Originally Posted by 
POD
				 
			I bought a big old Asian lathe (actually my 50th birthday gift from my wife, but I did the choosing and getting) that had some of the gear train missing, most significantly the 127-tooth gear that enables metric thread cutting on an imperial machine. It's been impossible to find the  right gears, and I got a quote of around $1300 from a gear-cutting mob to manufacture the 4 gears to complete the set (tell 'em they're dreaming...). I plan to cut the gears myself, after some online research I've found that this can be done in the lathe with some fairly complicated setting up. I posted some questions about casting gear blanks in an online metalwork forum, and a bloke in the U.S. has very kindly undertaken to cast them for me in his backyard foundry. Just hope I don't stuff the blanks with my first attempts at cutting gears.
The common / popular models of lathes, particularly the American machines, seem to be reasonably easy to find parts for, but with the more obscure machines you're pretty much on your own. My crossfeed screw is badly worn, I've had to make a replacement myself, next step is to make the crossfeed nut to suit. Fortunately, a lathe is a great tool for making lathe parts.