Mini Q Lathe Review

chuckie

Registered
I Have been on the sidelines for a couple months or so reading about which cue lathe to purchase. I have
been wanting to purchase one for some time.. At first I chose a Deluxe from high tower. Seemed like this was the one most on this forum leaned towards.. I went online and was going to buy one along with the taper attachment, and a few hundred dollars worth of supplies..Well, the company wouldn't accept VISA cards, they wanted certified funds. I wasn't about to shell out that kind of money with no protection. So, I went to plan B, I purchased a porper MINI Q Lathe..(Using My Visa Card)
Here is my review of the Mini Q Lathe.
The Good:
1. Very Nice Wood Box With 2 Drawers.
2. Nice Handles And Latches.
3. 1st Class Headstock.
4. Great Chuck with 1-3/8" Hole thru spindle.
5. Powerfull reversing and Variable Speed motor.
6. Alluminum lathe bed adequate for tasks.
7. Performs tip And ferrule work With ease.
The Bad
1. Having to change set up between tipping and Shaft cleaning.
( Imagine being at a tournement and you have several customers
wanting new tips and their shafts cleaned. Forget it.)
2. Cheapie tailstock. (it does work tho)
3. Crossslide is fixed. (It would be better if it traveled the length of
the lathe bed.)
4. Drill chuck attachment is a little cheesey.
5. Rear steady rest with wheels not the greatest idea.
If your looking for a lathe to do your own cue repairs at home This is what you need. It will do as advertised. Although, i expected more for the money.
If your looking for a lathe to do repairs at tournements or your local bars, this one is slow. UNLESS you make some modifications as i did mine.
I can go from doing a tip and ferrule to polishing a shaft in an instant.
The head stock now remains on the left side for tipping and pollishing. I repositioned the crosslide to left also. The tailstock is on the right end of the lathe and remains there for both tasks. The rear steady rest is to the left of the headstock with the wheels removed. i cut a piece of wood with a V cut in it to bolt on in place of the wheels. I glued a piece of felt on the wood as not to scar the shafts. These Mods work great for me..Mods may not work for everyone. I will upload some pics as soon as i figure out how. Thanks for all the info.
 
Last edited:
:)I am sorry but I am confused. I owned Porpers 1st full Cue Building Lathe. I have also owned 2 HighTower Deluxe (3(?). You can not compare a Mini Cue Porper to a Deluxe Hightower.

Chris Hightower gives you the lathe complete to make a Cue in his package. Even Porpers B lathe you spend thousands more and still need things (LOL, like you ever stop needing).

Even though I have bought 3 from Chris he gets a down payment and paid in full before it leaves even though he knows if I say I will pay I will pay. This is how he is able to keep his price down.

For small parts after he does allow some PayPal.

Congrates on your jumping in and nothing against the Porper, Joe makes great stuff but IMO you didn't get the biggest bang for your buck.

Harry Richards used to carry an ultra small true lathe he converted to a repair lathe to all the Florida Tour events.

I would never pay over $800.00 for a Lathe just for Ferrules, Tips and wraps and @ $800.00 that is more then I would pay now as I gained experiance.

Have fun though, great luck and welcome to addiction.:)
 
I would never worry about sending Chris Hightower a cashier’s check and did for a deluxe I bought a few years back. Chris will always deliver the products you pay for. The customer service you get from Chris is priceless!!!

We also have a proper model B at the pool room and have nothing but good things to say about Joe. I had a few problems with my machine and Joe would get right on the phone and answer any questions I had. Good luck and have fun with your machine
 
Back
Top