• The Shot You’ll Never Forget Giveaway - Enter To Win A Barrel From Rifle Barrel Blanks!

    Tell us about the best or most memorable shot you’ve ever taken. Contest ends June 13th and remember: subscribe for a better chance of winning!

    Join contest Subscribe

Gunsmithing Taiwan Hardinge clone

Re: Taiwan Hardinge clone

Feeler did make a copy of the Hardinge toolroom lathe in the late 80's. Many of the parts were soft steel with no heat treating. I would be very leery of one. Sharpe made a copy a few years back that looked pretty good. I bought a new Hardinge HLV tool room lathe back in 89 and it is still super accurate. It is a little small for some gunsmithing tasks but you cannot beat it for small precision work especially small pins and threaded parts. If it had a bigger brother that had a larger spindle bore and a little more bed length it would be better. I guess a 14" x 40" or a 16" x 40" engine lathe would probably be a better all round choice for a gun smith.
 
Re: Taiwan Hardinge clone

Here are a few thoughts. The things that make a Hardinge a Hardinge are the reasons I would buy one. They are extreemly well built accurate machines with some unique features,and if taken care of will last for a long time. As mentioned above the HLV has some shortcoming with respect to gun work. I would be willing to work around this for the benifits of the HLV, if I was selecting an import I would pick one that is better suited to the task as it likely will not posess the quality and precision as a HLV. Nice used Hardinge HLVs can be had I would assume for about the price of a new import Just my .02