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THIEL No. 58 Universal Precision Miller
- and the "EHJ-58" & Sentinel copies -

Thiel No. 58 Page 2   Thiel No. 158   Thiel 162

A Manual is available for the Thiel 58 (only in German) together with the only two known English-language catalogues
Literature for other Thiel machines can be found here 


Gerbruder Thiel GmbH was based, originally, in Ruhla a small town in the Thüringen area of Germany and began as makers of pocket, wrist and toy watches and general metal products. The development of their famous machine tools began in the early 1900s, the initial aim being simply to supply their own factory with more efficient methods of production. Although the new products included a series of unique and long-lived filing and sawing machines, together with a specially developed metal cutting bandsaw, it was for their range of superb, very high quality universal millers that they were to become best known. The earliest such type, built in 1906, was intended for the manufacture of punches but by 1914 had developed into the much more useful and ingenious "Duplex" (the term indicating that the cutter spindle could be arranged anywhere from vertical to horizontal and the machine used for a variety of tasks). However, Thiel were not the only makers of such a model and in the United States Van Norman manufactured their own uncannily similar type, also called a "Duplex" (shown right, below the Thiel Duplex). Van Norman were handled in Germany by the well-known agents Schuchardt & Schütte, numerous examples appearing in their catalogues from 1899 to 1914. Hence, Thiel would have had the chance to see early examples of the type and either copied it, or were inspired by the design to make their own version. Others examples have been found badged "EHJ-58" (for E.J.Jones once a very well known London dealer in high-class machinery) and also for Jones  as the "Sentinel" by a company in Shrewsbury. In addition, from the late 1800s onwards, America had taken the world lead in both outright production numbers and innovation in the machine-tool field - surely further circumstantial evidence that the German design sprang from an American drawing board.
By the early 1930s the very fine "Duplex 58" was in production - in which form the arrangement of its various components and controls provided such versatility that the success of the type was finally guaranteed.  At the end of WW2, in 1945, Thüringen fell under Russian control and the works directors, the designers and many workers fled to West Germany where a factory was established at Leinfelden, near Stuttgart, In Ruhla the remaining workers restarted production (with some modifications) of the pre-war Duplex 58 - while in the West a new machine, the 158 was designed and built. It is also reported (but not confirmed) that Junghans, a firm of watch makers in the Black Forest, also built the Duplex 158. After some years the East German factory was renamed "VEB Ruhla" and a new model, the 59 introduced.
Heavily revised, the Type 158 had increased rigidity, had improved table travels, a wider speed range, built-in motor(s), improved electrical and safety controls, independent drive of spindle and table feeds, fixed dowelled positions for attachments and tables and hardened and ground feed screws. However, many accessories could be swapped over from the 58, as could collets and other spindle-nose fittings. The final conventional (non NC) Thiel miller made was the 162 - an improved "5-axis" machine that could perform all its tasks without the need to mount alternative tables or accessories.
The success of the "Universal Precision Miller" lay in ability to mount a number of different heads - horizontal, standard vertical, high-speed vertical and slotting - in combination with a variety of tables - plain, plain-tilting and compound swivelling. All the heads could be driven backwards and forwards across the top of the main column, by a handwheel working through reduction gearing, to provide an in-out feed, whilst the tables all bolted to a flat, vertical T-slotted knee equipped with power longitudinal and vertical feeds. By juggling the choice of heads and tables, and utilising other accessories, a skilled technician was seldom defeated in his attempts to produce the most complex of milled and drilled components - and all to a very high standard of accuracy.
Also illustrated on this page is the Model 58, a machine either copied or re-badged in the UK as the "EHJ-58" - "EHJ being the once well-known E.H.Jones Company of Edgeware Road, London. With their showrooms located in a busy area of north London, sandwiched between Hendon aerodrome, the British Museum Newspaper Library, the Frigidaire works and the DeHavilland aircraft company's Gipsy engine works, Jones were famous for their association with high-quality machine tools that were often, but not always of German origin
A slightly smaller 25" x 8.5" table was fitted as standard, this having three power feeds - longitudinally, in traverse and vertically - while power backwards and forwards was also fitted to the head. On some versions of the miller, fitted with a clutch, spindle speeds could be changed, or reversed, without stopping the cutter spindle. The head gearbox had three levers: that at the lower left gave forward - neutral - reverse whilst the other two levers were for speed changes by moving gears within the gearbox. The clutch engaging lever had three positions: left for high range - centre for disengaged - right for low range. Typically, with the LHS gear lever in its the central position, the RHS gear lever to its right-hand position and clutch in low range would give 105 r.p.m.--or 210 r.p.m. in the high-range setting.
A range of accessories was available including a dividing attachment, supplementary horizontal  swivelling table, power down-feed to the spindle, slotting attachment, self-contained high-speed (5000 rpm) vertical head attachment, and the usual range of vices and precision setting and measuring  equipment. The whole machine was remarkably similar to, but much larger than, the much copied Deckel** universal miller - and, because of their unique features and superb quality of construction many examples of both types are still to be found doing  experimental and development work, nowadays often in the hands of highly skilled, self-employed engineers.
After WW2, Thiel was split into two parts with one based in the Allied-controlled Federal Republic of Germany and the other in the communist-controlled German Democratic Republic.
Continued below:


Christian Bauer from Germany was kind enough to contribute the following notes:
Historical Development of the Thiel Company:


