---
product_id: 48284621
title: "Silverline 350W Bench Drill Press / Pillar Drill 250mm (10\") 230V (262212)"
brand: "silverline"
price: "3708.69 DT"
currency: TND
in_stock: true
reviews_count: 10
category: "Silverline"
url: https://www.desertcart.tn/products/48284621-silverline-350w-bench-drill-press-pillar-drill-250mm-10-230v
store_origin: TN
region: Tunisia
---

# 0-50mm precise drilling depth 5-speed variable belt drive 350W motor power Silverline 350W Bench Drill Press / Pillar Drill 250mm (10") 230V (262212)

**Brand:** silverline
**Price:** 3708.69 DT
**Availability:** ✅ In Stock

## Summary

> 🎯 Drill with precision, power, and style — don’t miss out on the ultimate DIY upgrade!

## Quick Answers

- **What is this?** Silverline 350W Bench Drill Press / Pillar Drill 250mm (10") 230V (262212) by silverline
- **How much does it cost?** 3708.69 DT with free shipping
- **Is it available?** Yes, in stock and ready to ship
- **Where can I buy it?** [www.desertcart.tn](https://www.desertcart.tn/products/48284621-silverline-350w-bench-drill-press-pillar-drill-250mm-10-230v)

## Best For

- silverline enthusiasts

## Why This Product

- Trusted silverline brand quality
- Free international shipping included
- Worldwide delivery with tracking
- 15-day hassle-free returns

## Key Features

- • **Compact Yet Capable:** Lightweight 7.86kg design fits neatly on your bench without sacrificing power or versatility.
- • **Power Meets Control:** Robust 350W motor with 5-speed belt drive lets you tailor speed from delicate woodwork to tougher metals.
- • **Precision at Your Fingertips:** Fixed head and adjustable table deliver unmatched stability and accuracy for flawless holes every time.
- • **Depth Gauge for Perfect Results:** Drill depths up to 50mm with an integrated gauge for consistent, repeatable precision.
- • **Built to Last, Designed to Perform:** Strong cast base and metal construction ensure a solid foundation and durability for your projects.

## Overview

The Silverline 350W Bench Drill Press is a compact, versatile pillar drill designed for accurate hole boring in wood and metal. Featuring a fixed head, adjustable table, and a 5-speed belt drive, it offers precise control with a 13mm chuck and 0-50mm drilling depth gauge. Its sturdy cast base and metal build provide stability, making it ideal for professional DIYers and millennial managers seeking reliable, space-saving power tools for their creative projects.

## Description

Shop Silverline 350W Bench Drill Press / Pillar Drill 250mm (10") 230V (262212). Free delivery on eligible orders of £20 or more.

Review: A good drill once set up. - This is a compact useful small bench drill, with five speeds (by changing the belt over the pulleys). I would note that the milled finish on the table and base are unusually course, a finishing cut on a miller wouldn’t go a miss. The “T” slots on the bed and table hadn’t been finished properly, I had to do that with a round and flat file, also there were a lot of burrs everywhere, they needed tidying up with a file. Once built up and fixed to the bench, the mains lead will plug into a 13A socket, although the plug is an adaptor, which if removed, reveals an European plug on the lead. Our mains supply is 240V 50Hz, the drill works well with that. I can’t comment on duty cycle, I note that it is not for industrial use, so I would assume it is rated for intermittent use only, which is all I shall be using it for. I would not recommend this for precision engineering, because the way the main drilling head fits onto the pole is a bit sloppy, so repeatability when using a jig fixed to the table, will be poor, also I would check all the geometry while setting up if I had to use it for this, for example, for making a part for a model steam engine. For general work like making a replacement part for a “Pop-up” Gazebo, as in the video, it is more than adequate. It was a good price, and delivered on time. I am pleased with it.
Review: Ingenuity Required Here And There - As commented elsewhere, and whilst I could be wrong, this machine looks to be a generic build badged and sold under a number of different company banners. It assembles easily and all the bits were in the box together with adequate instructions so that an average DIY'er will be up and running in less than ten minutes. I wouldn't call the result flimsy but it is quite basic seemingly on the principle that if functions it's fine, there's no finesse on any of the parts but everything does it's job if the user knows what they're doing. If the depth gauge breaks (which it might well do with careless handling) then one can either get out the superglue or find another way (I usually wrap a rubber band around the actual drill at the right level to give a specific depth but I am obviously a sucker for doing things the hard way). The point is that most if not all the support functions (ie depth gauge, angle indicators etc) are just about adequate but probably with a limited lifespan. The core function, spinning a chuck round accurately at varying speeds, is pretty solid and certainly worth the price; it's just that the user might need to use their initiative and experience if and when bits fall off. I bought a Silverline drill vice at the same time and it is annoying that the two aren't made for each other and a bit of ingenuity is needed with the (not supplied) bolting together arrangements; not ideal. The final point I'd make is about the guarantee (not sure why some reviewers didn't claim under the guarantee when the things they experienced happened) which is a healthy three years. Unless used by a professional three years would cover the average DIY'er very well indeed and on such a cheap machine is a good sales feature. I don't know how easy it would be to actually claim but the Silverline web-site looks like it has good access to any service needed. The only confusing thing (to me at least, must be my age) is that the back cover of the instruction manual says that it has a three year guarantee in the top left corner but, on the bottom right, is "Guaranteed Forever" in several languages, which is the usual Silverline guarantee for some other none power tools. Overall a good value item for occasional amateur DIY use but might prove difficult to live with if used and abused by more demanding (and heavy handed) tradesmen

