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New or Used Drill Press


Jim Oaks

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2005 Jaguar XJ8
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2021
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Ford Ranger
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drill_presses.JPG

Now that I finally have electric in my shop, I really want a drill press.

I found a Craftsman 137.229150 15" 5/8" 1 HP floor model on Marketplace for $150. From what I can find these were made in the early 2000's, so it's probably roughly 20-years old. I checked Harbor Freight, Home Depot, and Lowes, and the only other good deals I found was a Kobalt at Lowes that's 1 HP with a 5/" chuck on sale for $200, and a 5/8" .64 HP Craftsman for $180.

I like Kobalt hand tools but never bought their power tools. I prefer a floor model and kind of dig having older tools, but does it make sense to spend $150 on a 20-year-old drill press if I can get a new one for $50 more?
 
You will run out of room on most bench mount drill presses immediately unless you are just using it for wood. Add 3-5" to the table height at its lowest position to account for a good vise or clamp.

$150 for that Craftsman is a good deal if it's in good shape. Open the cover and see if it's clean inside or if there's chunks of belts all over. Run the quill all the way down and shake the chuck around - should be very little movement (none is better!) Turn it on and make sure it sounds healthy. Tighten the table down everywhere and push on it... can you move it up or down at all? Should not be able to.

I mentioned this in your garage thread but if you are doing any metal work you want the table to do these things:
- crank up & down height adjustment
- pivot on the main post tube
- table itself rotates and can be locked in position - this is a very nice feature to have - almost essential in my mind
- table itself tilts (not necessary but nice.)
- a drain hole is really nice for oil to run out of into a bottle

This is the vise I have on my drill press, Vevor makes some cheese dick stuff but this is an exception, I love this thing:
 
find one with more travel. you can eat up 3.5" just changing from a pilot bit to a jobber size 1/2".
and bigger is better, so is older.
 
also light weight tables/columns flex a lot.
 
Look for a third pulley. Then you can get slow enough for metal.
 
I'd do the Craftsman one just because it is like my dad's lol.

He had to replace the chuck, otherwise it has been great.
 
So…

Dad years ago bought a Delta floor drill press. Nice looking, has a lot of nice features, except the quill wobbles pretty good when you run it out. Brand new. Delta told him to get lost when he complained along with the store he bought it at.

I bought a Harbor Freight benchtop drill press newly used from a guy. Quill wobbles a little when you run it out and it doesn’t go nearly slow enough for metal. I’m about ready to start watching for a mill…
 
Bigger is better for drill presses. Bring a dial indicator and turn a drill shank in the chuck or something to see how clapped out it is.
 

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