I have a full size Shopfox lathe, and want to start replacing tips and ferrels Looking for a Oneway or similar steady rest unless there is a better way !
Joey, you forgot to mention a crossslide/carriage. I once saw a wood lathe like this that had a drill press milling vice attached to the bed for cue repair...
While the OP can choose go this route, almost anyone on here will refer you to a repair lathe specifically designed for cues (Hightower, Midamerica, or other taig based lathe), Unique Products, or Porper. It will probably save you hours of headache and money.
With all due respect, guys I have turned some pretty intricate parts over the years with standard wood and medal lathes. And see no reason to buy a cue lathe to install a cue tip. I will install a chuck and a Oneway steady rest and post pictured. Thanks.:smile:
People with a good deal of experience are telling you that you'll spend more cobbling together a half-assed workaround to make the wrong machine maybe do what you want than you will finding the right machine at the right price. But obviously you are smarter than them so I'm kind of confused as to why you bother posting to begin with.
TW
I am very sorry for the posting , and can assure you it will not happen again. WOw!![]()
:lol: Then there are folks who are both smart and frugal, perhaps that's what confuses you.
Joey, did yall look at the steady rest the OP mentioned in the first post ? It looks fine, and maybe something others will find interesting.
For the folks with poor google-fu : http://www.oneway.ca/steadyrests/spindle_steady.htm
The guy is looking to do tips and ferrules. There are methods. I appreciate that live threading on a proper lathe (an engine lathe, NOT a little cue lathe) is ideal but lots of shots can be taken with a cue that has a ferrule that is a simple sleeve. Making the tenon on a wood lathe is entirely possible, by hand or using a simple cross-slide arrangement (a $50 touch, not that much of an expense).
And Ron, appreciate that these guys argue about lots of stuff and typically think that a well equiped shop is the only way to go. Good luck with your projects.
Dave
Dave - I started with NOTHING and built all my original tools, pretty much from scratch. As I progressed I came to realize that professional results come from professional skills AND professional equipment. The OP is not looking for a way to mess around with his own cue for fun, he almost certainly intends to work on other people's cues and presumably charge money for that service.
When I was in my teens I was riding with a friend and we got a flat tire. He had a spare, but the only "tools" he had were a bumper jack with no handle and a pair of Vice Grips. We managed to loosen the lug nuts with the vice grips, using the hollow upright stem of the jack as an extension bar for leverage. We then jacked up the car, using the handle of the Vice Grips to pump the jack mechanism. We changed the tire, reversed the process, and drove on our way.
From that experience I learned it was possible to do almost anything with almost nothing... but I would never - never, never, never - take my car to a "tire shop" that only had some Vice Grips and a bumper jack. It's one thing to hack around on your own cue with the wrong tools, but it's a whole other prospect to take in someone else's cue and work on it with anything less than professional equipment.
If you think I'm wrong about that please take you favorite shaft and send it to this guy so he can **** around with it trying to make a wood lathe do the job of a cue lathe.
TW
(PS: What you didn't consider is that for the cost of a chuck, Oneway steady rest, and a few other minor requirements the OP could probably buy one of the small "lathes" being made specifically for replacing tips and ferrules. Also, please remember to take before-and-after photos of your shaft when you have him work on it.)