Heres one they still currently sell with what looks like a
fancier switch box
Like I mentioned earlier these machines are sold by so many
different vendors with different paint colors . Some of them have
turned out some mighty fine work .
animal
On 4/11/24 9:56 AM, Charles Kinzer
wrote:
toggle quoted message
Show quoted text
You've probably already found
it on the Grizzly site.? They still show it, but as a
discontinued model (G1006) but the specs are all there.
I took a closer look at the
photos and noticed the collets underneath - nice.? But a
really small vise.? I suspect you will want to get a bigger
one.? Perhaps look to see if anything is laying around where
this is that belongs to it.? From the seller's other items
shown, it doesn't look like it is somebody really in the
machinery selling business.
One interesting thing is the
bolt loosening note written on the side of the machine with a
black marker.? I don't think it is likely that a private owner
would do that with one in his/her home.? So, this was probably
used in a shop somewhere.? And by more than one person.? It
has been my experience (and perhaps axiomatic throughout the
universe) that if something is used by multiple people, one or
more won't use it as if it were their own or even abuse it?
?So, the odds for issues increases.
Charles E. "Chuck" Kinzer
On Wednesday, April 10, 2024 at 04:48:47 AM PDT,
Miket_NYC <mctaglieri@...> wrote:
Thanks for this very helpful evaluation. I'm
hoping to go see it this week.
I think there's really a fundamental difference
between my mini-mill and mini-lathe.? I now have an
11" Logan lathe and it has a gearbox, so I do most
of my lathe work on that. But for small jobs and
specialized jobs, the minilathe is still useful. By
contrast, if there are things a mini-mill could do
better than a bigger and more rigid mill, I haven't
run across them yet.
Mike Taglieri?
On
Tue, Apr 9, 2024, 12:00 PM Charles Kinzer < ckinzer@...>
wrote:
Technically, this type of
mill is called a "bed mill" versus a "knee
mill" (like the oft mentioned Bridgeports
but also larger and smaller knee mills).
If it is in good condition,
and even if perhaps not so good, I would
expect one of these to produce better
results on their worst day than a
mini-mill does on its best day.
The primary compromise I
suspect most people think about with the
"mill-drill" machines is that they are
giving up.? And therefore, giving up a
much larger work envelope.
I view the mini-mills as just
small, weak, low power, low quality,
versions of this style.? It is likely that
once you have a decent one of these larger
versions, you might want to usher your
mini-mill out the door.
I think that is probably a
long discontinued model, but that probably
doesn't matter.? It is very likely that
the spindle is R-8 which would be good.?
Hopefully some tooling comes with it.
You can go to??to
see their current array (which includes
mini-mills) and find the closest match to
see what a new one might cost retail
today.
My bona fides with mills is
that I actually DO have a mini-mill that,
inexplicably, I find myself using a lot
even though I swear at it some.? (Most
recently from the locking levers stripping
inside as the pot metal crystallized or
something.? Little Machine Shop
replacement handles to the rescue.)? I
also have a Kao Fong knee mill of a medium
size of the rotating head style such as
the current Grizzly G0731.? At workplaces
I have used Bridgeports, a similar Lagun,
and a small Clausing 8520 (which makes for
a REAL nice milling machine for a home
shop.)? For MY home shop, I certainly
looked at mill/drills pretty seriously
back in the day but got a good deal on the
knee mill as I bundled it with a purchase
of a Shen-Wai 12x36 lathe.? (Mill and
lathe from Taiwan.)? Otherwise, I would
probably have bought a mill/drill as being
"good enough."
Unless you really need a lot
of vertical workpiece space, I think you
would be happy with a decent mill/drill.
I know you have a larger
lathe, so you know what it is like to use
a truly decent machine.? I think many on
this group don't know what that's like as
mini-whatever's may be their only
experience which can, for many, be
discouraging at times.? A decent condition
mill/drill (so long as NOT the mini-mill
version) will give you that same
experience of being able to focus on the
workpiece and not frustrate with the
foibles of a marginal machine.
Charles E. "Chuck" Kinzer??
? ??
On Tuesday, April 9, 2024 at
03:29:36 AM PDT, Miket_NYC < mctaglieri@...>
wrote:
Monday night I was looking at the
latest Home Shop Machinist and saw a
cover story about someone making new
dials for his Jet mill-drill so
theyd look more like Bridgeport
dials. (This involved designing a
machine to engrave the new dials,
designing another machine to
resharpen carbide engraving tools to
needle sharp points, etc. People in
HSM often go overboard in cover
articles, perhaps to get to be cover
articles).
I paid little attention to the
modification story, but I was
intrigued by the mill-drill
itself. I have a Harbor Freight
mini-mill (the one with the
tiltable column) that I bought in
2017. It's given me good service
and I love using it for drilling,
but its low power and small
capacity have sometimes been a
trial.
For example, when I was
restoring my South Bend
shaper, I had to make a new
gib for the shaper ram out of
phosphor bronze. The SB gib is
a foot long, and that's the
exact length of the table on
the mini-mill. So milling the
edges of the gib was a mess
and cutting oil grooves in it
was even worse. I had to keep
unclamping the work and moving
it on the table, because a
one-foot table gives you much
less then a foot of table
TRAVEL, and a table as long as
the work means you can't clamp
it on both ends at the same
time.?
The thing that saved me on
that shaper gib job was that
it works fine and will never
be seen by human eyes until
after I'm dead. But if that
had been practically anything
else, I would've has to scrap
the part (probably several?
times), in metal that cost
$100/square foot.? Also, even
on the lower speed setting,
this mini-mill doesn’t have
much power.
But the mill-drill in that
story had twice as long a
table and more capacity in
every area,? plus a 2 HP
motor. (With real American
horses, not Chinese horses).
So I looked on ebay to see
what they sell for and
discovered that the Grizzly
equivalent is for sale right
across the river in Brooklyn
right now, for a used price
similar to what I paid for my
mini-mill in 2017.
What do people think of
this? I know there's criticism
of round-columned mill-drills
because the head can move from
side to side when changing
height but I could figure out
ways around that, and I'd much
rather have that problem than
to try to make something more
rigid or more powerful then it
was designed to be.
?I was originally hesitant
about the weight of the thing
since I lived by myself and
drive a VW GTI. But it looks
like it can break down into
pieces, and I could make
several trips.
I'm sick with a cold, so
I'm not visiting the seller
immediately, but probably will
later this week.
Mike Taglieri?
|