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Thread: Any Rikon Experience?

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Aug 2004
    Location
    Millsboro, DE
    Posts
    249

    Any Rikon Experience?

    Have a small shop and have been using a 10" Jet lathe with a bed extension for several years. Was poised to buy the 15" Laguna for about $2500 but just saw an ad for the Rikon 1420 benchtop for less tan half of the Laguna. Both are 1.5HP. Rikon can turn 18" outboard with a bed extension. Could only find one youtube review of the Rikon but looks good and very reasonable price. I mostly turn bowls these days and actually only ever did one project which required the bed extension for turned legs. Appreciate any experience anyone has had with either. Cheers

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Nov 2009
    Location
    Peoria, IL
    Posts
    4,546
    If you mostly turn bowls, go for the Laguna. The Rikon looks like a DC motor and the controls for those don't like the heat generated from heavy bowl turning. A few years ago you could almost fry an egg on Jet DC motors. People posted all the time on the motor smelling and too hot to touch. No idea about the latest iterations.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Mar 2016
    Location
    Florida
    Posts
    1,950
    I snagged one of the Powermatic PM2014 models a few weeks back when they were on sale for nearly $1k off. Put it in the same price bracket as the Rikon is but it had some nice features like AC VFD motor, 1-1/4x8 spindle thread, etc. I added the light and bed extension and so far it has turned out to be a nice mid-sized lathe. It can go to 20” with the extension in the lower position but honestly how big can you really go on a midi lathe. A 12” bowl out of round is enough to make this one dance and I have it bolted to a heavy weighted counter. I really couldn’t imagine turning much bigger safely on these small lathes.

    Anyway, check out the Powermatic too for comparison.

  4. #4
    Laguna is notorious for lousy customer service. Not sure about the modern DC motors, but the old ones you had to fiddle with them a lot to keep them performing well. I do not like the slow start up/ramp up to speed on the Rikon mini lathe I have. A bench top lathe can work, and maybe half or more of that is having a bench that it will sit on, flat and level, and anchored to wall and/or ground. Does the lathe you are looking at have 110 or 220 volt. I prefer the 220. I had turned on both models of the Jet 16 lathe, 110 and 220. For bowl turning, the 220 one worked a lot better. That PM lathe looks good too, and PM does make a very good lathe.

    robo hippy

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Aug 2004
    Location
    Millsboro, DE
    Posts
    249
    Thanks Greg and Richard for your comments. Must admit motors are a mystery to me but both the Rikon and Laguna appear to have DC motors; the Rikon is 1.5HP TEFC DC motor and the Laguna is Permanent Magnet DC. Frankly I don't understand the difference. Both have 1-1/4x8 spindle thread. Laguna is $2300; Rikon on sale at Woodcraft for $1105. Both without shipping and accessories.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Mar 2016
    Location
    Florida
    Posts
    1,950
    Here are a few pics of the little Powermatic. It truly is a shrunken down version of the larger siblings. The only down side is that I already want a larger lathe. LOL. My prior shop had a Laguna 1836, But this time around, I’m going to hold out on larger until I can afford a Robust or a Vicmarc.

    IMG_2437.jpg

    IMG_2438.jpg

    71418406925__6C2F29E4-8973-436D-9AB9-81C1D821F05D.jpg

  7. #7
    Join Date
    May 2013
    Location
    Smyrna Mills, Maine
    Posts
    95
    I have a Rikon 70-220 lathe and have never had a problem with it. It's a good lathe and does what it's supposed to do. I also have a Laguna Revo 1836 220v. The Laguna is a great lathe and I have also had no problems with it.

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