The lathe in question is my recently purchased second hand but very young Chester DB super 10 long bed which I have done very little work on other to try to get a handle on it's use by trying to do a few passes on a length of round bar that I happened to have, the outcome of which was pretty poor in it's finish this could be due to the type of metal the bar was made of but this doesn't matter at the moment as i do intend to purchase some better steel for any future attempts.
There are a couple of things that have got me concerned about the lathe
1) It has variable speed control by a knob on the head stock but when the knob is fully off the chuck still rotates at about 40 RPM as soon as the power is turned on so the only way to stop it is to turn the power off, Would this be normal on these types of lathe
2) When running it does seem quite noisy, not sure if this is normal
3) When you turn the chuck by hand there does seem to be the feel of a slight rumble from the head bearings as if maybe the shaft might be over tightened on the bearings
I have put a DTI on the chuck and there seems to be little or no run out on it so you would think the bearings should be in good order any advice would be much appreciated from our much more experienced members
There are a couple of things that have got me concerned about the lathe
1) It has variable speed control by a knob on the head stock but when the knob is fully off the chuck still rotates at about 40 RPM as soon as the power is turned on so the only way to stop it is to turn the power off, Would this be normal on these types of lathe
2) When running it does seem quite noisy, not sure if this is normal
3) When you turn the chuck by hand there does seem to be the feel of a slight rumble from the head bearings as if maybe the shaft might be over tightened on the bearings
I have put a DTI on the chuck and there seems to be little or no run out on it so you would think the bearings should be in good order any advice would be much appreciated from our much more experienced members