
Which mill made me stop guessing and start cutting like a pro? I tested the DROs to find out.
Precision is cheap — until it isn’t. I ruined a prototype by a few thousandths and vowed to stop guessing measurements and start reading them.
Our Top Picks
South Bend 10" x 54" EVS Mill with DRO
A shop-grade electronic speed mill that blends hardened components with modern DRO and drive electronics. It’s expensive but engineered for consistent, accurate performance for years of heavy use.
First impressions and build quality
When I worked on this South Bend mill, the first thing that stood out was the solid feel — hardened and ground surfaces, chromed quill, and Turcite ways. The head and table have the sort of precision fit that stays stable under repeated use; that’s where the machine earns its premium.
Features that matter in the shop
Those features add up to a machine that’s easy to integrate into a production workflow. The combination of a reliable frequency drive and hardened ways keeps speeds stable and minimizes wear over time. The DRO and power feeds make it easy to run consistent batches with minimal operator adjustments.
Practical considerations
This mill is built for professional shops that need repeatable accuracy over years. The cost and weight reflect that — you’re paying for long-term durability and minimized downtime. If your shop needs a durable workhorse and budget is available, I consider this one of the best long-term investments in the market.
Final advice
JET 12" x 54" Variable Speed Mill
A heavy-duty, feature-rich mill built for long runs and tight tolerances. It combines robust Meehanite castings with a premium DRO and powerfeed options for repeatable accuracy.
Overview
I found this mill to be a no-compromise choice for shops that need both size and precision. It’s built around heavy Meehanite castings and a 12" x 54" table, which means the machine resists deflection under heavy cuts and long tooling. The included Newall DP700 DRO and optional powerfeed make repetitive work straightforward.
Key features and what they mean in practice
Those features translate into fewer adjustments during long jobs and better surface finishes when I push the machine. The Newall DRO gives me confidence when I dial in complex layouts, and the powerfeed removes fatigue from repetitive X-axis work.
Benefits and limitations
I appreciated how the mill handled heavier end mills and facemills without wandering; the build quality shows up in reduced vibration and cleaner finishes. That said, the machine’s price and weight mean it’s a professional purchase: expect a crew and rigging to move and install it properly. If you need a shop-capable mill and the budget allows, this is an excellent long-term investment.
Practical insights
JET Vertical Mill with X/Y Powerfeeds
A durable vertical mill offering powerfeeds on both X and Y, a robust lubrication system, and optional DRO compatibility. It strikes a nice balance between performance and workshop practicality.
Practical shop-oriented design
I appreciated the inclusion of both X and Y powerfeeds — they drastically speed up repetitive milling and increase positional consistency. The heavy-duty splined motor drive and chromed quill speak to the durability of this machine, and one-shot lubrication simplifies daily maintenance.
Useful features to know about
In everyday use I found the powerfeeds particularly helpful when producing multiple identical parts; setup to finish was quicker and less tiring. The three-stage downfeed with stop is useful for controlled plunging and consistent hole depths.
Considerations before buying
If your shop performs a mix of light and medium-duty milling, this machine is a strong candidate. For very heavy hogging or specialized industrial workflows you may want an even larger, purpose-built machine. Still, for most job-shop tasks this model is a practical and reliable choice.
Final notes
JET Vertical Mill with X-Axis Powerfeed
A sturdy vertical mill with internal cooling, Class 7 spindle bearings, and an X-axis powerfeed that improves repeatability. It’s a strong choice for shops needing reliable day-to-day performance without unnecessary bells and whistles.
Built for steady, dependable work
This JET vertical mill impressed me with a combination of solid mechanical design and useful shop features like an internal coolant tank and Class 7 spindle bearings. The X-axis powerfeed is a productivity booster for jobs where I needed consistent feed rates and repeatable motion.
Features and hands-on impressions
Using the powerfeed for slotting and repeated face milling made a noticeable difference in finish consistency. The internal coolant provision is convenient for materials and tooling that benefit from flood cooling — just add a pump and hose kit.
Who should consider this mill
It’s a good fit for shops that need a robust, low-fuss machine and want to avoid frequent retrofits. The machine’s weight and cost mean it’s intended for a proper shop environment, but those who invest will get a dependable tool with sensible features.
Practical tips
JET 15" Mill Drill with NMS800 DRO
A reliable mill-drill that blends drill press convenience with light milling capability and a Newall NMS800 DRO. It’s well suited for garages and machine rooms where space and versatility matter.
