CaptainBarnacles
Established Member
I've been looking for a new lathe and thought I'd settled on the Herald but the lack of mass and the short-ish bed started to concern me. The more I looked around the more I realised that my £1000 budget just wasn't going to buy me the lathe I desire (not new anyway). I began to look at the RP Envoy and the Axi 406, both of which have my wife starting to call around divorce lawyers! On the plus side I am now getting the silent treatment :roll:
Does anyone here own an Envoy (or even a Regent as they're very similar) and perhaps can compare to the Axi lathe? I don't want to buy another lathe that I outgrow in a year or two. My previous lathe was a Jet 1221VS and while I liked it the fixed headstock gave me backache when hollowing bowls etc and the relatively light weight became a restriction when turning bigger pieces.
I'm pitching this question at chairmakers, do you consider 24" between centres long enough for most work that you do or do I still need to be looking at a longer bed? I know that depends on the type of chairs that you want to make but as a chairmaker, if you had to buy a new lathe tomorrow what would you be looking at? (assuming a sensible budget!)
Whilst chairmaking will be the main focus of the lathe I'm also keen to explore other aspects of turning so it must be versatile enough to handle bowls, platters, hollow forms etc as well. I am not averse to buying a used machine but I am looking to buy a lathe that I can put straight to work, I don't want to spend countless hours tinkering with it and sourcing spares.
I'd be grateful for any input as lathes and turning really isn't my area of expertise.
Does anyone here own an Envoy (or even a Regent as they're very similar) and perhaps can compare to the Axi lathe? I don't want to buy another lathe that I outgrow in a year or two. My previous lathe was a Jet 1221VS and while I liked it the fixed headstock gave me backache when hollowing bowls etc and the relatively light weight became a restriction when turning bigger pieces.
I'm pitching this question at chairmakers, do you consider 24" between centres long enough for most work that you do or do I still need to be looking at a longer bed? I know that depends on the type of chairs that you want to make but as a chairmaker, if you had to buy a new lathe tomorrow what would you be looking at? (assuming a sensible budget!)
Whilst chairmaking will be the main focus of the lathe I'm also keen to explore other aspects of turning so it must be versatile enough to handle bowls, platters, hollow forms etc as well. I am not averse to buying a used machine but I am looking to buy a lathe that I can put straight to work, I don't want to spend countless hours tinkering with it and sourcing spares.
I'd be grateful for any input as lathes and turning really isn't my area of expertise.