Nova Voyager Drill Press

ear3 said:
Just pulled the trigger on the Drill Press.

Congrats on your new toy  [big grin]

Assembly is very simple & having another set of hands help when it's time to put the head. Make sure to read the assembly steps  [wink]
 
Yes as Mario says, easy assembly, the head unit is an awkward and quite heavy part. So just be aware, if you have help though, it’s very manageable.

I’ve nearly finished my table now, just got to make the fence. I went with a hand wheel for the rise and fall, works fine but the table needs to be lifted with one hand, whilst winding with the other, all ok though.

The mobile base arrangement works well, just need my replacement Rohm chuck now.
 
Just received my replacement chuck for my Voyager. After months of deliberation, I finally broke down and ordered an Albrecht chuck from McMaster Carr. I also purchased a MT2 to J33 arbor so I can use the other chuck on my wood lathes, or if I need the extra capacity, (the stock chuck will accept bits to 16mm), be able to pop it back into the Nova.

Swap out is seamless seeings how they provide the drift to remove the chuck.
The
I went ahead and chucked up a centering bit so I could put a dial indicator on it to check runout. I expected to see at least a little, but to my surprise, I measured none whatsoever with my instruments. The only way to show any movement on the dial indicator, was to push on the side of the chuck.

Runout wise, I got a winner.  I’m looking forward toward the elimination of that chuck key, and with Albrecht’s reputation, don’t expect to see any drill bit slippage either.

Jiggly, if that replacement don’t work out for you, pony on up to the Albrecht. Definitely impressive.
 
I bought a used Albrecht on eBay - there are usually quite a few listed.  I paid $95 for a 1/2" and just moved the tapered MT2 arbor over. 

I've been very impressed with the difference in that and a china keyless knockoff I had purchased from Amazon.  I didn't have a  dial indicator but see no runout visually with a bit or rod in the chuck.
 
Which part number did you order? There are 3 different 1/2" on their site and they don't really describe the differences.

thudchkr said:
Just received my replacement chuck for my Voyager. After months of deliberation, I finally broke down and ordered an Albrecht chuck from McMaster Carr. I also purchased a MT2 to J33 arbor so I can use the other chuck on my wood lathes, or if I need the extra capacity, (the stock chuck will accept bits to 16mm), be able to pop it back into to the Nova.

Swap out is seamless seeings how they provide the drift to remove the chuck.
The
I went ahead and chucked up a centering bit so I could put a dial indicator on it to check runout. I expected to see at least a little, but to my surprise, I measured none whatsoever with my instruments. The only way to show any movement on the dial indicator, was to push on the side of the chuck.

Runout wise, I got a winner.  I’m looking forward toward the elimination of that chuck key, and with Albrecht’s reputation, don’t expect to see any drill bit slippage either.

Jiggly, if that replacement don’t work out for you, pony on up to the Albrecht. Definitely impressive.
 
I ordered model C130-J33, for 1/32” to 1/2” bit shank size, McMaster Carr # 2823A19. I’d researched which I wanted, so only needed to find the correct part number when I came here.  I also ordered a MT2 to J33 arbor as well, McMaster Carr #2811A31 to match up with the Nova drill press.

tdwilli1 said:
Which part number did you order? There are 3 different 1/2" on their site and they don't really describe the differences.

thudchkr said:
Just received my replacement chuck for my Voyager. After months of deliberation, I finally broke down and ordered an Albrecht chuck from McMaster Carr. I also purchased a MT2 to J33 arbor so I can use the other chuck on my wood lathes, or if I need the extra capacity, (the stock chuck will accept bits to 16mm), be able to pop it back into the Nova.

Swap out is seamless seeings how they provide the drift to remove the chuck.
The
I went ahead and chucked up a centering bit so I could put a dial indicator on it to check runout. I expected to see at least a little, but to my surprise, I measured none whatsoever with my instruments. The only way to show any movement on the dial indicator, was to push on the side of the chuck.