## Features

- Pillar drill /drill press for boring holes in wood or metal where a high degree of accuracy is required
- The fixed head and adjustable table provides superior stability, accuracy, power and speed compared to a hand-held drill
- Strong cast base and machine table provide a firm foundation to work on
- Fixed head does not move or jump, allowing you to create precise cuts and bores
- 5-speed belt drive ensures versatility and control
- 13mm keyed chuck capacity
- Chuck/spindle travel (drilling depth) of 0-50mm with gauge for unparalleled accuracy and precise control of depth, hole position and angle entry into the workpiece

## Technical Specifications

| Specification | Value |
|---------------|-------|
| ASIN | B002QRYEBQ |
| Best Sellers Rank | 106,078 in DIY & Tools ( See Top 100 in DIY & Tools ) 21 in Benchtop Drill Presses |
| Brand | Silverline |
| Colour | Multi |
| Customer Reviews | 4.2 4.2 out of 5 stars (755) |
| Drill Type | Drill Press |
| Drilling Capacity Metal | 13 Millimetres |
| Drilling Capacity Wood | 13 Millimetres |
| EU Spare Part Availability Duration | 1 Years |
| Global Trade Identification Number | 05024763041532 |
| Included Components | 1x Drill Press 350W UK |
| Is Electric | Yes |
| Item Dimensions L x W x H | 2L x 1W x 1H millimetres |
| Item Type Name | Drill Press |
| Item Weight | 17.32 Pounds |
| Manufacturer | Silverline |
| Material | Metal |
| Maximum Chuck Size | 13 Millimeters |
| Maximum Power | 350 Watts |
| Maximum Rotational Speed | 2650 RPM |
| Model Number | 262212 |
| Number of Speeds | 5 |
| Part Number | 262212 |
| Power source | Corded Electric |
| Special Features | Variable Speed |
| Speed | 2650 RPM |
| UPC | 798256206436 002147483647 013523072362 |
| Unit Count | 1.0 count |
| Voltage | 230 Volts |

## Product Details

- **Brand:** Silverline
- **Maximum chuck size:** 13 Millimeters
- **Maximum rotational speed:** 2650 RPM
- **Power source:** Corded Electric
- **Voltage:** 230 Volts

## Images

![Silverline 350W Bench Drill Press / Pillar Drill 250mm (10") 230V (262212) - Image 1](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/71tR3D4gZhL.jpg)

## Available Options

This product comes in different **Style** options.

## Questions & Answers

**Q: Is this drill any good with mild steel and stainless ?**
A: Not really, might be ok for 6 or 7mm holes in thin 2-3mm steel but anything bigger it's no good, not enough power in motor and spindle in my one is not centered which means there is a wobble in the bit which makes drilling holes in steel even harder. My advice would be to spend more on a better one.

**Q: What is the taper on the chuck?, need to buy a good replacement chuck, thanks.**
A: Standard Morse taper, as far as I am aware. Any taper fit chuck should be OK.

**Q: Is it possible to use Mortice Bits with the drill press??**
A: I don't see why not - just make sure you set the speed to the lowest possible.

