Conventional Milling Machines for Metalworking
A conventional milling machine is controlled manually by the operator and removes material from a clamped workpiece with a rotating tool. This produces flat surfaces, slots, pockets, contours and holes. The operator guides the tool with handwheels and mechanical feed, not from a program. That makes the machine flexible for single parts, repairs and training. KNUTH offers a broad range of conventional milling machines, from the compact toolroom mill to the heavy bed mill.
Types of Conventional Milling Machine at KNUTH
Which design suits you depends on workpiece size, the task and the operator. KNUTH covers these types:
- Universal milling machines: With horizontal and vertical milling spindles and a swivelling milling head, they cover a wide range without lengthy resetting. The versatile solution for workshop and production, for example the VHF and UWF series.
- Knee-type milling machines: The table and knee move vertically and lengthwise on a rigid column. A proven, easily accessible design for universal milling work.
- Toolroom milling machines: Compact machines with a swivelling milling head and an infinitely variable spindle drive, ideal for toolmaking, mould making and fine work, for example the FPK series.
- Bed milling machines: With a fixed machine bed and high rigidity for the heavy-duty machining of large workpieces, for example the KB series.
- Boring-milling machines: They combine boring and milling in one machine and suit workshop, repair and maintenance work.
Construction and How It Works
A conventional milling machine consists of a milling spindle, a clamping table and at least three travel axes in X, Y and Z. The spindle holds end mills, face mills or drills and drives the tool. The operator moves the table with handwheels or engages the automatic feed, which runs through a motor with an adjustable speed. Optional accessories such as dividing heads extend the range, for example for producing gears. In conventional milling, the operator's experience determines the quality, as feed and infeed are set by hand.
Applications and Areas of Use
Conventional milling machines are the backbone of many workshops and production departments. They show their strengths where flexibility matters more than high volume:
- Repair and maintenance: Quick reworking and adjustment of individual components in repair workshops.
- Toolmaking and mould making: Precise single parts and fixtures without elaborate programming.
- Single parts and small batches: Economical when jobs change often.
- Model making and prototypes: Direct work on the workpiece.
- Training: Teaching the fundamentals of metal cutting in the training workshop.
Conventional Milling Machines in Training
In training, conventional milling machines are the standard starting point. Manual operation builds a solid understanding of the milling process before the step to CNC follows. Apprentices learn feed, speed and infeed directly on the workpiece. On request, KNUTH equips complete training workshops from a single source, across milling, turning, drilling and sawing, with training options for your team.
Conventional or CNC Milling Machine
For repairs, prototypes, single parts and training, a conventional milling machine offers the greatest flexibility at the lowest entry cost. For higher batch sizes, complex contours and consistent precision, a CNC milling machine is the better fit. Many operations use both in parallel. You will find an overview of the full range on the milling machines page. For large boring and milling tasks, take a look at the conventional milling and boring machines.
What to Look for When Buying
A few key figures decide whether a conventional milling machine suits your work:
- Travels X, Y and Z: They determine the maximum workpiece size and the usable working area.
- Table size and table load: They have to match your workpieces and clamping equipment.
- Spindle speed and drive power: Hard materials and large tools need more power.
- Spindle taper: Decisive for the usable tools, with heavy machines using an ISO 50 taper.
- Feed: Hand feed for full control, automatic feed for consistent surfaces.
The KNUTH product pages list these values for each model, so you can match a machine to your tolerances and your floor space before you request a quote.
Why KNUTH
KNUTH has been supplying machine tools to metalworkers worldwide since 1923. Our conventional milling machines are built for daily use, with a focus on durable reliability, easy maintenance and consistent performance. Every machine is quality-tested in Germany to ISO 9001 and shipped CE-compliant. That gives you European quality and conformity without the European price. At our Wasbek headquarters we keep around 1,000 machines permanently in stock, so many models are available at short notice.
Comprehensive Service: Commissioning, Training, Repair
We support you with the installation and commissioning of your new milling machine and train your team on operation. Our technical support and repair service covers every machine category in the KNUTH range. Our well-stocked spare parts warehouse supplies most components quickly, including for older machines. You will find details on installation and commissioning and on the repair service on the service pages.
Request a Conventional Milling Machine from KNUTH
Are you looking for a reliable conventional milling machine for metalworking? KNUTH covers the range from the toolroom mill through the universal milling machine to the heavy bed mill, and many models are available at short notice. Request a no-obligation quote on any product page or contact our team. We will help you find the right machine for your operation.
Further Machine Categories at a Glance
Here you will find an overview of our range of machines. Select a category to learn more about individual machines and their technical specifications.