I happen to own a Shopsmith myself. Pretty interesting wood working tool.
And, I have a seperate drill press. Because as much as I do like my Shopsmith, it makes a lousy metal working tool. I suspect the same will be true with this Paramount Woodworker. Neither are rigid enough or strong enough for metal working.
I picked up a Shoptask 2000 mill/drill/lathe for light metal work.
It can take standard R-8 or MT3 tooling, swings 13" over the ways, has autofeed carriage drive, etc
Not a high precision tool, but with some care and attention, you can achieve very good results
Machining fuel injector pockets into a Spitfire single carb manifold:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/13867611@N04/1517807268/in/set-72157602324566095/.
Look on CL and such (or estate sales) for bargains, you can find machine & tooling for pennies on the dollar.
Carter
after the discussion about the woodworker, I have to admit it's probably not what I need. (but DANG it's cool, and for $50....)
But I found a 17", 1.5HP, 5/8" chuck Craftsman on the North side of A-town for $100, supposed to go see the guy Sunday. It's quite a drive, but should be worth it. Looks like a solid unit in good shape.
So I told the seller of the Paramount Woodworker that it wouldn't work. I picked this 1.5 hp monster up for $100. The pic shows it home safe in my shop after a day long run to Atl to get it.
Thanks for all the wisdom GRM. Most appreciated.
Edit: I can't tell on my phone if the pic loaded. It's a pre-Kmart Craftsman 17" with 5/8" chuck. Lightly used solely for woodworking.
In reply to BJDavid :
I reckon that'll only be useful in drilling hole in your canoe
Zombie thread, canoe deleted
NOHOME
UltimaDork
9/11/17 9:01 a.m.
Floor model with the rack and pinion raise/lower function. 1/2" chuck goes without saying.
Ease of speed change is a big deal since it should be done often. If I could figure out how, I would have a variable speed control on the thing.
Don't forget the value of a good vise: a vise that clamps to the drilling table and can adjust in an X-Y pattern is a big asset.
Buy as heavy-duty and big as you can afford. $200 is pretty much used hobby range and while you willl do a ton of work with it, you will have drill press envy for as long as you own it.
The milling machine is a great tool, but not going to see anything for under $2k
spitfirebill said:
Curmudgeon said:
I have a Delta 1/2" benchtop which has been great, it looks almost exactly like the top one in Dan's pictures. I have drilled or holesawed stuff thicker than 1/4" with no problems. I've never used it on stainless, though.
I haz a sad.
It's always kind of a shock when these pop up.
In reply to Toyman01 :
It really is. I never met the guy face to face, but we conversed here a good bit. I sent him part he needed for the GT-6 he was working on right before he passed. A lot of the car guys up here knew Mike very well, as I know you did.
GVX19
Reader
9/12/17 7:15 a.m.
This is a project was building for the challenge but it's not going to make it. It's a turbo flange I built with hand tools. With a 12in drill press from Harbor Freight.
https://photos.app.goo.gl/KMRyqsrxw6xiAWCK2
ProBest
New Spammer
9/19/19 4:12 p.m.
[canoe vs. kayak spam review] may be helpful here!
holy crap a foxtrapper post.. another great lost to the ages..
ShawnG
PowerDork
9/19/19 4:36 p.m.
Rikon is the same as all the Jet, Central Machinery, Delta etc gak from offshore. They just seem to be backing it with a better warranty than everyone else.