Hal,
No problem on the info. There's a few ways of looking at your question about milling though. I wouldn't consider the Atlas as a primary mill. It's more of an addition to a vertical mill. The horizontals run mostly blade or slab type mills. And due to the way their designed with the arbour supported at each end, You can take far larger depth of cuts than any standard hobbiest type vertical mill. If I remember the correct rpm figures. My Atlas has a bottom end speed of 46 rpm. That works for the larger diameter tooling that is often used on horizontals. Without a larger Bridgeport type mill with a couple of HP and a 220v 3 phase motor and a VFD. Your not going to get the ultra low rpms from most of the smaller type vertical mills avalible today. Even with the above you'd still have a lot of reduced avalible tourque.
You really can't normally buy a good well made drill chuck for use on a vertical mill for $125 today. Buy the Atlas now, And then start saving for the best and largest vertical you have room for and can afford. Then just add parts if needed to the Atlas as and when you can afford it if their needed. You'll grow into that mill. A vertical is more versitile, But pound for pound the Atlas will remove more cubic inches of metal in a given time per HP than a vertical will. Set up right, The Atlas can machine the full length on both sides of a part at the same time. Using MT 2 collets and shorter end mills you can even use those in the spindle. Set ups are tougher to do on a horizontal than a vertical though.
Pete



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I put a few bucks into the lathe. It needed a 3 jaw chuch and I purchased a chinese AXA tool post fir it.
