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Lathe/milling machine Inputs
i am thinking about picking up a small lathe and or milling machine for my garage (strictly for hobby not pro., and making/modifying little parts on the car) and have been looking at the Grizzly Mini Mill (P/N G8689) and 7x12 lathe (G8688). I would love to have the combo one but budget wise that is not possible. So i am looking to spend around $500 or so. I know for that price my abilities will be limited but i am running out of room in the garage and money is getting tighter :_paranoid
Any of you guys have inputs/recommendations/etc? |
I would sugest if you were going to buy one or the other go with the mill but keep this in mind the buget that you have is not the full picture what i mean is that you need tooling to go with the eqip.you can pick up a used brigeport with a bunh of tooling included for about 2,500. if you buy a small bench mill you will end up spending twice the price of the mill in tooling. I think you should save some more cash before you purchase you will never loose any money on a great tool purchase.you will always loose in the end in a sub standard made in china crap. good luck with your purchase.;)
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Check out CNC Zone's Mini-Mill and Mini-Lathe sections. They will recommend you not do it unless your doing modeling plastic, brass or other light materials. They just don't have the power, stability or working range to be of much use for the price.
www.cnczone.com I'd also save up and get a good used Bridgeport somewhere. Using standard industry equipment will also allow you to get used tooling that's been surplused by manufactures or the government at low costs. Jim |
your $500 budget is not really going to get you much in the way of something decent. like the others have stated, save up a little more and buy a more common piece of equipment or you tool-up costs are going to cost you much more in the longrun. plus, a lot of those offshore no-name brands have a hard time holding consistancy while just cutting brass. sometimes you can get lucky and find a decent used Bridgeport (or cheaper version) with digital readouts and a powerfeed for under a grand
I'm a bit lucky that I'm about to close on a house, and there is an old benchtop lathe in the basement. I told them if they don't want to go through the trouble of lugging it out, they can leave it there. they said ok. now I just need to pick up a used bridgeport for the garage and I'll be all set! |
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ok, i still need to make a couple of more small ones for the GTO:_paranoid |
Ricer --
You're not going to get any machine that is going to make anything for $500... Sorry. That's just not a realistic budget. I have a Jet Mill/Drill (about $1800) and the tooling alone is 3 times your budget and I can't make anything. LOL At this point - take your idea or piece to a machine shop and just have it done. |
I should add -- that my Mill/Drill is a really nice drill press - very accurate - very stable - easy to maneuver parts precisely once you're set up...
As a Milling machine - it's next to useless - not enough power to do any "hogging off" -- and the belt slips if you make to large of a cut (and we're talking TINY cuts here) and it chatters on steel - the head is on a clamp set up on a round stock - and there's no way you're going to hold that head still.. So on aluminum it works pretty well - and if I'm just modifying a part - it's fine... But to call it a mill - is only a dictionary version of what a mill is... <grin> It's a 2 hp - single phase - 220V machine... and that it is a total ho hum... What we were saying about your budget -- is that, for a decent vise - or v blocks - or cutters - or any additional collets etc - you're going to blow your budget just on that minimal stuff. |
Looks like I am going to go against the grain here but this is my experience.
Many of the previous comments are correct but you need to decide on a machine based upon your needs. And a budget of $500 is not going to get you much if anything. I bought the HF44991 which is a Seig x3 clone similar to the grizzly you mentioned. I bought this mill for a specific purpose keeping in mind that I did not have the power or space available for a larger unit and especially a knee mill. And I never intended to mill anything very large. The carry over to car support would be in the way of various brackets and mounting tabs all of which an X3 clone are very capable of making. Since having my mill I have put it to a lot more use than expected and so far I have not run into anything I could not make or modify within reason. I did add a few upgrades to mine which combined exceeded the cost of the mill itself but I found that the upgrades proved to be worth the expense since they increased reliability, repeatability and precision. If you have the room and power definitely go for the biggest you can afford but do not dismiss the versatility of the mini mills. Pics of my setup; http://i62.photobucket.com/albums/h1...d/DSCN0059.jpg http://i62.photobucket.com/albums/h1...d/DSCN0050.jpg |
Hi John,
Can you give us more info on the setup and use please ? I don't have the space for a bridgeport machine and would prefer the mini - but have consistantly been told I can't perform auto hobby level type work with it. (steel, 4130, stainless, etc) Can you show us some projects you've completed, type materials, project size, manual usage or is it cad/cam process, what software, etc ? Just looking for the real truth out there from someone who actually owns one. Thanks much !! Jim |
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