Pictures?
I really liked my L&S!
Selling it was a big mistake on my part!
Keeping in mind that.. "Powerturn" was the baby-bear - smallest of three classes in the Large & Shapely lineup? You might find an Omniturn your shop can stand the mass of. The bigger bruder Superturn was basically "oil field" spindle bore goods and "overkill" as a daily-driver.
Another option might be an "AVS". Both the DC motor & DC drive and later AC motor + inverter were potentially expensve w/r the electicals "back in the day".
No longer a problem at all, either one.
The early DC model there are plenty of
modern solid-state DC drives around, pretty much "wire and forget" drop-in replacements.
The later AC model only needs any of what are NOW dirt-common and much cheaper VFD, also "wire-and-forget" drop-in replacements.
The motors are happier, either generations. Both pf DC drives and VFD's are just that much better as well as cheaper than the old OEM ones, back when electric variable speed was still "bleeding edge". Now it is dirt-common.
Then off you go with same lathe, lots of RPM choices, and only about one-third as many gears - it still has "some" - to worry about, but.... "that's a feature, not a bug" for better use of power than pure VFD or DC drive and NO mechanical ratios.
Monarch lathe is - or was - also the surviving go-to for Lodge & Shipley parts.
I've NO idea how much coverage they still have, but you could contact them by phone or email and ask?
(At least) one OTHER candidate is still a going concern.
As we type, I have shipment being arranged of just under USD$ 2,000 worth of 1970's Cazeneuve HBX-360-BC brand-new parts ex factory in France.
That model, now "Optica", has gone-over to servo driven spindle drive instead of power shifted varidrive, and grown itself Siemens "Teach in" hybrid manual/CNC controls.
But so have BOTH of its larger brothers, the 5XX and 7XX series.
Nice to be able to still get parts ...and from the original maker.
"Free" I didn't expect. Even so, the prices weren't all that bad considering the EU's massive social & tax burden on bizness in general.
Fair warning:
With two generations of Henri Bruet with genius-level IQ's doing the designing, and several dozen patents?
Cazeneuve's are more than just "a little bit" weird.
But it's good sort of weird, not squirrelly-weird, so once you get your head around the features they built-in, perhaps the best-ever manual (and later, CNC as well) inch/metric single-point threading high on the list, they are really, really sweet to operate.
Just don't take overly long lunch breaks .. or you may need to sit a refresher training course on return!
DAMHIKT!
Well you DID want something more "interesting" than an over-grown SB 9 on steroids, yah?