Did someone eye a metal lathe/mill this month ? I am having a case of TES http://www.mini-lathe.com/Mini_lathe/Start/start.htm#tes
TES and TEA are simply two facets of a similar condition. You are in the right place, just keep on keeping on. But do try to up the ante from Chinesium lathes..
The Grizzly minis have a good rep (at least the older ones that still had all-metal gearsets) for being the right mix of inexpensive vs cheaply made. Of course, that has driven the price up to a point where you'll usually be wishing for something a little more capable, unless you can get a steal on one from someone who doesn't know what they are.
mnem
Looking at their current line-up, it looks like Grizzly do the same as Warco here in the UK do. It
is a chinesium lathe, but it's a chinesium lathe that they have either souped up after getting them or, more likely, specified a higher grade when ordering them in bulk (e.g. Please fit proper angular contact bearings, not simple deep grove ones to the spindle please, and please grind the rails to a sensible spec, not ± half an inch, etc.)
If you're prepared to treat one of the chinesium mini lathes as a kit of parts, swap the bearings, and do all the fettling yourself you could probably get quite a decent lathe (within the limits of the casting sizes etc.) out of it. Depends whether you feel like spending a few days hand scraping ways and dovetails etc. Of course if one is going to go to all the trouble of reconditioning a
new lathe one might as well bide one's time, pick up a cheap but good old hunk of iron and recondition an
old lathe instead. Presupposing that one has the space to put a 'good old hunk of iron' in, if ya don't you're back to the mini-lathe.