Andy:
My present Swing-Away cabinet was $140 with a Singer Touch-Tronic 2010 already mounted in it - that's about average. You usually find them with an Athena or a Touch-Tronic in place.
It's really not bad for a great sewing machine and a
very well-built piece of furniture. The model Swing-Away that I have (the No. 266-1) is all wood solids and veneers; even what's under the veneer is high-quality plywood, not chipboard. Hardware is all metal. Oh, and it's on heavy-duty casters, for easy moving.
There was a less expensive Swing-Away that was mostly wood, but which had those awful molded-plastic fake wood doors seen so often in the '70s. I've only seen them in photos, never in person. Below is a photo of one, with an Athena 1200 mounted in it; the 1200 was a less expensive, slightly defeatured version of the Athena 2000.
You will stand the best chance of unearthing a Swing-Away by searching Craigslist for Singer sewing machines, and by searching "Athena" and "Touch Tronic."
Caveat: Swing-Aways are only plug-and-play with upper-series Singer free-arm machines of the '70s and '80s. Other brands and vintages may require a different head bolt (the angled bolt that holds the machine in place) and/or some modification. They won't work with flatbed machines at all.
I don't have the trouble many tall guys have with shirts - I am short-bodied, with legs that go on forever. Regular shirts fit decently well. It's pants that are a pain in the patootie.
