buy a good lathe book,,and buy a lathe,,,
that is what I was told and it worked!
Try tro find someone who is lathe experienced to help you find or decide if a lathe found is any good. LOTS of trashed lathes out there. You want to mostly work on guns and stuff, NOT the lathe itself unless you have LOTS of time and energy to do tedious work of disassembling, cleaning, picture taking [to know where the parts go back to], and assembly with care. I did this on my first large lathe [12 x 36] because it had lots of brass chips in the gearwork area. Previous owner left the cover open [DOH!].
It was kind of satisfying to have done it and I learned a lot about my lathe. I would rather spend whatever extra money it takes to find a lathe that has been taken care of and kept CLEAN!
As I said, beware of machines that have not had good care by knowlegable owners. Your time will be BETTER spent USING your lathe, not repairing or restoring it!
When I was shopping, I would have to say I saw one really nice lathe for every 10 lathes I found. The rest had been 'thru it'.
Hopefully you will find a good teacher or friend to show you the lathe. It will look like a "too complicated" machine at first, but the interest you have indicated you have will go FAR to get you running the machine quickly. I was fortunate enough to have a gunsmith friend PUSH me up to his lathe and say "do it". Just be CAREFULL at all times around the machine, it can hurt you if you don't be very careful.
I enjoyed learning about lathes and their use and would do it over again if I had to. It's VERY NEAT to be able to step over to YOUR lathe and fit/trim/cut/shorten/thread/clean/bore/ream/or MAKE, etc, etc. anything you might be working on!
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