Runout wise, I got a winner.  I’m looking forward toward the elimination of that chuck key, and with Albrecht’s reputation, don’t expect to see any drill bit slippage either.

Jiggly, if that replacement don’t work out for you, pony on up to the Albrecht. Definitely impressive.
 
I have 3 Albrecht’s that I swap between the drill press and the lathe. There is nothing better... guaranteed.

Zero runout and absolute clamping of the drill bits yield a great user experience.

After purchasing all 3 on eBay for a deal, I’d pay full list for one if it wasn’t available for a discount elsewhere.
 
I’m having a bit of a saga at the moment with the chuck, the company where I bought it asked for it to be returned to Rohm. It’s been back there since the 18th, and the supplier keep apologising saying he’s waiting for a report, and that Rohm are slow to respond?

I’ve now asked for either a replacement or refund. The Spiro that I bought, which I think was £175 is supposed to be on par with a similar model Albrecht, obviously mine was not.
I’ve had the cheaper Rohm Supra’s in the past, and still have a couple but, they won’t fit the Voyager. They have been faultless, so I though the more expensive and better tolerance Spiro would be a good bet.

If it goes down the refund route, I will source an Albrecht.
The chucks seem to be the downfall of most non engineering drill presses, some of the machines are superb for woodworking but, let down with awful chucks.

I would of happily paid more for the Voyager with a decent chuck.
 
Jiggy Joiner said:
The Spiro that I bought, which I think was £175 is supposed to be on par with a similar model Albrecht, obviously mine was not.

If it goes down the refund route, I will source an Albrecht.
The chucks seem to be the downfall of most non engineering drill presses, some of the machines are superb for woodworking but, let down with awful chucks.

I would of happily paid more for the Voyager with a decent chuck.

Hey Jiggy,
Rohm chucks are outstanding, the equivalent of an Albrecht. The only issue for us in the USA is that there aren't many in use and therefore there aren't many for resale. I hope you get yours squared away. It's frustrating to have a new drill press and not be able to use it.  [sad]  My next drill press will probably be a Voyager or it's metal working cousin the Vulcan. 

I purchased my Delta metal working drill press before eBay existed. So when it arrived and I noticed it had .015" runout when mated to its Chinese made chuck, I really had no other option than to purchase a Jacobs Super Ball Bearing chuck locally and pay full list price. That marriage dropped the runout to .002" which was fine for my uses.

During the financial meltdown a number of years ago, I noticed a bunch of Albrecht chucks on eBay that were almost "free" so that's when I started picking them up.

I'm also confused as to why Nova doesn't offer as an option, a good aftermarket drill chuck. Just make the chuck offering at cost and keep your customer base happy.

The only drill press manufacturers that offer optional quality aftermarket chucks are Clausing, Ellis & Flott. 

 
thudchkr said:
I ordered model C130-J33, for 1/32” to 1/2” bit shank size, McMaster Carr # 2823A19. I’d researched which I wanted, so only needed to find the correct part number when I came here.  I also ordered a MT2 to J33 arbor as well, McMaster Carr #2811A31 to match up with the Nova drill press.

Thanks! Ordered them and will be here on Monday!
 
Curious why one would order the chuck and the arbor separately, when there is an option on McMaster Carr for an Albrecht chuck with integral arbor?

thudchkr said:
I ordered model C130-J33, for 1/32” to 1/2” bit shank size, McMaster Carr # 2823A19. I’d researched which I wanted, so only needed to find the correct part number when I came here.  I also ordered a MT2 to J33 arbor as well, McMaster Carr #2811A31 to match up with the Nova drill press.

tdwilli1 said:
Which part number did you order? There are 3 different 1/2" on their site and they don't really describe the differences.

thudchkr said:
Just received my replacement chuck for my Voyager. After months of deliberation, I finally broke down and ordered an Albrecht chuck from McMaster Carr. I also purchased a MT2 to J33 arbor so I can use the other chuck on my wood lathes, or if I need the extra capacity, (the stock chuck will accept bits to 16mm), be able to pop it back into the Nova.

