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Thread: How Smooth and Quiet is your Lathe?

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Location
    Escondido, CA
    Posts
    6,224

    Question How Smooth and Quiet is your Lathe?

    I love smooth and quiet woodworking tools. I know they all make noise when the blade cuts the wood, but some are quieter and smoother than others, whether by mass, by quality of machined parts, or any other reason.

    How smooth and quiet is your lathe? Are there any built-in problems in design that make it more susceptible to noise or vibration? If you have used more then one, which is smoother?

    This is personally just out of curiosity. I love my Delta 46-460 with 200 lbs of sand in the base. It is very smooth and quiet until I add my beginner's techniques to the mix .

    Thanks for the discussion.

    Brian
    Veni Vidi Vendi Vente! I came, I saw, I bought a large coffee!

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Oct 2008
    Location
    Kapolei Hawaii
    Posts
    3,236
    The noisiest part of my Jet 1642-2 is a slight high pitched whine that the inverter makes. I even called Jet about it. The rest of the lathe makes very little noise. Probably why I noticed the whine from the inverter. It is very quiet even after years of use. My 1014 makes a little bearing noise after many years of use.

    My starter Craftsman lathe, however, was really noisy, but I didn't know any better. Turned for a long time on that too. It finally gave me a blessing and died on me. Then I got the 1014, wow, what a difference.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Aug 2009
    Location
    Rapid City, SD
    Posts
    223
    My DVR is as quite as can be and smooth as a baby's behind.
    Wes

    "Never believe everything you think"

  4. #4
    Agreed about the DVR XP. Very smooth and quiet.
    Lathes: Nova DVR XP, Delta 46-460, Jet 1014vsi; Bader III 2"x72" belt grinder; Triton 2.25 router; CMT Industrio table; Jointech fence; SC planer; Dewalt miter; Delta 14" bandsaw; Festool TS55, MFT/3, CT22, ETS150/3, OF1400, PSB300EQ, CXS; Hegner Scrollsaw; JJ-6CS jointer; Grizzly 1023s cabinetsaw, Jet 17" drill press; Rigid OSS; 9" SandFlee; 3M AirStream & Breathe Easy PAPRs

  5. #5
    My old Delta/Rockewell is silent. If I turn it on, close the shop door, go in the house, close the house door, go into the bedroom and close the bedroom door then go into the bathroom and close that door, I can't hear a thing.
    David DeCristoforo

  6. #6
    had new bearings installed last late spring, i am running like a new lathe but now know to avoid some stupid things that i have tried in the last 4-5 years

  7. #7
    Reeves drives are noise,I have a General 160-18 Canada made not China and the reeves drive is not overly noise but it is not quiet.
    My Vega 2600 is very quiet a little noise from the inverter but quiet. I have 2 Jet 10-14 and a Delta Midi early model belt change very quite,I also just for laughs have a micro lathe swing 4" max I run it on a sewing machine motor with foot pedal VS. An "old" Delta 12" Reeves drive and motor, belt, pulleys, everything is noise. My Medal lathes are all rather quiet.
    Comments and Constructive Criticism Welcome

    Haste in every craft or business brings failures. Herodotus,450 B.C.

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Dec 2009
    Location
    Mount Sterling, KY
    Posts
    2,504
    I have a Grizzly G0658 and a Jet 1642, many times I have walked by my turning cell and saw one of them spinning where I forgot to turn it off. If I hadn't seen one of them I wouldn't have know it was on because they don't make any noise. If I am right up on either one I can hear some low noise but I have to be right there.
    ____________________________________________
    JD at J&J WoodSmithing
    Owingsville, Kentucky

    "The best things in life are not things."

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Mar 2007
    Location
    Eureka, Mo.
    Posts
    2,363
    I also have the DVR and you hardly know it is on. Started with the the jet 10" variable speed and it was so quiet I forgot it was on a few times and reached for the spinning bowl. Now my old Shopsmith on the other hand lets you know it is running from 30 yars away!

