Dang I saw the title and was hoping someone was selling one. Haha. Nice find.
I paid about the price of one. And I already have two floor drill presses. But I will try it to see if it's a good fit for my shop.you can pretty well buy 5 or 6 decent new drill presses
Thanks Sean. What I was mostly looking for was maintenance info which I found. The manual wasn't for my model but close.
I paid about the price of one. And I already have two floor drill presses. But I will try it to see if it's a good fit for my shop.
Did you change the high speed spindles to slower ones? That would be nice. This one has two spindles with a little play but the other four are tight.I used parts/gear sets from my parts machines to slow down the spindles
They turn up for sale fairly often, especially on Ebay. But for the price, if you have the space, you can pretty well buy 5 or 6 decent new drill presses. That's what I did. I have about 8 drill presses in a line on my bench now.
yeah I went and looked at one off ebay not long ago and all the spindles where incredibly loose. Hadn’t found anymore close enough to warrant a trip. I mainly wanted one for super accurate holes because I want to get into folders at some point not as concerned with the multiple chucks. I’ve had several drill presses and it seems like no matter what they have a lot of runout. Even bought a decent chuck for one and it still has to much runout. I probably just need to invest in a mill.
I use exclusively my drill presses for folders. I've never once used my mill for drilling holes on a folder. I use my mill for folders but honestly, if I had to scrap any one tool for folders, it would be the mill. I could very easily do without it for folders if I had to.
Honestly, I think making folders sometimes gets misrepresented as needing to be a NASA machinist to complete one. And I say that cautiously because anyone that knows me or has been to my shop knows I'm EXTREMELY careful/ picky about precision and fit/finish. But the reality is just about any big box tool store drill press will probably be fine unless you got a real dud.
I personally think there are much more important things to worry about than quill runout or even spindle slop, within reason.
If your table is square, flat and perpendicular with your spindle and you use short screw-machine length drill bits and you raise your table as close as you can to your work so that you're limiting the runout of your quill anyway, then probably you or anyone else won't notice any bit of lack of precision.
That plays right into what I said about the proper mindset.EXTREMELY careful/ picky about precision and fit/finish
Ed, can you indicate what weight of gear lube? And another question if I may. Do you have set height blocks to drill/tap on to make up the difference in length of the tooling? One of the things missing on my burgmaster is the sub plate. It is obvious it had one at some point. I will need to make one.use a synthetic gear lube
YOU? Naw, no way. LolI'm EXTREMELY careful/ picky about precision and fit/finish.
Thanks for the link great article! I have a love hate(mostly hate) relationship with the counterbore. I can’t even imagine how many holes I have c’bored! The biggest problem with them are people keep using them when they are dull. My favorite memory of a dull c’bore; I was walking back to my bench past a bank of drill presses where a coworker was c’boring the upper die shoe. The c’bore was whining and I commented about it on my way past. When I got to my bench and turned around to see if he would heed my warning, he decided to give up and get another c’bore but it was too late when he started up the friction grabbed the shoe and it caught. With a big die shoe they just snap but this was a tiny shoe, about 10 lbs. and so it lifted, caught and spun then at its most perfectly timed rotational point that vindictive c’bore broke and released that block of steel directly into his crotch! He was on the floor moaning and groaning worse than that dull c’bore and everyone else was dying laughing. I still can’t believe he didn’t need an ambulance!I agree that folders are not really all the difficult, provided you train yourself to think in fractions of a thousandths, rather then fractions of an inch, which is generally how most do when building straight knives..... maybe not literally for all, but that's how I illustrate the point when I try to explain what I consider, the required mindset.
There's no doubt that a person can achieve acceptable results with any drill press, but it requires a lot of trial and error to learn the shortcomings of each particular drill press, and how to compensate to achieve your desired results. The key is being what John said....
That plays right into what I said about the proper mindset.
The best example I can offer is counterboring for caged bearings in a folder..... if the bottom of the counter bore is more than .0015" out of flat, the action will get stiffer and lighter as the blade travels through it's range of motion, if it happens on both counterbores, for me that action becomes unacceptable. Such an issue usually results in rebuilding a liner or scale, as trying to "fix" it usually ends in the bearing pocket being too deep.
The issue with modern drill presses, versus a milling machine, or the Burgmaster machines, is the quality of build, and the resulting flex in the table when down pressure is applied to the spindle.... with the modern drill presses, amount of pressure applied dictates how much or how little the table flexes. Generally, the smaller the drill press, the lighter the table casting, and the more resulting flex. Yes, it can be compensated for by the operator learning how much down pressure he/she can get away with, for a particular machine, but with a decent mill or the Burgmaster turret presses, that flex does not exist, so it's one less variable... and the more variables you can eliminate from the process, the better your chances for success, which why I like the Burgmaster machines so much when it comes to building folders.
Beyond what I've already said about the Burgmaster machines, you have to realize that they ended production of those machine in 1985, so you are dealing with at the newest, is a 35 year old machine. That means you have to really scrutinize any potential purchase of one. I've had mine in the shop since 1998, and was able to see and look them over in person before buying. Here's a good read on the history of the company in the LA Times in 1987: https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1987-07-12-tm-3203-story.html