bilinghm
01-23-2008, 07:06 PM
See this site. They are for sale on Ebay for $2500.
http://www.townlabs.com/index.html
http://www.townlabs.com/index.html
|
View Full Version : Townlabs mini mill? Check this out bilinghm 01-23-2008, 07:06 PM See this site. They are for sale on Ebay for $2500. http://www.townlabs.com/index.html DonF 01-23-2008, 07:31 PM Yes that has been bought up before. There have been some reviews with very unhappy customers! DonF 01-23-2008, 07:35 PM Check out this thread -> http://www.cnczone.com/forums/showthread.php?t=47862 ataxy 01-23-2008, 10:23 PM ouf 2500$ is alot of money for such a weak machine Halfnutz 01-23-2008, 11:29 PM I would look at the Proxon, the Taig the X2 conversion kits and the Sherline for a comparison. These machines do great in wood, wax or composites but people expecting to mill metals are often disappointed with their overall strength and rigidity. There are however, people with skill and patience ( I'm not one of them ) that can do incredible work in soft metals with these little lightweights, but you really have to learn some machining basics first. I have a CNC'd X2 that works great, it cost under a grand total for the machine, a HobbyCNC kit, the plans and some time for the conversion but overall I really like it, it just cant hog with a 1/2 inch endmill like my big mill/drill can, but for light stuff (even light cuts in metal) it works great and doing the conversion myself taught me skills that money can't buy. BrassBuilder 01-25-2008, 06:53 AM I would look at the Proxon, the Taig the X2 conversion kits and the Sherline for a comparison. I have a CNC'd X2 that works great, it cost under a grand total for the machine, a HobbyCNC kit, the plans and some time for the conversion but overall I really like it, it just cant hog with a 1/2 inch endmill like my big mill/drill can, but for light stuff (even light cuts in metal) it works great and doing the conversion myself taught me skills that money can't buy. For $2500, I would CNC an X2 before I spent that much on a X1. It cost me a little more than a grand to buy my machine and CNC it, but even if you went with the same package I did, you will have around $1000 left over from your $2500 and have a much better machine. I now have a machine that I built and if something goes wrong, I have a good idea on what I would need to replace or at least where to look for the problem. Like Halfnutz said...this taught me skills that money can't buy. :) Mike |