Plecostomus
Commodore
I sold my little yellow lathe today. And I feel absolutely horrible.
Recently I graduated from working out of my living room to an actual basement workshop with a full-size mill and lathe.
The mill is a 30 year old Bridgeport J-head with digital readouts, full set of collets, big-ass kurt vice and about a zillion cutters and attachments.
The lathe is a war-vet Monarch from 1940 that's in better condition than some "modern" machines. It's got a collet closer, 3, 4 and six jaw chucks, quick change and rocker toolposts, big-ass drill chuck and power glide on all movements.. Did I mention it comes with an isofuckton of tooling and attachments?
It's by and far a much better machine than the wee yellow one. It has more power, more features, far more accurate and it's not OMG FUCKING YELLOW!!!1!"
Yet I feel terrible selling the little one.
It was clunky, very innacurate, had no readouts, no power-glide, and to change speeds you had to manually unscrew gears and replace them by hand.
By all accounts it was a piece of shit.
Yet when I carried it out to the truck for the fellow I sold it to it felt like I was kicking a puppy or selling a friend to Boghorian Slave Runners (don't ask move along now good day).
So, anyone else sell something and suffer seperation anxiety like this? Share your stories.
Recently I graduated from working out of my living room to an actual basement workshop with a full-size mill and lathe.
The mill is a 30 year old Bridgeport J-head with digital readouts, full set of collets, big-ass kurt vice and about a zillion cutters and attachments.
The lathe is a war-vet Monarch from 1940 that's in better condition than some "modern" machines. It's got a collet closer, 3, 4 and six jaw chucks, quick change and rocker toolposts, big-ass drill chuck and power glide on all movements.. Did I mention it comes with an isofuckton of tooling and attachments?
It's by and far a much better machine than the wee yellow one. It has more power, more features, far more accurate and it's not OMG FUCKING YELLOW!!!1!"
Yet I feel terrible selling the little one.
It was clunky, very innacurate, had no readouts, no power-glide, and to change speeds you had to manually unscrew gears and replace them by hand.
By all accounts it was a piece of shit.
Yet when I carried it out to the truck for the fellow I sold it to it felt like I was kicking a puppy or selling a friend to Boghorian Slave Runners (don't ask move along now good day).
So, anyone else sell something and suffer seperation anxiety like this? Share your stories.