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What is a Morse taper? MT1 vs MT2 vs MT3 explained

What is a Morse taper? MT1 vs MT2 vs MT3 explained

  • , by Mani Bhushan
  • 24 min reading time

If you have ever ordered a live center, drill chuck, or drill bit and seen the spec "MT2" or "MT3" in the description, you have already encountered the Morse taper system. For many machinists and hobbyists, these designations are confusing — what do the numbers mean, which size fits your machine, and what happens if you try to use the wrong one?

This guide answers all of it. By the end, you will know exactly what a Morse taper is, how MT1, MT2, and MT3 differ, which machines use which size, and how to use adapter sleeves when you need to bridge the gap between sizes.

What Is a Morse Taper?

Three Morse taper shanks MT1 MT2 MT3 lined up on a machinist's steel workbench showing size difference

Morse taper is a standardized self-locking tapered shank system invented by Stephen Morse in 1864 while working as a machinist in New Bedford, Massachusetts. The system was designed to hold twist drills, lathe centers, and other cutting tools securely in machine spindles without requiring bolts, set screws, or clamps.

The core principle is elegant: the tool shank and the machine spindle bore are machined at the same very slight taper angle. When the tool is pushed into the spindle socket, the mating surfaces wedge together so tightly through friction that the tool becomes self-locking it will not pull out under normal cutting loads. A flat "tang" at the end of the shank fits into a corresponding slot, preventing rotation under torque and providing a surface for the drift key to push against during removal.

1864
Stephen Morse patents the taper shank system at Morse Twist Drill and Machine Company, New Bedford, Massachusetts.
Late 1800s
Seven sizes (MT0–MT6) are standardized. The dimensions remain essentially unchanged for the next 160 years.
20th Century
System codified in international standards: DIN 228 (German), ISO 296 (international), and ANSI B5.10 (American). All three define the same physical dimensions an ISO MT3 is identical to a DIN MT3.
Today
Morse taper remains the dominant tool-holding standard on lathes, drill presses, milling machines, and VMCs worldwide, over 160 years after its invention.

Where you will find a Morse taper on your machine:

  • Lathe tailstock bore — holds live centers, dead centers, drill chucks, and boring tools
  • Lathe headstock spindle — on smaller machines, holds centers and faceplates
  • Drill press spindle — holds drill chucks and taper-shank drill bits directly
  • Milling machine spindle — on manual Bridgeport-style mills, holds end mill adapters and collet holders
  • VMC tailstock — holds live centers and steady rests
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How Does a Morse Taper Work? The Self-Locking Principle

Cross-section diagram of Morse taper shank seated in spindle socket showing self-locking taper angle and tang

The Morse taper is not a single uniform angle; each MT size has a slightly different taper ratio. The approximate taper per foot is around 0.600 inches per foot for all sizes (very slight), which translates to a full included angle of roughly 2.86° to 3.0° depending on the size. This angle is intentionally shallow, shallow enough to self-lock through friction, but steep enough that a sharp knock from a drift key can instantly break the friction and release the tool.

💡 Why not use a steeper angle?

A steeper taper (like a Jacobs taper used on drill chucks) does not self-lock under cutting loads; it relies on a threaded drawbar or nut. The Morse taper's shallow angle is the key to its "set it and forget it" clamping. The heavier the cutting load, the more firmly the taper wedges itself in place.

How to seat and eject a Morse taper tool:

  • Seating: Wipe both the tool shank and spindle socket completely clean and dry (oil or chips reduce grip and add runout). Align the tang with the spindle slot and push the tool in firmly with a smooth, quick motion. A proper Morse taper will seat with a satisfying "thud" and resist pulling straight out by hand.
  • Ejecting: Insert a drift key (a flat wedge bar) into the drift slot on the spindle and tap it with a mallet. The drift pushes on the tang, breaking the friction lock and popping the tool out. Never use a screwdriver or chisel; damage to the tang or socket will ruin accuracy.

