I am considering a Nova lathe (one of a couple models), but I haven't been able to determine if they have a bore through the headstock spindle. If not, how do you get a stuck drive spur out of the spindle, since a knockout bar won't be useful?
Would love to hear what you think of the Nebula. I have the Comet II as well and want to upgrade at some point.I have the comet II, and my new Nebula will be delivered next week. I love Teknatool, great customer service.
Great to hear! It reads like it can be 110 or 220 but looking in the online manual I couldn’t tell if it is just a matter of replacing the existing plug…any idea?I'm totally blown away by the Nebula, an amazing tool. Very quiet, very hi-tech, very heavy, and best of all no belts to change.
That's darned smart. I ordered a Rikon 70-1824 in 110v. In Rikon's case, it's two different configurations.I have one of the Galaxy DVR 16/44 and that is all you have to do with it is change the plug and plug it in to 220 rather than 110. At startup the software identifies the current it's connected too.
Yup, just change the plug takes it from 1.5 to 2.5HP!Great to hear! It reads like it can be 110 or 220 but looking in the online manual I couldn’t tell if it is just a matter of replacing the existing plug…any idea?
It's a Morse taperYes Nova Teknatool lathes have a number 2 morris taper bored through.
I ordered mine but it hasn't arrived yet. I want to be ready to go when it does. Did you rewire yours? If so, would you mind sharing the kind of plug you got? Thanks!Yup, just change the plug takes it from 1.5 to 2.5HP!
I have the comet II, and my new Nebula will be delivered next week. I love Teknatool, great customer service.
Hey Bryan,it’s been a minute since this post,but I ordered my Nebula over a month ago and am waiting patiently for it to ship.I'm totally blown away by the Nebula, an amazing tool. Very quiet, very hi-tech, very heavy, and best of all no belts to change.
More info in this thread.Oh,this is the first I’m hearing about a bankruptcy,that is definitely concerning moving forward.
I have no inside info, but they've clearly had problems shipping their lathes for years. Maybe the threat of tariffs indeed created a last-straw situation, but at most I suspect it just moved the timing of all this forward a little. (Similar to how the pandemic "ripped off all the band-aids", pushing a lot of ongoing trends forward very fast.)Strange isn't it...a company that couldn't deliver it's products fast enough is suddenly looking for financial protection. I wonder if the new tariff issues is what pushed them over the edge?
Technically, absolutely not, coming from an IP perspective – those PCB designs are at minimum copyrighted. In reality, many parts of the world play much faster and looser with all that than the US does (fun fact: so did we before our superpower days). Also, there's unprecedented ability to simply reverse engineer a board with one in hand now. Assuming parts are available, it may just be some time in Fusion and "click click" on the right website to get a replacement shipped to you. Practically, it would take just one person with a decent EE background to sort things out and sell replacement parts.Would a NOVA lathe be repairable by accessing the manufacturers of the PCBs that are sourced?
Ah, to clarify.... https://striatech.us/ makes the servo motors and controllers for Nova, so I would expect to be able to order replacement parts from them...Technically, absolutely not, coming from an IP perspective – those PCB designs are at minimum copyrighted. In reality, many parts of the world play much faster and looser with all that than the US does (fun fact: so did we before our superpower days). Also, there's unprecedented ability to simply reverse engineer a board with one in hand now. Assuming parts are available, it may just be some time in Fusion and "click click" on the right website to get a replacement shipped to you. Practically, it would take just one person with a decent EE background to sort things out and sell replacement parts.
Kent- 2 different spec motors, or the same motor that can be rewired for 220v?That's darned smart. I ordered a Rikon 70-1824 in 110v. In Rikon's case, it's two different configurations.
Kent- 2 different spec motors, or the same motor that can be rewired for 220v?
Machines I've owned with motors that are dual voltage, I rewired to 220. But I know you went 110 for house wiring reasons, if I recall.
Good point. I’m aware of Striatech’s relationship at a high level (my Galaxi was even a unit refurbished by Striatech), but it’s never been clear to me, at the low level of parts like the PCBs, “who makes what” – or in the thought experiment here, who holds things like the IP and the CAD models. That can go a few different ways.Ah, to clarify.... https://striatech.us/ makes the servo motors and controllers for Nova, so I would expect to be able to order replacement parts from them...