I was on the “working’ side of the lathe and wanted the tailstock to be out of range of my elbow, so I pushed it slightly to rotate it to the side. In the 15 years or so that I’ve owned this lathe (Robust American Beauty), I’ve done this probably hundreds of times without incident. This time, it kept on going and the rotational momentum took the lathe over almost entirely on its side. I think two things were in play here: (1) the shock absorber has lost its ability to resist the motion, and (2) the bolts that hold the legs in the position they’re set to were not tight enough. I had moved the lathe a couple of months ago, and that involved adjusting the legs, so perhaps I didn’t tighten them down enough when I was done. Anyway, there it is. I guess the approach to getting it back to upright is to lift at the lowest point (the right-hand foot at the tailstock end), extend that foot back to being in contact with the floor and re-tighten, go to the other end of the lathe and lift, extend THAT foot, back to the tailstock & repeat, etc., a little bit at a time until it’s back upright. I have the jack that Robust supplies with the lathe, but I’m a little concerned about using it to lift in this postion. The business end of the jack is parallel to the floor, but the place where it hooks is now at an angle of maybe 20 degrees. Anyone got any suggestions? Thanks in advance.