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I think it IS worth the money . Take small bites and more passes . I just may get one myself for armchair milling in the den . I will be using it more for wood and plastics then metal .Fun fun fun . Ordered mine , and thanks for the heads up Ed . I expect I will get more than 200 bucks worth of fun with it .
I wish somebody would make something this small that was better made for 500 bucks or less .
https://proxxon-us-shop.com/collections/lathe-and-milling-systems/products/micro-mill-mf-70
Thanks , I just ordered it , the bits , and the vice . I should have done this in the first place , in fact years ago .
My lathe is also over 30 0years old. Then as the funds allowed I kept buying all sorts of attachments. One was a vertical milling column, so I has a mill with small table. Eventually I sent bought a full size mill base and sent in the vertical column to be modified to attach to the mill base, therfore giving my a fully-blown Sherline mill for less money than the miss costs. I still only had one headstock/motor to be swapped between the mill and lathe. As the time went by, I bought another headstock/motor assembly. Now I have a complete lathe and complete mill, with the cost spread out over 30 years. All thanks to Sherline's modular construction. Like playing with Legos.I think Maxxon Proxxon mills and lathes, while not as robust as Sherline also have modular construction, good enough for a hobbyist to produce small parts or mill model loco frames.https://www.proxxon.com/en/micromot/27110.php
what can't this $220 mill do?
Have we determined if Ed sucks or not?
It really depends on whom you ask!