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I was raised to expect the worst when using any kind of power tool and I am goggled up and usually wearing a thick sweatshirt because ... things fly.
But baggy clothing is to be avoided. The machine doesn't care that it stopped cutting the frame and is now cutting your sleeve and arm. It will pull you in pretty fast, even these little ones.
As someone with three milling machines and a metal lathe and has 'dremel warriored' lots of stuff, let me give you some advice.Looking for a mill? *if* you have the space, buy one two sizes larger than than anything you *think* you will use it for.You will find all sorts of stuff you never thought you would use it for. It won't be 'just trains.'Expect to spend just as much on tooling as the mill itself depending on what route you go.Wear safety glasses. You only have one set of eyes. thin cuts until you figure out feed rates, spindle speed, etc. After a while (especially with cast loco frames) it becomes sort of a feel and you learn where you have to tread lightly and where you can hog material. Hard to explain.Clamping- rigidity is everything.Anywhoo...stay safe and have fun!Kelley.