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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.
. . .Another step up: $1900 for a "Hi Torque" mill, weighs about 250 lbs, 1 HP motorFinally, go to $3000, and you get a 1-1/3 HP motor, bigger X-Y table, the spindle speed doubles to go up to 5000 rpm,so it has heavier higher-speed bearings in it, and the machine weighs 350 lbs.
I love buying good tools, but I also know my limitations.
Perhaps people are over-inferring what "two or three times larger" means.It doesn't mean a monster Bridgeport machine that weighs 5 tons.I am not shilling for this vendor, but they had a selection of mills that make my point, so here's my explanation...Little Machine Shop has a Seig X2D mini mill for about $900. This is the same mini mill that many people buy under a variety of names from Grizzly, Micro-Mark, and others. But LMS's version is the improved one with a solid column, air spring support for the head, and an R8 spindle (trust me, you'll find tooling a lot easier to find for that spindle). Considering that I paid about $600 for the X2 20 years ago, *without* those improvements, this is a heck of a buy.If you step up to $1200, you get the same machine with a 500w brushless motor (instead of 350w) and no gears on the spindle instead of 2-speed gear box on the cheaper one. It will be a lot quieter. It also has more travel lengthin X,Y, and Z. Another step up: $1900 for a "Hi Torque" mill, weighs about 250 lbs, 1 HP motorFinally, go to $3000, and you get a 1-1/3 HP motor, bigger X-Y table, the spindle speed doubles to go up to 5000 rpm,so it has heavier higher-speed bearings in it, and the machine weighs 350 lbs.My point is that while these mills do go up in size, even the biggest one will still go on top of a sturdy steel or oaktable and isn't like putting a "refrigerator" in your work room. But they go up in power and convenience quite a bitfrom the cheapest to the most expensive.