MT1 vs MT2 vs MT3 — Complete Comparison

The Morse taper system has seven standard sizes: MT0 through MT6. For the vast majority of machinists, woodworkers, and hobbyists in the USA, only MT1, MT2, and MT3 are relevant. Here is a full breakdown:

MT1

Small / Light Duty
Large end dia.0.475 in / 12.07 mm
Small end dia.0.369 in / 9.37 mm
Taper length2.13 in / 54.1 mm
Taper per foot0.5986 in/ft
Benchtop / Light use

MT2

Medium / Most Common
Large end dia.0.700 in / 17.78 mm
Small end dia.0.572 in / 14.53 mm
Taper length2.56 in / 65.0 mm
Taper per foot0.5994 in/ft
Most popular worldwide

MT3

Large / Heavy Duty
Large end dia.0.938 in / 23.83 mm
Small end dia.0.778 in / 19.76 mm
Taper length3.19 in / 81.0 mm
Taper per foot0.6024 in/ft
Industrial / Full-size

Full Specification Comparison Table

 Feature MT1 MT2 (Most Common) MT3
 Large end diameter 0.475" / 12.07 mm 0.700" / 17.78 mm 0.938" / 23.83 mm
 Small end diameter 0.369" / 9.37 mm 0.572" / 14.53 mm 0.778" / 19.76 mm
 Taper length 2.13" / 54 mm 2.56" / 65 mm 3.19" / 81 mm
 Typical lathe size Mini lathe 7×10, 7×12 Mini/mid lathe 7×14, 8×16 Full-size lathe 10"+ swing
 Typical drill press Benchtop hobbyist drill press Mid-range floor drill press Industrial heavy-duty press
 Max drill bit size (direct) Up to ~½" / 12 mm Up to ~¾" / 19 mm Up to ~1¼" / 32 mm
 Best for Light turning, pen turning, small drilling General machining, VMC tailstock, most hobbyists Heavy turning, large workpieces, industrial use
 Live centers, revolving centers Available, light load only Most common — wide selection Heavy-duty live centers
 Common on Small Chinese mini lathes, benchtop drill presses 7×14 mini lathe, most VMCs, Bridgeport mills South Bend, Grizzly G0709, JET lathes
✅ Quick Rule of Thumb

MT2 is the safest default if you are unsure. It is by far the most common size in mini and mid-size lathes sold in the USA, and the widest range of accessories, live centers, drill chucks, boring bars, and dead centers is available in MT2. If your machine manual is lost, measure the tailstock bore: approximately 0.700" / 17.78 mm at the large end = MT2.

Which Machines Use MT1, MT2, and MT3?

Lathe tailstock with MT2 live center inserted showing correct Morse taper seating in machine spindle

MT1 — Small Benchtop Machines

MT1 is found on the smallest machines, typically benchtop hobbyist drill presses, very small mini lathes (7×10 inch), and older light-duty equipment. It handles lighter drilling and turning loads and supports drill bits up to roughly half an inch in diameter. If you own a compact benchtop lathe primarily for pen turning or very small parts, it likely has an MT1 tailstock.

MT2 — The Universal Standard (Most Common in the USA)

MT2 is the workhorse of the Morse taper family. It is the standard on the most popular mini and mid-size lathes sold in the USA, the 7×14, 8×12, 9×20, and similar benchtop lathes from brands like VEVOR, Grizzly, JET, and BestEquip. MT2 is also standard on most VMC tailstocks, Bridgeport-style manual mills, and mid-range floor drill presses. The vast majority of lathe accessories — live centers, revolving centers, and drill chucks are manufactured in MT2 because of its universal adoption.

MT3 — Full-Size and Industrial Machines

MT3 steps up for larger, full-sized lathes with 10-inch or greater swing machines like the South Bend 9/10, Grizzly G0709, and JET GHB-1340A. It handles significantly heavier cutting loads, larger drill bits, and bigger workpieces. Industrial drill presses in machine shops are often MT3 or MT4. If you are turning large-diameter stock or doing heavy boring operations, your machine is likely MT3.

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Morse Taper Adapter Sleeves Using the Wrong Size Taper

Morse taper adapter sleeve MT2 to MT3 next to MT2 drill chuck showing how they connect

What happens when your tool has an MT2 shank but your machine has an MT3 spindle? You use a Morse taper adapter sleeve (also called a reduction sleeve or taper socket). The sleeve has a female MT2 bore on the inside and a male MT3 taper on the outside, bridging the size difference cleanly.