1862 Thiel brothers from Ruhla, a town in Thuringia, Germany, founded a metal-goods' factory
1870 the beginning of toy clock production, followed by mass production with approximately 200 employees when steam power replaced water power in the factory
1890/91 introduction of pocket watches
1897 a second factory started in Seebach, another town in Thuringia
1905 the founding of the machine-tool factory ("Central-Werkstatt") that was to make the following products:
filing and sawing machines, milling machines, drill presses, tapping machines, special toolmaker shapers, band saws, screw-production lathes, boring heads and watch-gear cutting machines
1906 first milling machine produced - small machine on the lines of an Aciera F1
1914 second design of miller introduced - floor-standing with tilting horizontal/vertical head but with a conventional knee.
1920 machine tools became the focus of production.
1930 (or 1932 according to some sources) production of the "Thiel Duplex 58" begins with eventual world-wide sales of 30,000
1946 resumption of machine tool manufacture after World War Two
1951 first trade exhibition with "Ruhla" machines in the Federal Republic of Germany ("Ruhla 58")
1969 prototype of the FUW 250 numerical-controlled miller exhibited at the Leipziger spring fair. Demand was so great that only 50% of orders could be met.
1971 a new factory built in Seebach for the production of UFB millers and other machine tools
1976 1050 employees with 1000 machine tools manufactured during the year
1990 start of co-operation with MAHO AG and establishment of the MAHO Seebach GmbH Company. The factory began production on the 3rd October, 1990
1992 takeover of the production of Thiel (FRG) from Emstal, a town near Kassel.
1993 fusion of the DECKEL Company (Munic) with the MAHO Company (Pfronten) to become DECKELMAHO AG
1994 GILDEMEISTER AG (Bielefeld) takes over DECKEL MAHO GmbH
1995 manufacturing moved from factories in Munich and Pfronten to Seebach
A prototype of the new vertical milling machine DMU 50 V is shown at the Machine Tool Fair EMO in
Milan, Italy with, so far, over 180 machines sold.
Since September. 1996 a new "profit-centre" approach to manufacturing has been followed with, in 1997, a consolidation of the product range. At this time the company had 280 employees..

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*Proof of the type's success - the genus Precision Universal Milling Machine - is evident from the number of similar machines made in various countries including:
Austria: Emco Model F3
Belgium: S.A.B.C.A. Model JRC-2
Czechoslovakia: TOS FN Models
England: Alexander "Master Toolmaker" and the Ajax "00", an import of uncertain origin.
Germany:Hahn & Kolb with their pre-WW2 Variomat model
Wilhelm Grupp Universal- Fräsmaschine Type UF 20 N/120
Hermle Models UWF-700 and UWF-700-PH
Leinen Super Precision Micro Mill
Macmon Models M-100 & M-200 (though these were actually manufactured by Prvomajska); Maho (many models over several decades)
Ruhla
Rumag Models RW-416 and RW-416-VG
SHW (Schwabische Huttenwerke) Models UF1, UF2 and UF3
Thiel Models 58, 158 and 159
Wemas Type WMS
Italy: C.B.Ferrari Models M1R & M2R
Bandini Model FA-1/CB and badged as Fragola (agents, who also sold a version of the Spanish Meteba).
Japan: Riken Models RTM2 and RTM3
Poland: "Avia" and "Polamco" Models FNC25, FND-25 and FND-32 by Fabryka Obrabiarek Precyzyinych
Russia: "Stankoimport 676"
Spain: Metba Models MB-0, MB-1, MB-2, MB-3 and MB-4
Switzerland: Aciera Models F1, F2, F3, F4 and F5
Christen and Perrin Types U-O and U-1 (Perrin Frères SA, Moutier)
Hispano-Suiza S.A. Model HSS-143
Mikron Models WF2/3S, WF3S, WF-3-DCM & WF-2/3-DCM
Perrin Type U-1
Schaublin Model 13
The former Yugoslavia: Prvomajska (in Zagreb with Models ALG-100 and ALG200)
Sinn Models MS2D & MS4D
"Comet" Model X8130, imported to the UK in the 1970s by TI Comet.
Sloane & Chace in the USA produced a miniature bench version and at least five Chinese-built models have also been made, including one from the Beijing Instrument Machine Tool Works. A number of the "clones" merely followed the general Thiel/Maho/Deckel concept while others, like Bandini and Christen, borrowed heavily from Deckel and even had parts that were interchangeable. Should you come across any of these makes and models all will provide "The Deckel Experience" - though you must bear in mind that spares are unlikely to be available and, being complex, finely-made mechanisms, they can be difficult, time-consuming and expensive to repair..


Thiel Universal Miller No. 58 with a swivelling, tilting and inclinable table and standard vertical head. This model was to be superseded by the Type 158

Thiel 58 carrying badges proclaiming E.H.J 58. Whether this was built in Britain, as claimed by the seller, is not known. However, having regard to the complexity of the machine, it's likely selling price and estimated demand, it seems unlikely. E.H.Jones Company of Edgeware Road, London, had showrooms located in a busy area of north London, sandwiched between Hendon aerodrome, the British Museum Newspaper Library, the Frigidaire works and the DeHavilland aircraft company's Gipsy engine works, Jones were famous for their association with high-quality machine tools that were often, but not always of German origin


1914 - the first Duplex model

Circa 1900-1914 Van Norman "Duplex" milling machine

1906 Thiel intended for
the manufacture of punches

Thiel No. 58 Page 2   Thiel No. 158

THIEL No. 58 Universal
Precision Miller
- and the "EHJ-58" & Sentinel copies -

A Manual is available for the Thiel 58 (only in German) together with the
only two known English-language catalogues Literature
for other Thiel machines can be found here 


E-Mail Tony@lathes.co.uk 
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