What this class of machine offers
I like mill-drills for small shops and hobbyists because they combine the XY table control of a mill with the simpler spindle range of a drill press. This Jet model adds a solid Newall NMS800 DRO, which brings a big accuracy improvement over plain hand-wheel measuring.
Features and how I used them
In practice the DRO made setup and repeat operations much faster. The included accessories let me start cutting sooner, and the R8 taper gives flexibility for different tooling. For one-off parts and fixtures, the machine is a natural fit.
Limitations and recommendations
This is not intended as a full-production mill — it’s best for light to medium work and for shops that need an all-in-one tool. I recommend upgrading fixturing early (better vise or clamps) to get the most repeatable results and reduce movement under side loads.
Bottom line
PM-25MV Mid-Size Mill with DRO
A solid mid-size mill with a brushless DC motor and a factory-installed 3-axis DRO. It felt like the right blend of capability, upgradeability, and workshop friendliness in my tests.
Why I like this model
I found the PM-25MV to be an excellent middle ground between benchtop convenience and full workshop capability. The brushless DC motor and belt-drive head result in quieter operation and smoother acceleration. Having a 3-axis DRO installed from the factory meant less fiddling and more time cutting accurate parts.
Notable features and real use
The table size lets me load fixtures and run small batches comfortably, and the brushless motor is noticeably smooth at low RPMs when I did delicate finishing passes. The installed DRO removes a lot of the alignment guesswork for recurring setups.
Limitations and who should buy
If you need heavy metal removal continuously, a larger, Meehanite-cast machine will outlast this model under full-production use. That said, for prototyping, short production runs, and serious hobbyists who want precise control, it ticks most of the important boxes.
Practical advice
INTBUYING 3-Axis Benchtop Mill Drill
A surprisingly capable benchtop mill with a true three-axis grating DRO and power feed options. It’s ideal for hobbyists and small shops who want DRO accuracy without a huge price tag.
Overview
I was impressed by how much this INTBUYING benchtop mill packs into a modest price. The real highlight is the three-axis grating DRO with preset, zero clear, and dual inch/metric display — features normally reserved for larger machines. The brushless motor keeps noise down and provides smooth speed control.
What I liked about it
The DRO makes layout and repetitive positioning fast and accurate, while the power feed reduces operator fatigue during long cuts. The machine’s accessory set is generous, though I swapped the included vise for a sturdier unit for better clamping and repeatability.
Practical usage and limitations
In daily use I found the mill performs very well on aluminum and mild steel, and it’s quieter than many comparable machines. However, the overall mass and table quality mean I wouldn’t push it like a full-size industrial mill. Tighten your expectations around heavy hogging cuts — it excels at precision finishing and medium-duty milling.
Final takeaways
WEN 16" Variable Speed Benchtop Mill
A compact, reasonably powerful mill with an LED speed display and DRO depth readout. It’s well suited for hobbyists who need a large table and decent power without a commercial price tag.
First impressions
When I set this WEN mill up, I appreciated the extra table real estate and the R8 taper; it accepts a wide range of tooling which increases versatility. The 11-amp motor provides healthy torque for drilling and end-milling operations, and the variable speed control makes it easy to match cutting speeds to materials.
Features I used most
Those features made it easy to machine larger workpieces and change tooling quickly. The onboard DRO for spindle travel is handy for Z-axis depth control, especially when repeating pockets or drilling multiple holes to the same depth.
Real-world performance and caveats
Performance is solid for hobbyists and light production, but the mill won’t replace a hardened industrial machine for heavy hogging or continuous multi-shift use. Some buyers report cosmetic shipping damage — I recommend careful unpacking and a thorough tramming check before heavy use.
Who this is for
Final Thoughts
I'm calling two clear winners from this group. If you want the absolute top-tier build and long-term accuracy, buy the South Bend 10" x 54" EVS Mill with DRO. It’s engineered for consistent, shop-grade precision with hardened components and modern drive electronics — ideal for toolrooms, fixture work, and anyone doing long, demanding jobs where repeatability and low wear matter (expect to pay a premium for that reliability).
If your shop runs larger production parts and needs heavy-duty throughput with repeatable results, get the JET 12" x 54" Variable Speed Mill. It pairs Meehanite castings, a premium DRO, and powerfeed options that make long production runs faster and more consistent — perfect for small job shops and production floors handling big or frequent setups.
I loved the practical setup tips in the article. Short story: bought the JET JMD-15 after reading the review and it cut my setup time in half. The digital readout is so handy.
One tiny complaint: the manual could be clearer about lubrication points. But overall happy.
Thanks Michelle — glad the JMD-15 worked out. I’ll follow up with the manufacturer notes on lubrication in the article’s comments section soon.
