one machine. I suspect you would soon eat into those 100 hours..
So I was wondering how much a typical (?) hobby woodturner uses a lathe, and whether a hobby lathe would be suitable for the average turner. I suppose you could make the same argument for scroll saw users.
Personally I have so many things to do that my turning time always seems limited, but when I do get the urge to have a bash at the lathe I usually spend several hours. I would like to spend a lot more time, and I think an Axminster hobby lathe would be unsuitable for me.
Any comments?
K
I was browsing through my Axminster catalogue (as you do - I am going to miss the good old Axi catalogue, browsing online is just not the same) and I noticed their specifications for their various grades of machinery. The spec for hobby equipment is 100 hours per year Maximum. This works out at about 2 hours per week. I think 2 hours per week might be fine if you were making say a coffee table because you might use a planer thicknesser for a short while, then table saw etc but with a lathe you would do the entire job on the one machine. I suspect you would soon eat into those 100 hours..
So I was wondering how much a typical (?) hobby woodturner uses a lathe, and whether a hobby lathe would be suitable for the average turner. I suppose you could make the same argument for scroll saw users.
Personally I have so many things to do that my turning time always seems limited, but when I do get the urge to have a bash at the lathe I usually spend several hours. I would like to spend a lot more time, and I think an Axminster hobby lathe would be unsuitable for me.
Any comments?
K