cambournepete
Established Member
So after the DM Tools tedium I drove to Didcot and spent 3 hours or so at the Toolpost open day.
Spoke to Mark Baker, Chris Pouncey (Robert Sorby) and Andrew Hall (the hat man).
All 3 were very impressed with the Wivamac lathes they were using, and Mark also enthused about the one Woodturning had in their workshop for several months. Mark let me have a play on the one he was using (2HP 1200 vario) and it was very smooth with little vibration on the bouncy floor it was standing on.
All of them were much better than the record maxi-1 and I think also than the maxi-2. Plus of course they have swivel/sliding headstocks.
Question to Wivamac owners - is moving the headstock awkward , having to use a spanner?
I expect to do a mixture of turning - bowls, spindle, hollow forms etc.
Now, I could afford (using an inheritance) to get a VB with full tailstock if I wanted, but would have little left for other toys.
I k now I've previously raved about the "Stealth" lathe, but that would leave even less of the inheritance.
So, I managed to leave with wallet intact, but with a good offer (open until Monday) on a Wivamac DB1200 Vario, 3HP, full variable electronic speed control with external control box, 1200mm between centres and 520mm diameter swing and bowl turning attachment, together with a Oneway Stronghold chuck (largely on Mark Baker's recommendation).
What does the team think?
Would I regret the Wivamac and keep thinking it's not a VB, or am I actually being vaguely sensible?
Is the Stronghold a good chuck?
Should I save more cash and just get the Jet 3520B, remembering though cost is not the primary issue, luckily, for once
Thanks in advance for any advice
Pete
PS Sorry George, I know it's not a VB!
Spoke to Mark Baker, Chris Pouncey (Robert Sorby) and Andrew Hall (the hat man).
All 3 were very impressed with the Wivamac lathes they were using, and Mark also enthused about the one Woodturning had in their workshop for several months. Mark let me have a play on the one he was using (2HP 1200 vario) and it was very smooth with little vibration on the bouncy floor it was standing on.
All of them were much better than the record maxi-1 and I think also than the maxi-2. Plus of course they have swivel/sliding headstocks.
Question to Wivamac owners - is moving the headstock awkward , having to use a spanner?
I expect to do a mixture of turning - bowls, spindle, hollow forms etc.
Now, I could afford (using an inheritance) to get a VB with full tailstock if I wanted, but would have little left for other toys.
I k now I've previously raved about the "Stealth" lathe, but that would leave even less of the inheritance.
So, I managed to leave with wallet intact, but with a good offer (open until Monday) on a Wivamac DB1200 Vario, 3HP, full variable electronic speed control with external control box, 1200mm between centres and 520mm diameter swing and bowl turning attachment, together with a Oneway Stronghold chuck (largely on Mark Baker's recommendation).
What does the team think?
Would I regret the Wivamac and keep thinking it's not a VB, or am I actually being vaguely sensible?
Is the Stronghold a good chuck?
Should I save more cash and just get the Jet 3520B, remembering though cost is not the primary issue, luckily, for once
Thanks in advance for any advice
Pete
PS Sorry George, I know it's not a VB!