Lonsdale73
Established Member
Looking to upgrade my drill press and saw this one. Any regularss own or have experience of using one that can provide some informed advice please?
Nelsun":1zzrrhr7 said:You can have mine!
When you pry it from my cold dead hands.
The cost of just getting to Shetland would likely cover the cost of the drill and leave you plenty change!Lonsdale73":v0fauyj2 said:Is it that good? If so, what's your address, I'll be right round.
Jarno":12k823di said:LOL!
I also was looking around for a drill press, and really the option is to buy a 120EUR/GBP chinese drill press, which I used to have, or spend about double that amount and buy the Bosch.
The cheaper one only has a few spindle speeds, and on mine when lowering the drill, the pinole started rattling. Everything is pretty low quality, rough castings, poor quality of mounting materials etc.
For 260EUR/GBP you get much better quality, depth indication, continuously variable spindle speeds in two ranges, light, laser, more power (700W). So, really, it is a very good option indeed.
There are a few things I noted on mine, note that I bought mine last week, so I haven't done a lot of work and bearings might need to run in a bit:
It is pretty noisy, the motor runs quite a bit faster than the fixed speed motors on the cheaper drills.
It is not quite as stable as I'd like. I tried a 10mm regular drill bit (not brad point) in pine, without pre-drilling and it was shaking rather a lot.
It is pretty square out of the box, so that is good.
It would be nice if you can reverse the footplate and clamp it to the bench, to be able to drill into taller workpieces.
Pretty happy with it, and I expect the 140GBP/EUR or so extra outlay to be forgotten because of the better function and finish.
But, I don't expect putting an endmill into it to mill mortises will work well. Something a bit more stable is needed for that, and those machines are more in the 400-500EUR/GBP region, I wasn't ready to spend that kind of money (think I will try a 6mm end mill though, will post the results here).
Nelsun":38a7ovnz said:The cost of just getting to Shetland would likely cover the cost of the drill and leave you plenty change!Lonsdale73":38a7ovnz said:Is it that good? If so, what's your address, I'll be right round.
It's the one I went for after looking around and only seeing various rebadged jobs for hundreds more that didn't look much better than my old £50 Silverline drill press. The digital depth stop is, for me, the winning feature (dead quick to set and stays put) besides having no belts to change, being relatively light weight and a speed dial.
The clamp thing is a bit of a gimmick and doesn't see much use - I built a table for it with your normal clamping options. The round handle can be a little bit awkward to turn if you're plunging any great distance but not in any major way. Oh, and I've not notice any wobble or run-out worthy of investigating on mine.
For the price of it I'd buy another in a blink. This is the review that sold it to me: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iYCYGI0aAWc
Well, if you're gonna bump me off for the drill press then you may as well take the house as well :lol:Lonsdale73":2owtwpu4 said:Any crofts going up there? I'd relocate in the blink of an eye!
I didn't see the point in stumping up for a bigger belt driven version as, unless you paid good money, it looked like you'd be getting something you'd learn to hate. The BPD40, although green Bosch, looked like an actual good bargain and I'd say it most certainly is from my experience.Lonsdale73":2owtwpu4 said:I saw that Manor Wood video this morning and that had me reaching for my wallet. Common sense (and an empty wallet!) prevailed and I thought I'd see if there was any members with guidance to offer afore jumping in and potentially ending up with a second - albeit pricier - Silverline!
Lonsdale73":39dfqn7u said:Not sure if there's anything out there remotely similar in that price range?
Jarno":1s56xfb4 said:Lonsdale73":1s56xfb4 said:Not sure if there's anything out there remotely similar in that price range?
That was the point of my reply, I do not think there is anything similar in this price range. I'd forego some of the niceties for more stability, but you are looking at another 200 EUR/GBP outlay for something which is probably not as nicely finished.
So yeah, buy the Bosch or spend 500GBP (Or, alternatively, buy the Bosch AND spend a few hundred on a used mortiser).
Nelsun":2z99oj2j said:You can have mine!
When you pry it from my cold dead hands.
Nelsun":1hubxffp said:Phew, I can come out of hiding now then 8)
I laminated a printout of a speed chart I found in the google. There were many in there but I plumped for this one (https://cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/1361/ ... dchart.pdf) as it catered for most of the bits I'm likely to use.
Lonsdale73":fuj7ma07 said:Nelsun":fuj7ma07 said:Phew, I can come out of hiding now then 8)
I laminated a printout of a speed chart I found in the google. There were many in there but I plumped for this one (https://cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/1361/ ... dchart.pdf) as it catered for most of the bits I'm likely to use.
That's useful thanks. Think I might have been going a tad fast with the hole-saw in MDF!
Eric":34ib0dwo said:Thought of changing the chuck, then had a better thought - to get a milling machine and keep the Bosch just for wood
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