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Default Romancing the lathe. Upgrading to a mini (warning: long waste oftime)

I wonder if there is a sort of bell curve re the size of the lathes that
we actually use during our turning lives.

Many of us were exposed to woodturning in our late teens, then came a
long hiatus while earning a living.Then circumstances allowed for more
leisure and we sought a hobby. Some fortuitous event led us back to
woodturning and we bought a modest mini-lathe, became fairly proficient
and began buying every new and improved fixing used by some expert or
lobbied about on a net forum.

The need (read compulsion) to buy a big trophy lathe became unbearable.
Compared to golf or sailing or sneaking around with a co-worker, it was
safer and a lot less expensive _and it kept us home. Besides, we
deserved a once and for all machine that would last a lifetime. It's not
clear which life; the lathe's or the turner's, but we rationalized,
picked out a color and bought our dream machine.

After trying every known turning project and technique the 'been there,
done thats' gradually became tiresome. Those large turnings accumulated
and selling them was no fun, not all that profitable and our hobby began
to resemble the job we wanted time away from. The heavy blanks that were
expensive or a hassle to process became harder to lift. Turning big had
become an expensive chore while small items were easy and more fun.
(posting woodturning banality is even easier, certainly cheaper.)

Some of us had kept our mini, others noticed that a new mini cost less
than an accessory for our trophy lathe. Of course, we weren't about to
sell our big white, grey, blue or green machine. There would be the
agony of being asked in a crowd at the club meeting, "what lathe do you
own?" We would have to murmur, " I have a H.F" (or maybe a Carbatec
knockoff). Think of the heartbreak.

So we upgrade and turn on our mini's and talk about our maxi's and all
is right with our turning world. However, If I have mistakenly got the
bell curve upside down or if I cracked it, let me know. I might be a
COC.


Turn to Safety, Arch
Fortiter



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