Grizzly H7827 Drill Press Table

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  • Grizzly H7827 Drill Press Table

    When looking to add a woodworking friendly table to a drill press, I discovered the Grizzly H7827 Drill Press Table, which cost less than I could build it for. So far it has been worth it.

    My particular table was one that I purchased used from a fellow BT3Central member, as he had interference issues with the fence and his elevation controls. And upon initial setup of the table, I did experience the same problem. But with proper centering of the table, the fence lock down knobs do not interfere with the control levers even with the table at full elevation. At any height I would actually use with a bit, and stock I would be willing to drill, there is at a minimum 1" of clearance.

    I am not sure what there is to say about the table. It is a basic laminated melamine board for all intents and purposes, with a routed pocket for the 3-15/16" square replaceable sacrificial insert. The insert is a mere 1/4". The T slots on the table itself are secured aluminum, and are well attched, there are hold downs and studs on the bottom to fix the table a wide variety of drill press iron tables.

    The fence adjustment T slots and adjustment knobs are spaced a little on the narrow side, and the fence is relatively tall at 3" with may of its competitors using a 1.5" to 2" fence, so elevation lever interference can be an issue at extreme elevation of the table. I have not found this to be a problem though.

    The table itself is banded by a rubber T strip, and is well finished. The fence on the other hand has the visual quality of being simply cut, routed, drilled and dropped in the box. A horizontal T-slot is routed into the face of the fence in lieu of a proper aluminum T slot. And the stop block is almost laughingly straight forward. Simply a block of MDF cut to size, and through drilled to accept the T bolt and knob. I know this is a cheap table / fence setup, but somehow I expected better from Grizzly.

    After comparing the H7827 to the Harbor Freight 96395, it is readily apparent that the Grizzly has a larger table area, and better fit and finish. The HF appears to be a simply downsized copy of the Grizzly.

    While I feel overjoyed at the price I got mine for, and would have been happy with the cost new, and without a doubt the fit and finish made this far and away the winning choice over the HF model, if it were to creep closer to the $50.00 mark, it wouldn't have made financial sense to buy this pre made, and honestly, this could have been shop built with better features. But would have cost more...

    For what it is, and what it cost, it is a great table, and a great value. I expect years of service out of this table. BUT... this is NOT a fancy DP table, and was not meant to be. This table was meant to be a simple, effective unit, that didn't cost a lot, and it excels at what it was made for. The fact that it cost less to buy than build meant for me that I could spend more time, and funds in the shop, doing other projects, and it got me to speed with the DP faster than building a shop made unit...

    • LCHIEN
      #1
      LCHIEN commented
      Editing a comment
      as the former owner of that specific table Dave reviewed, I can add a couple of comments.

      One the right side T-track is positioned so that if the table is pretty much square the track is right under the quill elevation handle. This is compounded by the fact that the knobs for locking the fence to the T-track are on top of the tallish fence instead of behind as they are on many fences. This gives you a good chance of having the knob and fence interfere with the elevation handles - depends on your DP and throw. FOR MY drill press, I found a low profile fence from Woodpecker to be my salvation (also larger and more flexible).

      Its been a while but I also had to modify a couple of things to make this particular DP work:
      The stop block had issues, it did not reach the table so I had to drill out the hole a bit to allow it to sit lower and flat on the table (and square to the end it stopped) and still be locked down.
      I also had to drill out the end of one of the knobs - i think it was the stop block too, the knob was a closed end and the t-bolt bottomed out in the knob before locking to the fence.
      I also found the table a bit small for my 15" DP.
      I also like a Notch in the middle of the fence (if its a tall one) to allow the chuck to descend for drilling small offset holes next to the fence with shorter (usually small diameter) drill bits.
      Because of the above, I always found myself stacking up 1.5 to 2" of supports for my workpieces, on top of the table to get the workpiece close to the top of the fence. This sort of defeats the purpose of having a table.

      I'm not saying the DP table won't work for you but its not totally without faults. I just corrected a couple of them before selling it to Dave...

      This DP table kit also appears identical to the one sold at MLCSWoodworking.com for about $54.
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