Our hobby is full of choices, which is certainly good. 40 years ago, our world consisted of names like Myford, Bridgeport, Hardinge, Starrett, Monarch, Brown & Sharpe, Atlas, South Bend. Now, we have Import (usually Chinese) imports competing with these honored names. Some of it is decent, and some of it is horrendous junk.
Over the years, I have come to the conclusion that there are certain areas where it is best to shell out a bit more money. The purpose of this thread is to gather opinions on the overall quality of certain import products, and where it might benefit to pass them by and go for a "Western" product.
My shop is loaded with a mix of tools. I have a Chinese VM - it is excellent for the money. But here are tools where I've been very disappointed in the cheaper imports.
Milling cutters: Are expensive! It seems ridiculous to pay $25 for a single 0.250" HSS end mill. Those "20 TICN end mills in a box" for $39 seems to be an irresistable bargain, and to the naked eye, they look (and feel) just fine. I started with them, and wondered why my cuts were terrible, surface finish poor, and why the cutters broke so often. Then I got my hands on a Niagra end mill, and it cut like butter. Since then, I've found that paying the $$ is WORTH it when you've got a part with 30 hours on it sitting in your mill vise. The accuracy and correct geometry of quality cutters makes them desirable for the $$.
Drill bits: Exactly the same as the end mills. I've mounted some cheap drill bits and one could see the end of the drill revolving in a huge circle! These drill bits belong in the hand drilling drawer, at best.
Collets: It's hard to pay $20 for a single Lyndex or $40 for a Hardinge 5C collet when import collets are $4.95. But I've seen the cheapies indicate 0.005" out with a gauge pin installed, when the same pin mounted in a Hardinge collet has essentially 0.000" TIR.
Drill chucks: The import chucks are getting better, but I still think it pays to at least verify accuracy before pulling the trigger. I did find that my SPI Albrecht clone is every bit as good as a real Albrecht, but caveat emptor applies.
Hand Taps: IMO, definitely worth it to spend $$ on good taps like Sossner, OSG, etc. You can easily feel the difference in the torque required.
Where else does it pay one to spend a bit more? The idea is not to bash - I own and enjoy a large number of "import" tools that are every bit as good as the expensive domestic variety. The idea is to be informed on the current state of the art with regards to tools and tooling. Also, where is it a good idea to buy the import tools? Things like parallels, 1-2-3 blocks, many others, are excellent values and good tools.
Over the years, I have come to the conclusion that there are certain areas where it is best to shell out a bit more money. The purpose of this thread is to gather opinions on the overall quality of certain import products, and where it might benefit to pass them by and go for a "Western" product.
My shop is loaded with a mix of tools. I have a Chinese VM - it is excellent for the money. But here are tools where I've been very disappointed in the cheaper imports.
Milling cutters: Are expensive! It seems ridiculous to pay $25 for a single 0.250" HSS end mill. Those "20 TICN end mills in a box" for $39 seems to be an irresistable bargain, and to the naked eye, they look (and feel) just fine. I started with them, and wondered why my cuts were terrible, surface finish poor, and why the cutters broke so often. Then I got my hands on a Niagra end mill, and it cut like butter. Since then, I've found that paying the $$ is WORTH it when you've got a part with 30 hours on it sitting in your mill vise. The accuracy and correct geometry of quality cutters makes them desirable for the $$.
Drill bits: Exactly the same as the end mills. I've mounted some cheap drill bits and one could see the end of the drill revolving in a huge circle! These drill bits belong in the hand drilling drawer, at best.
Collets: It's hard to pay $20 for a single Lyndex or $40 for a Hardinge 5C collet when import collets are $4.95. But I've seen the cheapies indicate 0.005" out with a gauge pin installed, when the same pin mounted in a Hardinge collet has essentially 0.000" TIR.
Drill chucks: The import chucks are getting better, but I still think it pays to at least verify accuracy before pulling the trigger. I did find that my SPI Albrecht clone is every bit as good as a real Albrecht, but caveat emptor applies.
Hand Taps: IMO, definitely worth it to spend $$ on good taps like Sossner, OSG, etc. You can easily feel the difference in the torque required.
Where else does it pay one to spend a bit more? The idea is not to bash - I own and enjoy a large number of "import" tools that are every bit as good as the expensive domestic variety. The idea is to be informed on the current state of the art with regards to tools and tooling. Also, where is it a good idea to buy the import tools? Things like parallels, 1-2-3 blocks, many others, are excellent values and good tools.