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Stephane Guerin
 
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Default Ideas for quieting the Craftsman 21715 15" lathe?

I think adding rubber pad will not be a good thing. I suggest you add
some sand bag. They will damp a lot of vibration and add good stability
when unbalance blanks.

Daryl Biberdorf wrote in news:5bKcncBT2-nbZLyiU-
:

I'm a new woodturner with the "new" Craftsman 21715
15" lathe. (I think it's well worth its best buy status
in the American Woodworker issue last December or so.)
The only complaint I've got so far is the fact that it's
not the quietest lathe around. It's about the same volume
as the agitation cycle on a top-loading washing machine.
The lathe is mounted a longish bench, which is amplifying
the sound a bit due to resonance. That's not a problem
in my garage, where the lathe is now.

However, I'm about to move far, far away to an apartment,
where the lathe will have to go in the basement storage
area. There, I'm concerned that the noise might be bothersome
to the apartment that has a common wall with the basement
some 10 to 15 feet away.

I've considered placing some rubber pad between the lathe
and its bench to isolate it a bit from the bench.
Alternatively, I've considered using linked belts on its
Reeves drive mechanism to see if that helps.

Does anyone have any experience with these ideas or further
suggestions? I hate to give up my big lathe for a Jet mini
(which is whisper quiet), but I don't want to get my
neighbors upset with me. I'm trying to be the best neighbor
I can be.

Thanks in advance for any tips.

Daryl