Thanks @Susquatch and @toglhot. The plywood topped bench is more stable than the sheet metal stand that came with the lathe and although I won't worry much about the bench top twisting the lathe bed, I will make a steel stand "one day".
So hard or soft mount is not the important factor, as long as the alignment remains stable during operation and vibration is not amplified, life is good.
For wood mounts I would suggest oil soak as it greatly reduces moisture absorption, but as mentioned by others it works just be aware of the potential pit falls.
Want to true stabilize the wood as good as possible.Oil soaking causes other problems. The best is properly cured wood that is sealed. A sealing oil like tung or boiled linseed, or tru-oil is ok, but the wood will still move. Also, cutting oil on the sealed surface will weaken the sealing oil. Even sealed laminated wood will move. It's not if, only how much. And of course, how much is one of those pesky "it depends" questions.
If @curmudgeon is only making short parts, it probably doesn't matter.
My standard modern 9" Utilathe came on a sheet metal stand from the factory. The 10", 11", 13", and 14" Standard Modern models came the same way and still come this way AFAIK.Definitely steel, and definitely not one of those sheet metal stands that come with lathes. Mine came with a sheet metal stand, they make excelent stands on which to place 'light' benchtops.
Are you replying to me?Lathe stands are best bolted to the floor securely as level as you can get them. Keeping in mind, concrete floor are not the flatest surfaces around, so trying to level a bed lathe to within 0.02mm might be a litte difficult using shims between the concrete floor and the stand, even screw type feet. Metal on metal is another thing, metal is usualy pretty straight, so shimming is reasonably easy, if not quick. That's why I designed the leveling system I use: it is very quick and can be levelled to within 0.02mm on my 280x600 athe, probably better, but that's the best my engineers level can manage.
I'm not suggesting anything, just telling what I did for my 280 x600 lathe. I don't have an SM 1440. You do what you like with it.What are you suggesting if a person was to buy a NEW Standard Modern 1440 lathe like pictured above (or any other 14" lathe on the market today)? Remove it from the factory engineered base and fab something of your own? The SM 1440 weights 1800lbs.
You clearly arent thinking this through....