Longer post because I know others will appreciate the nitty-gritty:
I started with a WEN 33075T as a weekend project mill and eventually moved to a PM-25MV when I got more serious. The WEN is fine for wood and soft aluminum, but if you want to do hardened steels or precision fits, youll need something stouter.
The PM-25MV’s 3-axis DRO was a game changer for my small shop — I could actually dial in centerlines and repeat cuts without guesswork.
That said, anyone else find the benchtop INTBUYING surprisingly accurate for the price? I used it for jigs and it held up better than expected.
Would not recommend the WEN as your final upgrade, but as a starter its awesome.
Nice rundown Alicia. I also started with a WEN and upgraded — the difference in rigidity is night and day. Which PM-25MV accessories did you add?
Curious — did you ever try to retrofit a DRO to the WEN before upgrading? Thinking about squeezing more life out of mine.
Yes — cheap magnetic or scale DROs can be retrofitted, but the results are limited by the machine’s mechanical slop. Works for layout and rough positioning, not for true precision work.
I added a set of ER32 collets, an enclosure for chip control, and a better vise. Also mounted it on a welded stand which reduced vibration a lot.
Good points from Alicia. Retrofitting can help with repeatability but won’t fix loose gib settings or spindle play. If you need true precision, invest in a stiffer platform with a factory DRO like the PM-25MV or any of the Newall-equipped JET models.
Anyone used the JTM-1254RVS for production runs? The article calls it best for shop-floor production — does it hold up after weeks of 8-hour shifts?
I ran it in a simulated production scenario (lots of identical pockets and facing) and it handled long cycles very well — the castings and spindle cooling are designed for continuous duty. Keep an eye on lubrication and use a powerfeed for extended runs to reduce operator variability.
I liked the author’s point about ER collet availability — anyone tried using R8 to ER32 adapters on the South Bend? Any compromise in concentricity?
Adapters add a tiny amount of runout, but if you buy a quality adapter and balance the tooling, it’s negligible for most work.
Correct — a quality ER adapter will introduce a small amount of runout. For high-precision work, using the correct spindle taper or a direct collet system is preferable.
Not much to add except: if you’re a weekend hobbyist, WEN 33075T or INTBUYING will get you a lot done for the cash. If you’re making parts that go into products or sell, invest in JET or South Bend.
Great roundup — thanks for testing the DRO-equipped mills. I own a JET JTM-2 (the 2 HP X-axis powerfeed version) and can confirm the powerfeed on X really makes repetitive pocketing a breeze. Curious if you noticed any backlash differences between the Newall DRO on the JETs vs the South Bend encoder?
Also, did you test spindle runout on the SB1028F? I’m considering upgrading but worried about collet options.
Good to know — I’ll look into ER adapters. Thanks both!
Thanks Sarah — glad the JET works well for you. In my tests, the South Bend’s encoder/DRO pairing felt slightly more solid overall; the SB1028F had very low runout out of the box (within a couple thousandths) and accepts R8 tooling with optional collet upgrades. The Newall DRO is excellent for repeatability; backlash is more a matter of leadscrew and gib adjustment than the readout itself.
I second the concern about collets — South Bend machines often ship with MT/RT options. If you want ER collets, budget for the adapter.
Here’s a small rant + tip:
I tried a cheap DRO retrofit kit on an older benchtop and it was maddening because the scale didn’t sit flat and the carriage would snag on chips. Spent more time fixing that than I’d saved.
Tip: if you retrofit, make a sealed cover and check mounting tolerances before you spend money on the DRO itself.
Also consider magnetic chips — a brush or scraper on the cover can help keep scales clear.
Thanks all — agreed on the dial indicator check. Saved my sanity.
Good actionable tip, Brian. Mechanical alignment and chip protection matter more than the DRO brand when retrofitting.
Ouch, been there. A simple way to check alignment is using a cheap dial indicator first — much cheaper to fix mechanical issues before the DRO goes on.
I loved the comparison of the PM-25MV to the bigger JET/South Bend machines. For anyone choosing between PM-25MV and the INTBUYING benchtop: PM-25MV wins for motor and build, INTBUYING wins for price.
Also, FYI — power requirements differ: check single vs 3-phase or dual-voltage options before purchase. I fried a starter once by assuming 240V was fine when my shop was only wired for 120V 😅
Good reminder, Priya. Always verify voltage and phase. Many of the JET machines have 115/230V single-phase options, but the larger 3-phase setups need the right wiring or a phase converter.
Ouch — glad it was just the starter. I use a portable phase converter for my older 3-phase mill; not ideal but it works for low duty.
