ATT: AO Machinists. I Need Your Opinions. (Granite 1324 by Smithy)

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  • luke
    lukescustoms.com

    • Jan 2001
    • 8216

    #46
    Thanks for the info, I'm going to follow your lead on the Taig machines, I've got a Mill in mind, but all info is still welcomed because I'm still shopping.

    Are you a machinist by trade or a hobbyist at this point? How did you get started?

    Originally posted by J-LYTE
    I'm just doing things a little different and am not going to post pic's until these are available for shipment.
    That was my plan also...

    Comment

    • J-LYTE
      Registered User
      • Mar 2003
      • 24

      #47
      Hobbyist, targeting my main hobby, paintball. Posts will be out soon on my product line.

      Comment

      • luke
        lukescustoms.com

        • Jan 2001
        • 8216

        #48
        Where did you pick up your CNC/CAD knowledge? Also, where did you learn your machinist skills?

        Comment

        • J-LYTE
          Registered User
          • Mar 2003
          • 24

          #49
          CAD knowledge comes from I do it for a living, structural steel detailer. CAM knowledge comes from trial and error and a bunch of scrap aluminum. CAM is the easy part. Not sure of where the machinist abilities came from I just kinda have a knack for it.

          Comment

          • luke
            lukescustoms.com

            • Jan 2001
            • 8216

            #50
            Originally posted by J-LYTE
            Not sure of where the machinist abilities came from I just kinda have a knack for it.
            Yea I'm the "fly by the seat of my pants" sort of guy too.

            Comment

            • J-LYTE
              Registered User
              • Mar 2003
              • 24

              #51
              lol!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! it tends to make things interesting.

              Comment

              • Statik7
                AKA: Mr. Diameter.
                • Oct 2002
                • 343

                #52
                I take machining as one of my classes at school. I have a friend who works at a machine shop.
                and i read alot. :o

                you should just buy seperate machines. lathe, mill, etc.
                im sure you could pick up used working machines for a decent price. CNC on the otherhand.... takes a while. Running the machine is no biggie but writing the code for it will be the issue.

                We have:
                2 Bridgeport Mills
                1 Clausing-kondia mill
                4 lathes
                1 fadal CNC mill
                2 CNC lathes
                2 small cnc engraving mills.

                and a vareity of other common shop tools
                Statik Seven Labs' Machinist - We are the industrial revolution.
                Good Buyers/sellers: Adio755, Jon/xpm, Carpecerevisi, Torbo

                My Feedback

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                • Statik7
                  AKA: Mr. Diameter.
                  • Oct 2002
                  • 343

                  #53
                  http://www.mscdirect.com

                  for cool industrial supplies

                  www.grainger.com too
                  Statik Seven Labs' Machinist - We are the industrial revolution.
                  Good Buyers/sellers: Adio755, Jon/xpm, Carpecerevisi, Torbo

                  My Feedback

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                  • Russ
                    Senior Membrane
                    • Jul 2001
                    • 1935

                    #54
                    My question to the TAIG buyers is how do you program this thing?

                    Will you need to purchase software?

                    Comment

                    • J-LYTE
                      Registered User
                      • Mar 2003
                      • 24

                      #55
                      If you purchase the Taig mill in the CNC version, everything you need comes with it. Personally, I use Autocad 2000 for modeling, which I then DXF into Gcode2000, it does the programming for me.

                      Comment

                      • luke
                        lukescustoms.com

                        • Jan 2001
                        • 8216

                        #56
                        Statik7,

                        I have decided not to get the Smithy. I will likely go with A Grizzly or an Enco floor model.

                        Comment

                        • J-LYTE
                          Registered User
                          • Mar 2003
                          • 24

                          #57
                          Luke,
                          Just to be on the safe side, run a few checks on availability of "reworked" machines by US or Canadian companies as both of these, along with the Harbor Freight and Jet versions of the same mill are manufactured in China. My experience with both the Enco and Harbor Freight vesions left dissatifying results. Accurate repeatability was virtually non-existent. Nothing compares to a Bridgeport, but few small shops can afford them. Still a firm believer in the Taig for paintball work. If in disbelief of it's capabilities, check out www.whitewolfairsmithing.com, He does some of the fanciest work I've seen and guess what He uses? I'm not really trying to "sway" your decision in any direction, just as you stated before, I don't want you to spend now only to find out later, been there, done that. John

                          Comment

                          • luke
                            lukescustoms.com

                            • Jan 2001
                            • 8216

                            #58
                            Actually I'm leaning more towards a Grizzly than an Enco, but I'm not ruling out anything (still shopping)...

                            Here is the one I was considering > (G4027)
                            http://www.grizzly.com/products/item...8&site=grizzly


                            What do you think?
                            Last edited by luke; 03-21-2003, 01:16 PM.

                            Comment

                            • luke
                              lukescustoms.com

                              • Jan 2001
                              • 8216

                              #59
                              Originally posted by J-LYTE
                              Luke,
                              I'm not really trying to "sway" your decision in any direction, just as you stated before, I don't want you to spend now only to find out later, been there, done that. John
                              Give it too me straight! I do value your advice and experience. I REALLY don't want to make a mistake and have to buy another machine as my skills improve.

                              Comment

                              • J-LYTE
                                Registered User
                                • Mar 2003
                                • 24

                                #60
                                Sorry it took so long to get back to you. This is mainly going to depend on what you intend to do in the future. A mill by design is a fairly simple concept. They all do basically the same thing. Capacity (how big of stuff you can mill) was the first thing I looked at. Accuracy was next. I wanted portability. I wont tell you not to buy the Grizzly, I own several Grizzly woodworking tools (my first love). I just dont feel the accuracy you are going to want is going to be there. Look at it this way, $3k for a floor model machine, or $20k for one the same size, versus $200 for a benchtop or the same $3k you would've spent on a bottom end floor model. Which one do you think is going to be better made, more accurate, more dependable? Tooling is still yet another consideration. Bigger machine = bigger tooling = more cost. I personally dont care for the imports; Jet, Grizzly, Enco, or Harbor Freight. Even though two of these are US companies, in the case of their mills and lathes, they're all made in China.

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