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Thread: best tooling purchases made for building your CNC machine

  1. #1
    Registered pminmo's Avatar
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    best tooling purchases made for building your CNC machine

    As I'm setting there tonight with a 5/8" fostner bit from a set from Harbor Freight (less than $10) on my 7 x 10" Central Machines metal lathe from Harbor Freight, getting ready to make a measurement with a 6" lcd digital calipers (you guessed it from HF!) all of a sudden it dawns on me. (Oh yea, plus the T-handle that I use to change tool bits if from a $4 set of T handles, and the large Metric wrench to loosen the tail stock is from a cheap set of HF wrench's.) This company which I used to laugh at, I'm using a bunch of there el cheapo tools with very good results. First I don't have any affiliation with HF, just a coworker that stops by there on the way home a couple of times a month, and makes a "run" for us coworkers to gobble up the latest in elcheapo sales stuff. Now mind you, I do have some expensive tastes, my wood working tools are Powermatic, Delta, Porter Cable and on the lower end Jet and Ryobi. But I must conceed that $25 pneumatic crown stapler works like a champ, especially next to my $150 Porter Cable brad nailer. So after this dissertation what I really wanted to say was my best tooling investments that have been used in making my CNC machine (mostly wood) is that set of Forstner Bits from Harbor freight, along with the digital calipers and and a cheap set of 123 blocks from Enco. What's your's?


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    Gold Member chuckknigh's Avatar
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    Mine include a Forstner bit set from Harbor Freight (TiN coated!), a multi-speed Dremel clone, also from HF, a refurbished RotoZip, also from HF...let's see, what else. My benchtop drill press, also from Harbor Freight...and my machinist's dial gauge from you know where. :-)

    Oh yeah, there's also the $20 cross slide vise from Cummins Tools...a Harbor Freight competitor! Not perfect, but darned good.

    China is making some usable tools, now! :-)

    -- Chuck Knight


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    Registered strat's Avatar
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    i have a few cheapys from HF also but as far as bits and tools i'm a grizzly man


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    Thanks for the question. It poused me to think and I inverted the question " which are the most expensive tools that I have?" Answer: Harbor Freight


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    I also have some HF tools but I have also found by watching their ads and being part of their club thing Sears can have some very nice tools at a moderate investment, and a plus, most of theirs are guaranteed. Oh and don't forget the best of all the Garage Sale gems. Ron


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    A "Tool Shop" brand circle cutter of the type that let's you set the radius via an "outrigger" knife.

    I set it to cut blind holes for my gas pipe rails (no adjustment... ) and for my ball screw thrust bearings. (Again, no adjustment...)
    --
    Dan


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    Registered NeoMoses's Avatar
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    For the metalworking guys out there (I know I'm in the woodworking forum) these Eron Vises can't be beat. I'd put them up against a Kurt any day.

    http://www.hpi-heartech.com/accessories/vises.html
    My name is Electric Nachos. Sorry to impose, but I am the ocean.
    http://www.bryanpryor.com

    (Note: The opinions expressed in this post are my own and are not necessarily those of CNCzone and its management)


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    (my first real post)
    I would go along with, what appears to be a concensus, that some of the 'less expensive' tools can suffice, and be downright 'un-live-withoutable'. I own a Griz table saw, a PC router under a table of my making, Delta 12" drill press and miter saw,Ryobi bench top band saw, Mitutoyo and Starrett cals. But the tools I use the most are my telescoping magnetic pickup/screwdriver with six different bits($3.99 @ HF) and my 8 ft. Stanley tape measure (6.99 @ Home Depot). I wouldn't want to be caught dead w/out my tape measure.
    Go Longhorns! Go Astros!


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    Hey hook'em, I hear you about the tape. I must have 3 or 4 just so I have one near my right hand at any given time
    Bill


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    HF... can't live with out 'em!

    Hmmm... my HF collection?

    9x20 lathe (still in need of a QCTP and boring bar set)
    Lathe carbide bits
    13" Drill Press
    6" Calipers... about 4 sets
    Multimeter for $3.99
    Bar Clamps.. bar clamps.. bar clamps.
    Pipe clamps
    Welding magnets
    All of my Pneumatics, brad nailer, hose, air wands, die grinder
    Forstner Bits (the TiN coated ones)
    4-Speed Bandsaw

    I'm sure there is more that I can't remember. The amazing thing is that their post sales support is actually pretty good. I managed to twist the drive spline on my drill press while holesawing through gas pipe..... eventhough the drill was 10 months old, they had my craditcard purchase on file, and could verify my warranty request on the spot!!! Ask Home Desperate to do that for you...... NOT!!!

    Eventhough I only asked for the drive spline to be replaced they sent me an entire quill set with a new chuck too. The chuck I cut the MT down and now use in the lathe and I have an extra set of quill bearings for whenever I need them.

    HF is not so bad if you purchase carefully. Like someone else said, my most expensive machines are from HF!


  • #11
    Moderator mvaughn's Avatar
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    This is great....

    I know have my shopping list put together for my next trip to HarborFreight.


  • #12
    Gold Member High Seas's Avatar
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    Just another data point - I found some of the same gear at the Homier sales (truckload) that are functionally and quality wise similar to HF but at about 1/2 or less!
    I needed some dollys (snicker-snicker hehe) for the car - 19 bucks a pair. For the same ones - I means EXACTLY the same - HF was gonna get me at nearly 50! Someone else pointed out on the forum elsewhere - that the gear is nearly almost always made at the same factories in China anyway.
    It pays to shop around - and have your list when you're lookin!
    cheers - Jim
    Experience is the BEST Teacher. Is that why it usually arrives in a shower of sparks, flash of light, loud bang, a cloud of smoke, AND -- a BILL to pay? You usually get it -- just after you need it.


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