YepThey're very expensive.
5k for a drill press may no sense. May as well buy a millThe Ellis 9400 is assembled in the USA.
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Drill Press 9400 - Ellis Mfg, Inc.
Ellis Drill Presses operate with infinitely variable speed control while maintaining high torque at all speeds.ellissaw.com
They're very expensive.
Agreed.5k for a drill press may no sense. May as well buy a mill
...is it? Or does "assembled" mean they attached the VFD in the U.S? It looks like every other Taiwanese drill press I've seen. Same color even, too.The Ellis 9400 is assembled in the USA.
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Drill Press 9400 - Ellis Mfg, Inc.
Ellis Drill Presses operate with infinitely variable speed control while maintaining high torque at all speeds.ellissaw.com
They're very expensive.
Their website does indicate "made in USA". I have a Buffalo 18; the last time I spoke to BMT, the 18" drill press was selling for $5200.![]()
I didn't see anything about their stuff being made in the USA but I only breezed through the website.
My Bauer 17" drill press is assembled in USA.
By me.
Took 10 minutes plus a second person to help lift the headstock on the column.
At 4700$ for USA made, that's as close as I'm going to ever get to us made unfortunately.
Right on the Front page but this part of Buffalo Forge co. not the cheapy imported Buffalo tools company we all know.![]()
I didn't see anything about their stuff being made in the USA but I only breezed through the website.
Completely different company than you are thinking of the cheapy garbage wrenches and power tools etc this Drill Press is made by a division of Buffalo Forge company a friends grandfather worked there back in the day even made a roll bar at the Forge for my friends Spitfire.Are you sure Buffalo is even USA made? I had some ultra cheap Buffalo hand tools back in the mid 1980's and they were poorest quality foreign made garbage known to man.
I searched for "new buffalo drill press" on google and couldn't find anything. Can you post a link to the drill press in question?


Their website does indicate "made in USA". I have a Buffalo 18; the last time I spoke to BMT, the 18" drill press was selling for $5200.
It's really easy to miss a big red white and blue square.Right on the Front page but this part of Buffalo Forge co. not the cheapy imported Buffalo tools company we all know.

Yeah, I figured it had to be a different company....Completely different company than you are thinking of the cheapy garbage wrenches and power tools etc this Drill Press is made by a division of Buffalo Forge company a friends grandfather worked there back in the day even made a roll bar at the Forge for my friends Spitfire.
It won't load screenshots.With what issue?
I have a Powermatic 1200 that list price in 1995 was $3500. That price would be over $7000 today.5k for a drill press may no sense. May as well buy a mill
Have you priced a better, heavy Chinese built drill press? You can blow $2,000 on one and still have have a crappy drill press. I haven't looked into the Buffalo but once you run a good quality, heavy frame drill press it really ruins you for anything else.Does a Shopsmith count? I think they are still MiUSA. Though I checked their website for pricing and they're up to around $5k now too!
I guess $5k is just what it costs to make a shop tool domestically![]()
I worked in a machine shop for a few years so I have experienced running a mill.Not sure why people think mills aren’t good drill presses. They might be thinking of hobby mills. My mill does anything a drill press can do but better.
When I can't get a file to upload, I crop the image down a little and save the image again. Then when I attach, it usually loads after that. I don't know why it works. Not sure if that is your issue or not.It won't load screenshots.
Heckuva deal! Up here, you'd be prosecuted for theft, stealing a Bridgeport for $500. Most beat-to-shite Series 1 will bring $1000 - $1500; later models bring $2500 - $3500 and I've seen a rescraped DRO completely tooled go for $15,000. Even going way back, I've never, ever, seen a working $500 BP.Just for reference, I bought my 1967 100% US made Bridgeport Milling machine for $500. It needed a few parts that were made in the US that I bought from a really nice US business H&W machine tool.
Not sure why people think mills aren’t good drill presses. They might be thinking of hobby mills. My mill does anything a drill press can do but better.
Not sure how to do that.When I can't get a file to upload, I crop the image down a little and save the image again. Then when I attach, it usually loads after that. I don't know why it works. Not sure if that is your issue or not.
Very unlikelyAre Powermatic drill presses (and other tools) still made in the US?
No. Powermatic went to China 20-30 years ago.Are Powermatic drill presses (and other tools) still made in the US?
Yeah you are right. And I have a 42” table. But visually, its not like 8x8 because you can put tool boxes adjacent to it and sort squeeze it in.I worked in a machine shop for a few years so I have experienced running a mill.
My biggest complaint is the space they take up. An average sized Bridgeport will take up an area about 8x8 feet, including the room for the operator. My drill press takes up and area about 2x4 feet and if I need more room it is easily rolled out of its normal spot to anywhere in the shop. Even if you never move the table on a Bridgeport they take up about 5x8 feet.
Sure, you can mount the Brigdeport on a skid and move it with a forklift or pallet jack, but then I have more stuff to store I don't need.

The first thing I would check is the file format of your screenshot to make sure it’s compatible with the Web site. I’m not sure about GJ_._com, but for most sites, I have to convert my screenshots and camera pics to jpg (or other compatible file format) before I can upload them.It won't load screenshots.