  10. Both my Grizzly G0698 and my Delta 46-460 are quiet.......the Delta is VERY quiet. In cold weather, the bearings on my G0698 have to warm a little before they are really quiet........my shop is basically unheated except for a kerosene heater when I turn it on, and a little overhead radiant heater ......so the shop gets really cold, but the lathe quietens down quickly, but I would not call it noisy, even when cold.
    Remember, in a moments time, everything can change!

    Vision - not just seeing what is, but seeing what can be!




  11. #11
    Join Date
    Aug 2011
    Location
    Lummi Island, WA
    Posts
    665
    up until last June I turned on a Jet 1642. It was very smooth and quiet. I sold the Jet and invested in a Robust AB 25. Having turned on a Robust before deciding to buy, I was a little surprised that it seemed a little louder than the one I demoed extensively earlier. Found out two things - 1) My lathe has the new version of the Leeson 3HP motor, and it is just slightly noisier than the older version - mostly fan noise from what I can tell, and 2) Any differences in noise levels unless they're caused by bad bearings or other mechanical defects, fade as you get used to anew piece of equipment.

    I haven't heard the lathe run since I discovered just how smooth and efficient a well made piece of machinery can be. Like James, I've left it running on occasion just because it is so quiet. Also, putting a few miles on it seemed to let the fan 'bed in' and the noise is nearly gone at this point.

  12. #12
    Join Date
    Aug 2010
    Location
    Wittmann, AZ
    Posts
    2,503
    My old Delta sounded something like an airplane coming in for a landing. When turning at night I sometimes worried about waking up the neighbors and we're all on 2 acre lots.
    My new DVR is extremely quite and smooth (even when it's running , which hopefully it will be doing soon).
    "If it is wood, I will turn it."
    vor-tex: any activity, situation, or way of life regarded as irresistibly engulfing.

  13. #13
    all my tools are totally silent. I turn on my jet powered 5HP Clearvue cyclone and you will be hard pressed to hear any machine over that.

  14. #14
    Join Date
    Jan 2004
    Location
    Fredericksburg, TX
    Posts
    2,576
    My seven year old Powermatic 3520B is very quiet in the lower to middle motor speed and has a little motor wind noise at the higher end. Bearing noise is nothing, and then there has been the occasional click with loose tach pick-up that had to be tightened. My new little Nova Comet II does not have enough time on it to be broken in, but does have some motor noise again at the higher end, and some belt noise still being worked due to alignment.

  15. #15
    Join Date
    Dec 2006
    Location
    Mesa, Arizona
    Posts
    1,799

    There's smooth and then there's smooooth.

    Brian - I have two lathes, a HF 34706 (a clone of Jet's old Reeve's drive lathe) and an Australian made Woodfast (as opposed to the Rikon version of the same lathe that's made in Taiwan). The Woodfast is much smoother. However, the HF is fine for spindles. In addition, I've spent some quality (and quantity) time on a PM 3520B. The Woodfast is a little smoother than the PM.

    The smoothest lathe I've ever seen is the Serious Wood Lathe by Serious Toolworks. The thing is massive -- over 1,500 pounds of cast iron wood turning love! I saw it on display at a wood turning symposium a few years ago. I was standing at the tailstock end of the lathe with my back to the lathe. As I spoke with another turner, I casually rested my hand on the bed of the lathe. When I turned around, I was shocked to see that a large out-of-balance bowl blank was spinning on the headstock. I was shocked to see that the lathe was on because I had not felt ANY vibration. That's smooooth. On top of the headstock, the team from Serious had a stack of wood blocks spelling out "Serious". When I tried making a few cuts on the bowl blank, the blocks never moved. Look up "smooth" in the dictionary and you'll see a picture of the Serious wood lathe.

    Here's a link: http://serioustoolworks.com/wood-lathes.php
    David Walser
    Mesa, Arizona

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