Jon, perfectly right. There are parts you can *only* make in a CNC 
lathe. In fact, a couple of yeas ago, I CNC-equipped my lathe only for 
the one purpose of turning large grinding discs, positive and negative 
curvature of exactly the same radius of, say, 4 or 6 meters, of 300 mm 
diam. cast iron slabs. How would you do that manually? Since then, I 
dismantled the steppers and all again though, because with most parts, I 
can make one piece faster than write a program for the CNC machine.

Peter


Am 08.03.2013 18:57, schrieb Jon Elson:
> It absolutely depends on the parts you make. If you make mostly 
> rectangular parts, a mill is an obvious choice. If you make free-form 
> carved parts, it is also quite good. But, if you largely make round 
> parts, perhaps for tube fittings, valves, sliding rods and pistons, 
> etc. then a lathe is WAY more efficient. I have not CNC'd my lathe, as 
> I rarely do production parts of that nature, But I can easily see 
> where a different mix of parts to be made would make a CNC lathe way 
> more useful. Also, there are things that are TRIVIAL on a CNC lathe 
> that are harder to do on a manual lathe. I am thinking of things with 
> tapers, or tapered threads. A couple lines of G-code vs. a couple 
> hours of exacting setup and calibration. Jon


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