The Drill Press I own was purchased almost 25 years ago by my Dad as a Birthday gift to me. It was sold by MSC (Manhattan Supply Company) and was manufactured in Taiwan. American made Drill Presses are a thing of the past with the exception of a few very very expensive factory production models costing many thousands of dollars. It's a 1/2 HP Floor model ( anchored to the floor - see 4 bolts in picture ) and has 16 speeds ranging from a low of 200 rpm up 3630 rpm (very quiet too). The orange painted magnet is what the current speed is set for so I don't have to look at the belt positions to remember what speed it's on.
It came with a pretty descent Taiwanese chuck ranging from 0 - 5/8" but I replaced it with a much better NOS # 14N Jacobs (USA) Super Chuck also 0 - 5/8". Believe it or not, the run out is only 0.0015" measured with both a Federal and Mitutoyo Dial gauge. That is amazing for ANY DP and almost unheard of from an imported one! Guess I really lucked out.
When I installed the NOS Super Chuck I did put on a NOS American Made Jacobs Arbor that had no scratches and had never been mounted before which probably attributes to the trueness.
I also have a #18N Jacobs Chuck (1/8" - 3/4" range) and a Jacobs #0 which is strictly for very small drills from 0 up to 1/4".
The DP Vise is a Starrett and this set up probably fills 98% of my drilling needs. I also have an extensive bolt down kit I put together over the years which allows fro proper holding of work to be drilled - including uneven and odd shapes - mostly hand made kit but some Starrett pieces too.
The bench model I sold 6 years ago was a Sears Craftsman and quite honestly was a cheap Chinese import that was not worth using for much. It had unacceptable run-out, made a racket and was in one word - horrible - hence it's no longer in my shop.
I don't remember what my Dad paid for theMCS DP 25 years ago but I would
guess somewheres in the $400 $450 range. Even though it was made in Taiwan I consider it a pretty good quality machine especially compared to what is for sale in the stores today. If you can find a Taiwan made machine now (even mildly used) it should be heads and tails above a Chinese made one.
The Drill Sets are from front to back Center Drills, Number, Fractional and Letter.