Hello Dennis and all.
I have also recently been thinking of buying a new micro lathe to use in the comfort of the house, and it was either the Taig or Sherline I was considering. They both seem to be pretty equal in terms of quality and capability, and both have an enthusiastic group of users.
I already have two much larger lathes in my home workshop, one of which is a Chinese geared head lathe. I have nothing against Chinese machinery, but for the new micro lathe I have decided to avoid a small Chinese machine and go for something with faultless quality and possibly better reliability, but which I can still afford.
The Cowells ME90 is lovely, and more closely follows full size design, but it is in a different league with a price tag to match. I almost bought a used one recently with many accessories, but was finally put of by the damage on the bedways in several places caused by the use of a hacksaw.
While comparing the Taig and the Sherline, I notice that the Taig uses a lever operated tailstock and a rack and pinion to drive the carraige. The Sherline uses a feedscrew operated tailstock and a centrally mounted leadscrew to drive its carraige. I also liked the all metal construction of them both, no plastic bits such as handwheels.
The Chinese made Sieg C1 lathe, although slightly larger, appears to be based on the Sherline design in places. With a very similar carraige and cross slide, tailstock, topslide, bed and base and with the centrally mounted leadscrew.
It would be interesting to know what you decide in the end. I haven't made my mind up yet, but I slightly prefer the Sherline at the moment.