My turn
alright, this may be useless to some, but I figured as long as I have the equipment someone might be interested in seeing this comparison. With 4 kids including a newborn, I haven't had much time to play with my stuff lately, but finally had some time to take some pictures.
I have three lathes (not sure why, they just seem to find me). The first one is a cobra.

The tool holder and motor mount/v-block are separate, so although the base and attached tooling is fairly solid you definitely need to take your time to set it up. I detached the v-blocks from the base slightly to show how they can get "askew" fairly easily.
The second is an Eagle Racing "mod fashion", which I have no idea where it comes from but it's surprisingly solid, and well built.

As you can see the tool holder and the v-blocks are separate, but tied together so the comm and the tool holder are parallel even when the v-blocks are adjusted.
The last is a Hudy. I believe this was their higher end model, because the v-blocks have bearings. This seems like a good idea, but I could see how it could create a problem when the bearings wear. This one is perfect though. The tool holder and v-blocks are linked together similar to the Eagle, to ensure that the comm and tool holder are parallel. The tool holder moves like butter, and everything else reeks of quality.. kinda awful early 90s paint scheme though. :mrgreen:
I have yet to use the cobra, but tried out the Eagle and it works great.. I missed out on a trinity lathe last week by a few minutes. No idea why I want them, I guess I just think their neat. The Eagle came with a bag full of old motors, so I have something to practice on.