Used Mazak Quick Turn CNC Lathes for Sale 22


Yamazaki Mazak introduced the Quick Turn name across multiple generations of CNC turning platforms, evolving from the original Quick Turn machines through Quick Turn Nexus, Quick Turn Smart, and finally into the current Quick Turn line under the Smooth control. This generational layering is reflected in the second-hand market: a pre-owned Quick Turn could be a fifteen-year-old Nexus 200 with a Mazatrol Fusion control or a more recent Smooth-controlled machine with Industry 4.0 connectivity features. Configuration sub-suffixes (M for milling, MY for milling plus Y-axis, MS for sub spindle, MSY for full milling plus sub spindle plus Y-axis) significantly affect both production capability and second-hand value.

Used Mazak Quick Turn CNC lathes on Exapro include Quick Turn Nexus, Quick Turn Smart, and Quick Turn (Smooth) generations across pure turning, M, MY, MS, and MSY configurations. Filter by chuck size, control generation, sub spindle, and Y-axis. Submit an enquiry through the listing page on Exapro.

Mazak Quick Turn series and generations

The Quick Turn name has been used by Yamazaki Mazak across multiple generations of CNC turning platforms, evolving from the original Quick Turn machines through Quick Turn Nexus, Quick Turn Smart, and finally into the current Quick Turn line under the Smooth control. This generational layering is reflected in the second-hand market, where the same brand and platform name covers machines spanning fifteen or more years of evolving control architecture.

Quick Turn Nexus, Smart, and Smooth control eras

Quick Turn Nexus machines (typically late 1990s through mid-2000s) carry Mazatrol Fusion 640 or Matrix controls. Quick Turn Smart machines (mid-2000s through mid-2010s) carry Mazatrol Matrix or Matrix 2 controls with enhanced cycle libraries and improved diagnostics. The current Quick Turn line under the Smooth control integrates Mazatrol SmoothG, SmoothC, or SmoothX with extensive process monitoring, predictive maintenance, and OPC-UA Industry 4.0 connectivity.

Quick Turn configuration variants

Key configuration variants in the Quick Turn line include the standard two-axis turning version, the M-suffix indicating milling capability with live tooling and a C-axis, the MY-suffix adding a Y-axis for off-centre operations, the MS-suffix indicating a sub spindle for second-operation work, and combinations such as MSY for full milling, sub spindle, and Y-axis. Each configuration step adds substantially to second-hand value and should be itemised explicitly on any listing.

Mazatrol control and operator considerations

Mazatrol controls are the defining element of Mazak machines: the conversational programming environment differs significantly from a standard Fanuc or Sinumerik experience and operator familiarity with Mazatrol is a meaningful factor in the buy decision. Mazatrol training and operators familiar with the environment are widespread across European subcontracting, but shops new to Mazak should plan for an operator transition period.

Used Quick Turn value drivers

Used Mazak Quick Turn machines benefit from continuing parts availability through Mazak's European service network, an established trade in Mazak-compatible tooling and bar feeders, and the wide installed base supporting consistent monthly inventory turnover.

Browse used Mazak Quick Turn CNC lathes on Exapro to compare Quick Turn Nexus, Smart, and Smooth-controlled generations across pure turning, M, MY, MS, and MSY configurations from verified sellers worldwide. When evaluating a used Quick Turn, verify spindle hours from the Mazatrol control, check spindle bearing condition through radial play measurement, inspect turret clamping pressure and indexing accuracy, test live tool drives where present, verify sub spindle alignment on MS and MSY variants, confirm Y-axis backlash on Y-axis configurations, request the most recent calibration data, and request the included tooling, soft and hard jaws, and bar feeder configuration. The Mazatrol Smooth, Matrix, or Fusion generation significantly affects daily operability and should be confirmed against the buyer's existing operator skill base.