Anyone recommend electricians who understand machine tool wiring? I’m hunting for someone local in Philly.
Portable converters are a great stopgap. If you go heavy production, invest in proper 3-phase.
I chuckled at the “surprisingly capable” tag for the INTBUYING. I built jigs and small fixtures on one — it’s an absolute value machine if you accept its limits.
Questions to others:
– Has anyone measured positional repeatability over 0.5″ moves on INTBUYING? I got about 0.003″ on average after warm-up.
– How does that compare to the PM-25MV out of the box?
Your numbers align with my tests. INTBUYING hovered around a few thousandths for short moves; PM-25MV and the Newall-equipped JETs were routinely under 1-2 thousandths with proper setup.
Thanks everyone — that settles my expectations. I’ll use the INTBUYING for jigs and save up for a PM-25MV for precision parts.
Good plan. Use the benchtop for shop tasks and get a mid-size mill when you need tighter tolerances.
I measured PM-25MV at around 0.0015″ repeatability after careful adjustment. Not lab-grade, but good for serious hobby projects.
0.003″ is great for a benchtop mill. For most fixtures it’s acceptable.
Final thought — the article did a solid job comparing the lineup. A few laughs, some hard numbers, and real-world feel.
A few things I personally care about that I didn’t see much on: vibration/noise levels and ease of replacing the DRO if it fails. Anyone have quick notes on warranty/support for the Newall DROs on the JETs vs the South Bend electronics?
If DRO dies, you can usually limp with an indicator for a while — but backup plans are good. Buy the spare scale if you rely on uptime.
One more: for production shops, consider a service contract if uptime is critical.
Thanks Zachary. Vibration/noise: heavier castings (South Bend, JET 1254RVS) damp vibration best. Benchtops are noisier under heavy load. Warranty/support: Newall has solid international support and replacement parts; South Bend’s electronics are well-supported via their dealer network. Always check local dealer warranty terms before purchase.
Noise: I fitted extra dampening pads under my PM-25MV stand and it helped. For DRO replacement, both are straightforward with dealer parts.
Good tips — I’ll budget for spare parts.
I noticed the expert rating differences — 9.8 for South Bend vs 9.4 for the big JET. Do those decimals really matter to a small shop owner deciding between the two? Anyone pick one over the other for a machine shop with varied work?
For me it came down to service network and spare parts — check local dealer support before you buy.
Ratings are shorthand for strengths: South Bend edged out for build quality and long-term reliability; the JET is exceptional for heavy production and features. For varied shop work, consider workflow: choose South Bend for precision heavy-duty bench ops, JET for long-run production — both are solid investments.
Does anyone have experience powerfeeding the INTBUYING or the JET JMD-15? Looking to do some long slotting operations and worried about chatter.
I used the JMD-15 with low feed rates and it was ok for light steel; for long slotting I’d prefer the JET vertical mills with actual powerfeeds. INTBUYING is more hobby-level.
For long slotting, consistent chip load and proper fixturing matter more than the presence of a powerfeed. The JET models with Newall DRO and powerfeeds are designed for repeatable long feeds; the INTBUYING can do it for light cuts but expect more deflection and potential chatter.
I appreciated the head-to-head notes on the South Bend SB1028F and the Jet Tools JTM-1254RVS. Two quick observations from my bench:
1) The SB1028F felt smoother when threading and doing fine feeds. The electronics are obviously higher quality.
2) The Jet was a beast for heavy facing and long runs but needed more setup time.
Both solid buys depending on whether you want shop-grade accuracy vs. heavy production capability.
Quick question: how difficult is it to maintain the DRO scales (dust/chips) on the benchtop mills like the WEN vs the INTBUYING? Are sealed scales worth the extra cost?
Sealed scales or glass/grating scales with proper covers are definitely worth it if you run lots of chips/fluids. The WEN has a simpler, less robust DRO — keep chip guards and wipe down regularly. INTBUYING’s grating DRO is better protected but still needs care.
Loved the humor in the article (“DRO: Doctor Recommended for OCD machinists” 😂). On a serious note, the Newall NMS800 looks tempting on the JET verticals — anyone used both NMS800 and Newall DP700 and can compare?
Thanks! The DP700 is very user-friendly and compact, great for shop-floor JETs, while the NMS800 has a few more advanced functions and a different UI that some prefer for multi-axis setups.
Perfect — that helps. Might go DP700 for my limited bench space.
I used DP700 on a knee mill and NMS800 on a larger vertical. DP700 is more compact and has great resolution; NMS800 feels more industrial with extra features for production workflows.