Hi Paul,
Yea, without a mill, drilling my oil distribution plate would be a challenge.
I do like what you came up with better than what Mark did (sorry Mark).
I hear ya on the 833. It's unfortunate that PM doesn't offer a decent alternative to power that mill. I know of one user here who bought the geared-head version and is converting it to 3-phase with VFD. You might check in with
ahazi - I'm not current on where he is in the process, but he was doing the research on a 3-phase motor that would fit that mill. The 833 looks like a nice platform for a CNC conversion. As a manual mill, I wouldn't want that mill in either the T or TV form because there is no power downfeed.
I'm pondering the move to CNC mill myself, and still on the fence about direction to go. I think I have the requisite skills, time and equipment to do a conversion, but I don't like the options available for control software (Mach whatever or Linux CNC). I spent some time on a Tormach and Path Pilot is truly superior in every regard, so I might end up with an 1100MX - we'll see. I've also been on the list as a potential beta tester for the new Vulcan mill, but so far haven't cleared the hurdle to be accepted.
I will say this however: if I were doing a conversion, I would not choose to use the 935 as the platform. My thinking is as follows. The J-head is not an ideal choice for spindle on CNC - way too complex and clunky, and although you could probably add CNC control to the quill, the mechanism inside that head to drive the quill up/down is not very robust and is pretty sloppy. I suppose you could drive the knee up/down for Z-axis control, but wow - that's a lot of mass to be moving about, and the conversion of the knee elevation to ball screw looks like a ton of work. Additionally, putting a spindle out on the end of that RAM has serious drawbacks in terms of rigidity. So by the time you stripped the 935 down to the components for a CNC mill, you're basically left with some castings and a less than ideal setup with a new spindle on a RAM that's never going to move, on a turret that's never going to rotate, and lots of complexity with the knee elevation.
So when I think about doing a CNC conversion, even though I already have a 935, my thoughts drift to some other platform for the base mill. Looking at the options in the PM line, the 940 looks to me to be the best choice for the mill platform. It would certainly have more rigidity than the 935 since the turret and ram would be eliminated. And the Z-axis conversion is more straight forward. The 833 would be another contender, but you're paying a lot extra for stuff you're going to scrap in the process of the conversion - I'm assuming I'd use a proper CNC spindle, not the head on the 833 -
watch this video. Also
watch this video. I've been meaning to call Matt and see if it's possible to buy just the castings and table from a 940 as a CNC starter kit - almost everything else on that mill would get tossed in the conversion anyway. But you need a mill to do a CNC conversion of another mill, unless you buy some kind of turn-key retrofit kit. There's my two cents on the topic.