did you use one of theseDrill press milling ftw

did you use one of theseDrill press milling ftw
not really an attachment, but id say tye a string to your chuck key to your press, so you dont loose it , i learned my lesson!!!Gun Freak wrote:No those are pieces of crap from china... I read the reviews and they are so crappy... The good ones are like 150 bucks. What other attachments should I get for my drill press?
nice use of the word crap lol. I have the exact same model as pictured, and I got it for appx $50. Great little tool. I've done plastic and wood "ghetto drill press milling" with it and it is fine, but the chuck itself is my problem.... nothing like a bridgeport thoughGun Freak wrote:No those are pieces of crap from china... I read the reviews and they are so crappy... The good ones are like 150 bucks. What other attachments should I get for my drill press?
I agree.....Orange Juice is very good for you, a glass a day!MrCrowley wrote:Shouldn't you be out drinking on NYs eve?Labtecpower wrote:Preparing myself for new years eve
Don't try this at home folks !!tye a string to your chuck key to your press
lol I was chuckling at how bad of an idea that is...evilvet wrote:Don't try this at home folks !!tye a string to your chuck key to your press
evilvet wrote:Don't try this at home folks !!tye a string to your chuck key to your press
Tying the chuck key to a string is worse than leaving it in the chuck alone. I have seen too many near misses where someone didn't remove the chuck key before starting the drill, nice demonstration of centripetal acceleration.
Tying the key on creates a potentially lethal noose for your wrist and at 500RPM that string will tighten awfully fast.
Standard practice in any workshop at plants I work in is that no chuck key, collett spanner or any other tool will have a lanyard attached. You don't allow long hair, loose clothes etc near a spinning tool, why would you deliberately create a dangerous situation? I did once see a toolmaker who had put the chuck key on a lanyard round his neck so he would not loose it.........
Create a mantra that you follow EVERY time: chuck tight, yep, chuck key in the red painted holder next to the drill, yep, press the button,yep.
BTW, ditto @heimo on the mill vs drill chuck. Using your drill press as a slot drill / mill will wear bearings, overload and damage the motor and may give you that flying object effect when (not if) the chuck comes loose under the side load.