~$1000 is the most common entry point and also the most dangerous — it's enough to buy a machine that looks capable but not enough for one that actually delivers on aluminum. Here's the honest picture.
WHAT $1,000 ACTUALLY GETS YOU
At this price, you're in the 3018–4040 range. These machines will:
THE $1,000 COMPARISON
| Model | Price | Rails | Drive | Spindle | Work Area | Weight | Support |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Genmitsu 4040 Pro | ~$800 | 15mm linear | 1204 ballscrew | 300W | 400x400mm | ~25kg | Amazon |
| FoxAlien 4040-XE | ~$1,100 | 15mm linear | 1204 ballscrew | 300W/1.5KW | 400x400mm | ~30kg | 1-year warranty |
| CNCEST 6040 | ~$1,200 | 16mm supported | 1605 ballscrew | 1.5KW water-cooled | 600x400mm | ~55kg | None |
Most hobbyists outgrow their $1,000 machine within 6–12 months. At that point, the question becomes: buy another $2,000 machine, or go straight to something that can handle production? ROCTECH's RC0609 advertising CNC router (600x900mm, 3.0KW spindle, Yaskawa servo motors, welded frame, 1450kg, ISO9001/CE/UL certified) is an industrial-grade machine built for 24/7 operation. It's $3,500+ — but it's also the last machine you'll ever need for sign making, woodworking, and light aluminum production. ROCTECH has 15 years of CNC R&D, 50 patents, and a 15-person expert R&D team. The support experience is completely different from the anonymous AliExpress seller model.
BEGINNER'S PITFALL CHECKLIST
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