I am seeing Sherline come up for sale used, and they seem to be small. It is also odd that they don't have a proper quill, so I assume you have to drill with a wheel.
I am also seeing the old Emco/Unimat combination lathe and mill come up.
Understanding the weight issue, are these sufficient to do they types of milling required for knife making? Has anyone had success with them?
I am just looking at doing folders, so I am looking at working with bolsters, scales, liners. Boring liner/scale spring and pivot holes. Relieving scales/liners. Perhaps the locking notch on a lock back blade, or the race on a flipper. Perhaps sizing pins, making Loveless and Corby fasteners or some bushings. Perhaps the occasional jimping or precursor spring file(burr)work?
I am not considering milling out a bevel, or even a knife blank from a billet.
I know having a Bridgeport would be the thing to do. That will definitely not be happening.
The Sieg level comes next, and FWIW they all seem 6 of 1 half a dozen for the other. I do like the LMS high torque. However, I can easily spend quite a bit in tooling to go with them before I can actually do something useful.
The Sherline seem like they are smaller than the Sieg flavor, but they are USA made, and I can have a fairly nice tooling package along with the cnc-ready or base model for about the same as one the Sieg machines alone. There seems to be all the stuff you could imagine for the big mills made and available for these. And they seem to be either cnc-ready or cnc-convertable.
The Unimat's just appeal to my gee-whizz side! And most of the ones I see out there come with a fair amount of tooling, at least enough to secure something. I am not sure if the Z is only operated via the handle.
Not sure where the Proxxons fit in her, but the consensus I keep seeing is that they are overpriced for what they are.
So, other than "bigger is always better" any opinions in the smaller areas?
I am also seeing the old Emco/Unimat combination lathe and mill come up.
Understanding the weight issue, are these sufficient to do they types of milling required for knife making? Has anyone had success with them?
I am just looking at doing folders, so I am looking at working with bolsters, scales, liners. Boring liner/scale spring and pivot holes. Relieving scales/liners. Perhaps the locking notch on a lock back blade, or the race on a flipper. Perhaps sizing pins, making Loveless and Corby fasteners or some bushings. Perhaps the occasional jimping or precursor spring file(burr)work?
I am not considering milling out a bevel, or even a knife blank from a billet.
I know having a Bridgeport would be the thing to do. That will definitely not be happening.
The Sieg level comes next, and FWIW they all seem 6 of 1 half a dozen for the other. I do like the LMS high torque. However, I can easily spend quite a bit in tooling to go with them before I can actually do something useful.
The Sherline seem like they are smaller than the Sieg flavor, but they are USA made, and I can have a fairly nice tooling package along with the cnc-ready or base model for about the same as one the Sieg machines alone. There seems to be all the stuff you could imagine for the big mills made and available for these. And they seem to be either cnc-ready or cnc-convertable.
The Unimat's just appeal to my gee-whizz side! And most of the ones I see out there come with a fair amount of tooling, at least enough to secure something. I am not sure if the Z is only operated via the handle.
Not sure where the Proxxons fit in her, but the consensus I keep seeing is that they are overpriced for what they are.
So, other than "bigger is always better" any opinions in the smaller areas?