⚠ Never Force a Smaller Taper Into a Larger Socket

An MT2 shank dropped into a bare MT3 socket will rattle, run out badly, and can permanently damage the spindle bore. Always use the correct sleeve; they are inexpensive and widely available.

Common adapter sleeve combinations:

  • MT1 → MT2: Use an MT1 tool (like a small drill chuck) in an MT2 machine
  • MT2 → MT3: Most common use MT2 tooling in an MT3 lathe or drill press
  • MT1 → MT3: Two-step bridging for small tools in large machines
  • MT2 → MT4: For MT2 tooling in heavy industrial MT4 spindles

One sleeve maximum is the professional standard. Stacking two sleeves (MT1→MT2 inside MT2→MT3) adds compounding runout — typically 0.01–0.03 mm per sleeve and reduces rigidity. For precision work, never stack sleeves.

How to remove a sleeve: First, use the drift key through the spindle slot to push out the sleeve with the tool still inside it. Then use a smaller drift key to push the tool out of the sleeve separately. Never try to remove the tool and sleeve as one assembly by levering it damages the tang.

How to Identify Your Machine's Morse Taper Size

  • 1

    Check the machine manual or nameplate

    The quickest and most reliable method. Most lathe and drill press manuals list the tailstock and spindle taper size in the specifications section. The machine nameplate or sticker on the headstock sometimes includes this information. Search "[your machine model] tailstock taper size" if the manual is lost.

  • 2

    Measure the spindle bore with a caliper.

    Open the tailstock fully and measure the diameter of the bore at the opening (the large end). A reading of approximately 0.475" = MT1. Approximately 0.700" = MT2. Approximately 0.938" = MT3. Note: the socket may be slightly smaller than the tool's large-end diameter because the tool seats partway in measure as close to the opening as possible.

  • 3

    Test-fit with a known MT tool

    If you have a tool with a known Morse taper size, insert it into the socket. An MT2 tool in an MT2 machine will seat firmly with a short push and resist pulling out by hand. An MT2 tool in an MT3 machine will wobble and not seat at all. This confirms or rules out each size quickly.

  • 4

    Use the finger-size approximation (rough guide only)

    A rough field guide used by woodturners: an MT1 bore is approximately the diameter of a pinky finger, and an MT2 bore matches the width of an index finger. This is very approximate; never rely on it for purchasing tools. Always measure or check the manual for certainty.

Understanding your Morse taper size unlocks a full ecosystem of lathe tooling. Here are the Buyohlic products that connect directly via Morse taper, all stocked in our US warehouse:

✅ Not Sure Which Size You Need?

Check the product description for the MT size listed. All Buyohlic lathe accessories clearly state their Morse taper size (MT1, MT2, MT3). If you are unsure about your machine's taper, measure the tailstock bore diameter using the guide in Section 6 above or contact our team, and we will help you identify the right fit before you order.

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions from machinists, woodturners, and hobbyists about Morse taper sizes.

What is a Morse taper used for?
A Morse taper is a self-locking tapered shank system used to hold cutting tools such as drill bits, live centers, and end mill holders securely in the spindle or tailstock of a lathe, drill press, or milling machine. The slight taper angle creates a friction lock that holds the tool without bolts or screws, while still allowing quick release with a drift key. It has been the dominant machine tool standard since 1864 and remains universal today.
What is the difference between MT1, MT2, and MT3?
MT1, MT2, and MT3 differ in physical size and load capacity. MT1 has a large-end diameter of approximately 0.475 inches and suits small benchtop lathes and light-duty drill presses. MT2 with a 0.700-inch large end is the most common size worldwide. MT3 with a 0.938-inch large end handles heavier industrial work.
How do I know what Morse taper my lathe or drill press has?
Check your machine manual or measure the spindle socket diameter using a caliper. Approximately 0.475 inches indicates MT1, 0.700 inches indicates MT2, and 0.938 inches indicates MT3.
Can I use an MT2 tool in an MT3 machine?
Yes, but only with a Morse taper adapter sleeve. An MT2-to-MT3 sleeve allows the smaller MT2 tool to fit securely inside the larger MT3 spindle taper.
What is a self-ejecting or tang-drive Morse taper?
A tang-drive Morse taper has a flat tang at the end of the shank that prevents rotation and allows removal using a drift key. The drift pushes against the tang to release the taper from the spindle.

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