Mine isn't anything like that powerful and I have never been close to stalling 
it. Occasionally the extra drill travel is nice and sometimes I expect the 
extra swing too.



  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Dan Rossi 
  To: blindhandyman@yahoogroups.com 
  Sent: Wednesday, January 07, 2009 9:58 PM
  Subject: Re: [BlindHandyMan] Drill press advice.


  Sorry, I sent the previous message before I was done. I am comparing two 
  Grizzly presses.

  The Grizzly G7944
  Motor: 3/4 H.P., single-phase, 110V
  Overall height: 64"
  Spindle travel: 3-1/4"
  Number of speeds: 12
  Drill chuck: 1/8"-5/8"
  Spindle taper: MT #2
  Range of speeds: 140, 260, 320, 380, 480, 540, 980, 1160, 1510, 1650,
  2180, 3050 RPM
  Swing: 14"
  Drilling capacity: 3/4" steel
  Table: Precision ground cast iron
  Table size: 11-3/8" sq.
  Table swing: 360
  Table tilts: 90 in both directions
  Approx. shipping weight: 172 lbs.

  Grizzly G7947
  Motor size: 1 H.P., Single-Phase, 110V/220V
  Overall height: 64-1/2"
  Swing: 17"
  Spindle travel: 4-3/4"
  Number of speeds: 12
  Drill chuck: 5/8"
  Spindle taper: MT #3
  Range of speeds: 210, 310, 400, 440, 630, 670, 1260, 1430, 1650, 2050, 
  2350, 3300 RPM
  Drilling capacity: 1" steel
  Table: Precision ground cast iron
  Table size: 13-5/8" sq.
  Table tilts: 90 in both directions
  Approx. shipping weight: 275 lbs.

  Am I just being Tim the Tool Man Taylor by looking at the larger drill 
  press? Do I really need that much machine? The one thing that really 
  makes me like it is the additional spindle travel, 3 and a quarter verses 
  4 and 3 quarters. Plus some additional throat depth and a little more 
  power. But will I really need that?

  -- 
  Blue skies.
  Dan Rossi
  Carnegie Mellon University.
  E-Mail: d...@andrew.cmu.edu
  Tel: (412) 268-9081


   

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