thank you so much for helping me,in my country (Serbia) i dont have no one to ask obout my problem that is why i asked you,thank you .
It's only fair. Many of the very skilled Serbian craftsmen are not there to ask because their Great Grandfathers moved to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, where I met them as Brother Steel Workers, USWA Union!
If your women are still as lovely - but extremely
hard-headed - as ever, I'm not sure I understand why anyone STAYED home at all!
But there you have it... humans in all their astonishing variety, doing the best they can with whatever they have, not what they WISHED they had...
Richard can teach you how to
fix your lathe to as good as new. When you have the time to take it out of service to do the work on it that is required.
I can teach you how to make good parts on it
while it is still worn out and broken so you can earn the money to be able to AFFORD to take it out of service long enough to do that work. We - thousands of us - learned how to do that because we had no other option.
We did not own the machines. The companies we worked for did not PERMIT us to interrupt the flow of work to repair them. If you are working as an employee on a "company" lathe, welcome to that club. "Run what you got" was once MOST of the world of machining as a craft and trade, many countries.
Repair - if even it IS your own machine - needs planning, training, and practice.
Richard can do it
fast. Most others need two to five - even TEN times as long. And they cannot do it it all properly if they have not paid attention to getting the BASICS right.
That sort of preparation does not happen overnight. Budget about a year to learn just the basics. Those "basics" can, however, do you a great deal of good. "Expert" comes very gradually, and only with longer years.
One hand washes the other, then both hands wash the face.