Add Date: 2026/6/30 Views: 1
Keywords: # Creative Woodworking Course, # Primary and Secondary School Labor Skills Course, # Woodworking Education Equipment, # Woodworking Student Machine Tool, # Woodworking Creative Course
On primary and secondary school campuses and in communities, an increasing number of makerspaces are becoming the first window through which young people can touch the world of engineering.
Gone are the rigid boundaries of traditional classrooms; in their place are open workbenches filled with tools, small-scale processing equipment ready to start at any moment, and groups of young people driven by curiosity to turn their ideas into physical objects.
As a hands-on creative platform for the general public, the core value of a makerspace has never been about stacking expensive professional equipment. Instead, it lies in creating low-barrier, highly safe fabrication scenarios for learners of all levels, so that engineering enlightenment no longer remains confined to textbook formulas and schematic diagrams.
In the practical areas of metalworking and precision manufacturing, ordinary hand tools often fall short, while traditional industrial large-scale machine tools present high entry barriers and significant risks. Student-safe machine tools specifically designed for teaching scenarios fill this gap perfectly.
Unlike large production equipment found in factories, these teaching and makerspace machine tools—designed specifically for campus environments—place safety as their top priority from the very beginning. Most of these devices are compact in size and operate on standard 220V household power, allowing multiple workstations to be set up in ordinary classrooms without complex infrastructure modifications.
Professional Kit (8-in-3) (W500MA)

Features:
The professional kit can be assembled into 8 different types of machine tools (metal sawing machine, metal turning/lathe, metal turning/centre lathe, metal milling machine, metal drilling machine, metal grinding machine, metal hand-held machine tool, and metal indexing drilling machine), with any 3 functions available for simultaneous use. The machines are small in size, occupy little space, and are easy to assemble and disassemble. Installation does not harm hands, and there are no gender or age restrictions—they can be operated and used for model-making by anyone from children over 8 years old to healthy seniors over 70. The kit comes with detailed product instructions, model-making tutorials, protective goggles, aprons, etc., for convenient and safe use. The sawing machine features a special safety buffer design that is safe and will not cut hands; even if skin comes into contact with the blade during operation, it will only cause slight vibration and will not injure the hand, making it safe to entrust to students.
Technical Parameters:
All mechanical parts are metal components, including the belt cover; Voltage/Power: 100V–240V, 24W (36W and 60W optional); Motor speed: 20,000 r/min ±15%; Spindle speed: 3,000 r/min ±15%; Saw blade stroke: 4 mm; Max. machining diameter: 50 mm; Large slide stroke: 45 mm; Small slide stroke: 35 mm
Application Scope:
Youth activity centres, school general technology rooms, metalworking and woodworking rooms, makerspaces, science and technology activity rooms, and personal DIY projects.
Safe and reliable student-safe machine tools, thoughtfully designed teaching machine tools, and feature-rich makerspace machine tools are no longer distant industrial equipment—they have become "teaching aids" for engineering enlightenment. They integrate rigorous mechanical logic and dedicated craftsmanship into every feed pass and every dimensional measurement, allowing young creators to truly grasp the gateway to the intelligent manufacturing era as they turn their ideas into reality.
From a curious first attempt in a makerspace to completing their first independently machined metal piece in a practice base, the essence of engineering enlightenment is to help young people build respect for and understanding of "manufacturing" through hands-on experience.
Welcome to our video link:
YouTube: Xendoll
Facebook: Xendoll
WEB:www.xendolltools.com