I am building my first rifle, a Southern Mountain rifle, iron hardware.
I am shopping for a drill press and I would be interested in opinions on a second powertool purchase.
Small verticle belt grinder?
8" Bench grinder, or maybe a 8"wire wheel/buffing wheel rig?
Can ya help a guy out?
I use a verticle belt grinder a lot in my work (4x48"). Everything from sharpening tools to shaping metal parts to polishing. Wood sanding as well. Once you get used to one and working on the verticle as well as the the blind under side of the bottom wheel, you can do a great amt of very fine work.
A buffer/grinder I have but haven't used it as a buffer nor a grinder in 40yrs on gun parts. I do put a hard wheel on it and put a razor edge on carving tools with it. But no metal polishing/finishing with it. The other side has a wire wheel on it and I use that for cleaning up dirty parts of rust and grime. Works fast and efficiently. HAng on tight,,they can take a ride on you!
For finishing purposes I do use a fine wire wheel on metal that has been hand polished. Coat the metal with some oil,,most any oil will do and use a medium speed fine wirewheel to burnish the surface. Leaves a very nice finish for either in the white or ready for rust blue or brown. Shows up any file or polishing scars you missed too.
For that all you need is a recycled motor belted to an arbor. Kick the speed down about 1/2 and there you are. OSHA probably won't approve of the set-up but too bad.
I had another motor set up with a small drill chuck on it that I used for spin polishing and shaping screws and pins. Very handy. Had it mounted on a small wooden block so I just put it in the bench vise when needed and out of the way when not. No floor space taken up.
I use my small lathe headstock 3 jaw now, but the former did just as well for many years.
That motor now runs the rust blue carding wheel.
I got rid of my floor mounted drill press many years ago. Now I have just a small bench mounted one that I use occasionally and a JET mill-drill.
The small drill press is more than enough to drill the bbl pin and screw holes needed in a L/R project using a simple spike center mounted in the table and lined up with the drill bit.
Lots can be done w/o a lot of expensive equipment.