Swap out is seamless seeings how they provide the drift to remove the chuck.
The
I went ahead and chucked up a centering bit so I could put a dial indicator on it to check runout. I expected to see at least a little, but to my surprise, I measured none whatsoever with my instruments. The only way to show any movement on the dial indicator, was to push on the side of the chuck.

Runout wise, I got a winner.  I’m looking forward toward the elimination of that chuck key, and with Albrecht’s reputation, don’t expect to see any drill bit slippage either.

Jiggly, if that replacement don’t work out for you, pony on up to the Albrecht. Definitely impressive.
 
Not sure but perhaps the "integral" mean a permanent fixture?

Personally, I would go with an integral. Especially with a chuck with that quality & price.
 
[member=37411]ear3[/member] not a machinist but I’m with you, seems like there would be less total runout with an integral arbor than a two piece set.

Chuck jaws that can grasp a 1/32” diameter drill need to be very narrow on the business side. That results in less grip area and may be insufficient for larger diameter bits.
 
That makes sense -- I assumed there must be a reason like that.

I guess someone might buy an arborless chuck if they were switching it back and forth between machines with different arbors?  My lathe has an MT2 arbor as well, so if I wanted to swap the chuck between the two, having the fixed arbor would not be an issue.

Michael Kellough said:
[member=37411]ear3[/member] not a machinist but I’m with you, seems like there would be less total runout with an integral arbor than a two piece set.

Chuck jaws that can grasp a 1/32” diameter drill need to be very narrow on the business side. That results in less grip area and may be insufficient for larger diameter bits.
 
[member=44099]Cheese[/member] Thanks and thanks for the explanation, I must admit, I wondered why you guys didn’t mention Rohm much. So apart from Albrecht’s being superb chucks, I understand their popularity in the USA.

I must admit I’m kicking myself a little now, as I couldn’t decide between Albrecht and Rohm, and it was only the fact that I’ve had Rohm before without issue that swayed me.
Regarding the Vulcan, I think given your mix of woodworking and metalworking the Vulcan would be an excellent choice.
 
Michael Kellough said:
[member=37411]ear3[/member] not a machinist but I’m with you, seems like there would be less total runout with an integral arbor than a two piece set.

Chuck jaws that can grasp a 1/32” diameter drill need to be very narrow on the business side. That results in less grip area and may be insufficient for larger diameter bits.

There is theoretically less runout with an integral arbor model. However Albrecht checks every drill chuck for runout and the max that is allowed is .04 mm (1 1/2 thousandths) so for probably 99% of all the jobs whatever you gain with an integral arbor doesn't make much difference.

I like the changeable arbor models because my lathe is a MT2 while the drill press is a MT3. I also have an extra tailstock that's an MT1.

It's the inherent locking jaw design that prevents the jaws from closing down to zero. The 1/2" model Albrecht is rated to hold 1.0-13 mm drill bits, but in actuality it will chuck up a drill bit that's only .6 mm in diameter.

 
Delivered this morning, and am in the midst of setting it up.

Question -- someone must sell a certified, straight rod to use for testing drill press runout.  I want to run a test but want to make sure what I'm chucking up is absolutely straight.
 

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ear3 said:
Delivered this morning, and am in the midst of setting it up.

Question -- someone must sell a certified, straight rod to use for testing drill press runout.  I want to run a test but want to make sure what I'm chucking up is absolutely straight.

If you have a defective printer somewhere collecting dust, you are set: destroy it, but take care with the rods. Save one. They are made to quite exacting dimensions and will work fine in the chuck for your purpose. (Viz: Matthias Wandel).
 
I just used a piece of stainless steel axle that I had lying around. You might be surprised how straight axles are. To check I used a straight edge and a feeler. Any discrepancies were so small that they surely would not be of any significance for this purpose.
 
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