I'm in the process of emptying my wall--I mean, rebuilding my shop (by choice, only good things), and am wondering if any of y'all have tried to use a manual mill as your only "drill press" in a mixed woodworking/metalworking shop and how it worked out.
My situation is that I've historically been 99% set up as a CNC machine shop, but my new building has been laid out with some dedicated space for some nice basic woodworking equipment, think a good contractor saw, bench, etc. It will probably be priority #2/#3 behind metalwork and other mad science projects but will be nice to have some space I can leave set up for random DIY projects and whatnot.
I'd initially been planning to replace my little $50 HF benchtop special with something like the Nova Viking, but then I started to think that gets me a good part of the way to a good smaller mill. While my only mill for the past 10 years was a CNC, there have always been times when a manual machine would be a little faster or just nice to prep stock for the CNC.
My thinking was that I could build a swappable fixture subplate that holds either a milling vise or a "drill press table" with a fence and a center pocket for drilling through holes. That way it would only take a minute or two to swap between uses. Dust and chips are a potential concern but the fixture plate and a shop vac nearby should be able to limit that? I also don't use flood coolant on open machines, so they're not going to be soaking wet and covered in tramp oil all the time.
That said, maybe this is an idea that only seems good on paper and I should just have a drill press, or get both if I really want a manual mill. I *mostly* have enough space and budget but saving one or both of them in a smart way is never a bad thing.
My situation is that I've historically been 99% set up as a CNC machine shop, but my new building has been laid out with some dedicated space for some nice basic woodworking equipment, think a good contractor saw, bench, etc. It will probably be priority #2/#3 behind metalwork and other mad science projects but will be nice to have some space I can leave set up for random DIY projects and whatnot.
I'd initially been planning to replace my little $50 HF benchtop special with something like the Nova Viking, but then I started to think that gets me a good part of the way to a good smaller mill. While my only mill for the past 10 years was a CNC, there have always been times when a manual machine would be a little faster or just nice to prep stock for the CNC.
My thinking was that I could build a swappable fixture subplate that holds either a milling vise or a "drill press table" with a fence and a center pocket for drilling through holes. That way it would only take a minute or two to swap between uses. Dust and chips are a potential concern but the fixture plate and a shop vac nearby should be able to limit that? I also don't use flood coolant on open machines, so they're not going to be soaking wet and covered in tramp oil all the time.
That said, maybe this is an idea that only seems good on paper and I should just have a drill press, or get both if I really want a manual mill. I *mostly* have enough space and budget but saving one or both of them in a smart way is never a bad thing.