Sorry Jim but I am not familiar with a dozuki. Who makes a drill press with 5 inches or travel?? I would be interested in knowing. Thanks in advance.
A dozuki is a type of Japanese handsaw...it has a very thin blade so it cuts with very little effort, cuts on the pull stroke (due to the very thin blade), and has a back on it to stiffen the blade (like a western-style dovetail saw exempt with a thinner blade and cutting on the pull instead of push stroke).
Mine has very fine teeth so it's easy to get it started and it cuts quickly.
Proper ones are hand made and cost accordingly. Cheap ones work fine for such crude purposes as trimming pen blanks/tubes for much less.
Woodcraft had one on sale a while back but even at full price, they're worth it in my opinion...the blade is replaceable but I haven't bothered and I've cut probably hundreds of pen blanks, tubes, brass rod, etc with mine.
Here's one example (my oldest one came from Japan Woodworker but they're now owned by Woodcraft so I'm posting one of Woodcraft's...no doubt Rockler, Highland Hardware, Garret Wade, etc etc have something comparable):
Buy Shinwa Dozuki 110/7029 Hand Saw "Z" at Woodcraft.com
As for the drill press is the Rikon 20" which has 4 3/4" of quill travel. I caught it on sale for a nice discount then later discovered Harbor Freight has an eerily similar model for a bit less (though I have no idea what, if anything, is different in Harbor Freight's version). Here's a link to the one I have:
Buy Rikon 20" Floor Drill Press, Model 30-240 at Woodcraft.com
I made-do with a Craftsman drill press for about 20 years prior to this one and literally gave away the Craftsman after using the Rikon a few times. Shortly after I bought the Rikon, Powermatic announced a drill press with 6" of quill travel...the price difference wasn't worth trying to exchange the Rikon but if I ever got a new drill press, the PowerMatic would be a serious contender:
Buy Powermatic 18" Drill Press, Model PM2800B at Woodcraft.com
Lowes carries a Porter Cable drill press with 4" of quill travel. That's not enough for some of the styluses and pens I like to make but it's also much cheaper than my Rikon. The Porter Cable at Lowes runs about $330.
I'd love to find a bench top drill press with non-trivial quill travel but nobody seems to make one. So, floor models are what I've used instead.
I've drilled on the lathe but really prefer the drill press.
Tim S.