Hi all,
I am seriously thinking about a Tormach 1100MX.
I am self-taught hobby machinist. The only CNC experience I have is with 3D printing. I use Alibre for CAD designing.
As with anything on the net, there the usual horror stories and the usual very positive fan boy stories. I don't know how concerned I should be regarding a few negative "reviews".
Options-wise, I would want the tool changer and and probe. Not sure which coolant system I would want.
Yes, I have looked at Haas mini mills. Base machine is reasonably priced, but the options seem to get very, very pricey, and I do not intend to do any production CNC work.
Any thoughts would be appreciated.
Jon
I bought a brand new Tormach (as well a bridgeport and grinder) back in 2018 when I left my old job to start up on my own.
Personally I found it to be extremely disappointing.
This is not to say that it was necessarily bad, but going from a modern VMC with a Toolchanger to a tormach is a giant leap backwards.
If you do buy one, be sure to check out Scott_M's lever drawbar setup. I bought a set of plans from him and it is super slick, probably the only part of the machine I do like.
There a few things I really hate about the Tormach.
1: Stepper noise. I am used to dead silent servos, the stepper harmonics drive me crazy.
2: Other vibration noise: The enclosure rattles allot when taking a heavy cut, which I find pretty distracting.
3: Lack of rigidity: This is the big one for me. A lot of the youtube guys love to talk about how the Tormach can do everything the big machines can do but slower. That is a major understatement. The largest endmill you can really take advantage of is 1/4" of an inch, anything bigger and you have to worry about the tooling pulling out, lack of horsepower, intense vibration with terrible surface finish, lost step count, and maybe a scrapped part .
4: Very Slow Productivity: This is a direct result of the lack of rigidity and horsepower. The MMR on the tormach is literally less then 1/10th of the Fadal 4020 I recently purchased. The Tormach doesn't even compare to a bridgeport rigidity wise.
If I were to do it over again, my first choice would be a small linear way Fadal (EMC, VMC15, VMC3016L etc). They can be had for 10k, have a toolchanger, a full enclosure, and are light enough to fit in a garage.
Choice 2 would be a TRM, either a Fadal or Haas. Fadal TRM's can be had for about $6k and weigh around 5000lbs. This is IMO the heaviest machine one person can move around in their garage on their own.
Choice 3 would be a ProtoTRAk. I think this would actually be best for somebody doing this as a hobby. highly versatile and very easy to learn how to use. The only problem is that you are limited to 2 cnc axis machining.