JonnyW":73fhtw4g said:
I was suckered into getting one of those too, when I got the drill press (somebody's VAT free day caused a rush of blood to the brain).
It's the cheapest and nastiest thing imagineable. You absolutely have to clamp everything in the exact centre otherwise the sliding jaw goes squiffy and jams. And I totally agree about the slots - useless (no better on mine). And with a big hole in the bottom you can't easily drill small things that need to be referenced off the bottom face...
I must admit though, my drill press table is the square type and not the round table with the T tracks running outwards from the centre hole. The vice I'd imagine, would fit that type of table. So I've probably just bought the wrong vice. It certainly wasn't stated in the on-line description that it would only fit certain types of Clarke drill presses - it states that it's suitable for all current models of Clarke drill presses - which is incorrect.
In my experience, they just want your dosh. I daren't think what the ex-factory price is, FOB China, in units of 1,000.
20p?
I do think with all drill presses, that a custom table top with an adjustable fence on a T track and possibly another two runs of T track to take (my damned vice), is certainly the way ahead. I loved what David (Kingfisher) did with his drill press. I may buy next year, Steve Maskery's DVD to see what he did.
Steve's is jolly good. Don't remember Kingfisher's one but will google when I get a moment.
I have a design in Sketchup I've been playing with for a few years. It's not right yet and still needs work. I haven't bothered, mainly because I presently don't have enough room round the drill to fit a woodworking table.
Mine's on the 2nd floor of the house, in whqt was proably a box room, right next to a cupboard (needs must at the moment). I have to take the handles off and swing the table over every time I open the door!
In my defence, it stays dry up there and I use it for small electronic things quite a lot. The scope, and all the electronics kit is in the same room. Down below, I've got a drill chuck add-on for the bench morticer that serves for things like repetitive dowelling. It's not ideal but it is handy, especially for Forstners.
My Clark really is cheap and nasty though. I've never cleaned the original grease off the column, but it's still got rust spots, despite never getting even slightly damp. It's the finish I think - the column is really rough. It's also never run quietly - I think one of the three sets of pulleys is eccentric. Still I've finally after about 15 years, got the runout to acceptable, so it serves. The best thing about it, and the reason I chose it, is that you can get a good, slow speed from it - 180RPM. Good for big drills in metals.
One tip: I've found mine is much quieter, and has a lot less vibration, if I run it with the belts at the absolute minimum tension necessary. I almost never use the tensioner clamps now - gravity and friction usually keep the motor assembly in the right place. If it slips I will tighten it up, but if you think about it you need most torque with big drills at slow speeds, and then the mechanical advantage (little to big pulleys) is huge, so it nulls out usually.
Also,If yours is like mine, the gearbox lid rattles horribly: a few bits of split plastic hose glued onto the bottom half stops that too.