**Q: How do you adjust the speed**
A: adjust belt to speed

## Customer Reviews

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ A good drill once set up.
*by E***R on 23 July 2023*

This is a compact useful small bench drill, with five speeds (by changing the belt over the pulleys). I would note that the milled finish on the table and base are unusually course, a finishing cut on a miller wouldn’t go a miss. The “T” slots on the bed and table hadn’t been finished properly, I had to do that with a round and flat file, also there were a lot of burrs everywhere, they needed tidying up with a file. Once built up and fixed to the bench, the mains lead will plug into a 13A socket, although the plug is an adaptor, which if removed, reveals an European plug on the lead. Our mains supply is 240V 50Hz, the drill works well with that. I can’t comment on duty cycle, I note that it is not for industrial use, so I would assume it is rated for intermittent use only, which is all I shall be using it for. I would not recommend this for precision engineering, because the way the main drilling head fits onto the pole is a bit sloppy, so repeatability when using a jig fixed to the table, will be poor, also I would check all the geometry while setting up if I had to use it for this, for example, for making a part for a model steam engine. For general work like making a replacement part for a “Pop-up” Gazebo, as in the video, it is more than adequate. It was a good price, and delivered on time. I am pleased with it.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐ Ingenuity Required Here And There
*by R***R on 19 November 2014*

As commented elsewhere, and whilst I could be wrong, this machine looks to be a generic build badged and sold under a number of different company banners. It assembles easily and all the bits were in the box together with adequate instructions so that an average DIY'er will be up and running in less than ten minutes. I wouldn't call the result flimsy but it is quite basic seemingly on the principle that if functions it's fine, there's no finesse on any of the parts but everything does it's job if the user knows what they're doing. If the depth gauge breaks (which it might well do with careless handling) then one can either get out the superglue or find another way (I usually wrap a rubber band around the actual drill at the right level to give a specific depth but I am obviously a sucker for doing things the hard way). The point is that most if not all the support functions (ie depth gauge, angle indicators etc) are just about adequate but probably with a limited lifespan. The core function, spinning a chuck round accurately at varying speeds, is pretty solid and certainly worth the price; it's just that the user might need to use their initiative and experience if and when bits fall off. I bought a Silverline drill vice at the same time and it is annoying that the two aren't made for each other and a bit of ingenuity is needed with the (not supplied) bolting together arrangements; not ideal. The final point I'd make is about the guarantee (not sure why some reviewers didn't claim under the guarantee when the things they experienced happened) which is a healthy three years. Unless used by a professional three years would cover the average DIY'er very well indeed and on such a cheap machine is a good sales feature. I don't know how easy it would be to actually claim but the Silverline web-site looks like it has good access to any service needed. The only confusing thing (to me at least, must be my age) is that the back cover of the instruction manual says that it has a three year guarantee in the top left corner but, on the bottom right, is "Guaranteed Forever" in several languages, which is the usual Silverline guarantee for some other none power tools. Overall a good value item for occasional amateur DIY use but might prove difficult to live with if used and abused by more demanding (and heavy handed) tradesmen

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ no play means accurate holes
*by L***R on 3 August 2015*

I was told by a wise old machinist that the most important thing about a drill press is that there is almost no lateral movement in the chuck, because if there is, it wont drill straight holes. I was concerned that this 'value' item would not have been built well enough, but certainly My version of this has no play, and for that reason alone I would say this is a good drill and, given the price, I think it deserves five stars... I was also told by the same machinist to always use 'centre drills' to start the hole, and when I need an accurate hole this is what I do. Interestingly if you look around on the internet you can find this drill with at least three different manufacturers names on it. Most cost more than the Silverline - because you pay for the brand. Mine is a Silverline! I have had it for about six months and when accurate drilling is required - I use a centre drill, sharp drill bits, and hold the work piece firmly - and i have found I can drill very accurate holes in steel, brass, copper and aluminium. I agree with other reviews about noise, vibration and hassle of changing speed - and I would also add that the depth 'stop' is just two nuts on a threaded bar that tend to loosen themselves off.. which is a tad annoying- but I would have had to pay three to four times the price to see a significant jump in quality.

## Frequently Bought Together

- Silverline 350W Bench Drill Press / Pillar Drill 250mm (10") 230V (262212)
- Silverline Drill Press Vice 100mm (292674), Grey,silver
- Silverline Soft Vice Jaws 100mm (273221)

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*Product available on Desertcart Tunisia*
*Store origin: TN*
*Last updated: 2026-05-30*