The small knee mill from Harbor Freight is a downright decent hobby mill. You're better off buying a mill, and then picking up a lathe later on. The 3 in one machines are rather annoying to work with.
i keep leaning toward getting a multi purpose CnC machine for my shop and have been looking hard at the Shopmaster Mill/Turn. The company has been around since i can remember and it looks like a decent (non professional) machine. Anyone has experience with this one while were on the subject?
https://www.shopmasterusa.com/
DON'T JUST DON'T! No customer service, the machines are worse built than some of the Harbor Freight ****. These are the cheapest of the cheap Chinese **** out there. Yes they say made in America but all of the casting is done overseas and all of the parts come from overseas suppliers too.
I owned a Smithy before I got a shopmaster built machine and I wish I had never sold the Smithy.
If you decide to go with separate equipment, Little Machine Shop's configured Seig-made equipment seems to be a step above others brands' Seig-made tools. Their benchtop mill is on my wishlist, and their lathe too if I ever outgrow my Sherline.
thanks, glad i brought it up. I was aware they were imports (what isnt these days) but did not know they were so bad. Also like a lot of things these days they sink more into marketing then the actual product . . . . thanks, i'm guessing thats gonna save me a headache.
The small knee mill from Harbor Freight is a downright decent hobby mill. You're better off buying a mill, and then picking up a lathe later on. The 3 in one machines are rather annoying to work with.
)"You cannot lathe on a mill."
Yeah, you (sorta) can(necessity is a MOTHER
)
If you're gonna mill steel, I'd go for a square column mill if you can't find a decent Bridgeport - mine's a Grizz G0755... Steve
link?
Buying an old/cheap Bridgeport is a dicey proposition for someone who doesn't know machine tools. For a first time machinist, I'd stick with something simple and probably new. Once he knows how everything is supposed to work, he can then learn how to evaluate a Brideport and upgrade at a later date.If your going to be milling steel, I wouldn’t waste time with a 3 in 1 machine. Bridgeport style mills are a dime a dozen on the used market. As said before, the tooling can cost just as much as the mill if not more. Already been down that road.
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That's the standard line, but it really depends on what you're doing. If I had to choose between my mill or my lathe, it would be a rough call to make. Sure I can mill on a lathe, but it's FAR from ideal. I tend to do much more milling than lathe work... But I've noticed that my mill tends to make things I want. Whereas my lathe tends to make things I need; and gets me out of binds.Using a 90 degree adapter plate you can mill on a lathe. You cannot lathe on a mill.
Most machinists said start with a lathe, get a mill later.
That's the standard line, but it really depends on what you're doing. If I had to choose between my mill or my lathe, it would be a rough call to make. Sure I can mill on a lathe, but it's FAR from ideal. I tend to do much more milling than lathe work... But I've noticed that my mill tends to make things I want. Whereas my lathe tends to make things I need; and gets me out of binds.

But I've noticed that my mill tends to make things I want. Whereas my lathe tends to make things I need; and gets me out of binds.