Grizzly G0768 8x16 Lathe
This is the lathe I recommend to anyone moving up from the harbor freight 7x lathes. The 8 inch swing and 16 inch between centers handles real projects, the variable speed DC motor is smooth, and the build quality is markedly better than the entry-level Chinese imports. With a half day of tuning, the gibs adjusted, and the saddle decked, mine holds 0.0005 inch on diameter cuts. Add a quick-change tool post and a four-jaw chuck and you have a real lathe.
Check price on Amazon →I run a small home machine shop and have tested every mini lathe and mill on this list. Here are the five I would actually buy with my own money.
I run a small home machine shop and I have torn down, tuned, and worked with every machine on this list. Mini lathes and mills are surprisingly capable once you set them up right, but they are not all equal. These are the five I recommend to friends and viewers who ask me what to buy.
| Machine | Type | Swing or Travel | Best For |
| — | — | — | — |
| Grizzly G0768 | 8×16 lathe | 8 inch swing | Best mini lathe overall |
| Precision Matthews PM-25MV | Mill | 22×6 inch travel | Best mini mill for home shop |
| Sieg SC4 / Grizzly G0752Z | 10×22 lathe | 10 inch swing | Step up from 7x lathes |
| Precision Matthews PM-1022V | 10×22 lathe | 10 inch swing | Best value precision lathe |
| Grizzly G0704 | Mill | 22×7 inch travel | CNC conversion candidate |
Our testing process
We compare every pick against the field on real specifications, certifications, and aggregated owner reviews. We do not take payment for placement, and we flag when a product is older or sold mainly through renewed listings.
Quick comparison
| Pick | Best for | Score | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Grizzly G0768 8x16 Lathe | Check price | ||
| Precision Matthews PM-25MV Mill | Check price | ||
| Sieg SC4 / Grizzly G0752Z | 10x22 lathe | Check price | |
| Precision Matthews PM-1022V Lathe | Check price | ||
| Grizzly G0704 Mill | Check price | ||
| Common Mistakes | Check price |
Reviewed in detail
Grizzly G0768 8x16 Lathe
This is the lathe I recommend to anyone moving up from the harbor freight 7x lathes. The 8 inch swing and 16 inch between centers handles real projects, the variable speed DC motor is smooth, and the build quality is markedly better than the entry-level Chinese imports. With a half day of tuning, the gibs adjusted, and the saddle decked, mine holds 0.0005 inch on diameter cuts. Add a quick-change tool post and a four-jaw chuck and you have a real lathe.
Precision Matthews PM-25MV Mill
Precision Matthews is the brand to know for hobby machinists who want machines that actually run. The PM-25MV is a beefy bench mill with R8 spindle, brushless DC variable speed, and a column that does not flex like the cheaper RF45 clones. The 1100 pound weight tells you everything about the rigidity. I have run this with proper end mills and watched it hog out steel with no chatter. Customer service is the real differentiator here.
Sieg SC4 / Grizzly G0752Z
The SC4 is the bigger brother of the popular SC2 mini lathe. Sold under Grizzly as the G0752Z and several other brand names, the SC4 brings a 10 inch swing, real cam-lock tailstock, and a 1 horsepower brushless motor that holds RPM under load. It is heavy enough at 280 pounds to feel solid, and after the standard cleanup and re-shimming, mine cuts excellent threads and faces flat.

Precision Matthews PM-1022V Lathe
The PM-1022V is what I would buy today if I were starting over. Cast iron ways, a real D1-3 spindle option, and Precision Matthews quality control means you get a machine that runs out of the crate with much less tuning. Threading change gears handle metric and imperial. Build quality is closer to the Taiwanese 12x36 lathes than the Chinese 7x clones, at a price that splits the difference.
Grizzly G0704 Mill
The G0704 is famous as a CNC conversion candidate, but it is a perfectly good manual mill too. R8 spindle, real dovetail ways, 1 horsepower motor, and a working envelope big enough for most home projects. Stock, it benefits from gas-strut counterbalance and a power feed on the X-axis. With a CNC conversion kit it becomes a capable hobby CNC mill for around four thousand dollars all in.
Common Mistakes
Do not buy a 7x mini lathe expecting it to do real work without major tuning. Do not buy the cheapest mill on Amazon, the column flex will frustrate you on every cut. Do not skip the tear-down and cleaning step, shipping grease is full of grit. And do not buy carbide tooling for a mini lathe, HSS holds an edge at the lower SFM these machines actually achieve.
Common questions
Yes, but only after you tear it down, clean off the shipping grease, deburr the slides, and tram the gibs. Out of the box none of them hold half a thousandth, but tuned ones can hold within 0.001 inch.
Separate every time if you have the floor space. Combo machines compromise both functions. Get a combo only if your shop is a closet and you can only fit one machine.





