The 3-in-1 lathe/mill/drill form factor is necessarily a compromise. You can't just set up a job on the mill, switch to the lathe and back again like you can on separate machines. Depending on how it is implemented you also run into space issues and rigidity problems. Also these machines are aimed primarily at the hobbyist on a budget and made in China, so quality is variable.

The Shoptask 1720 XMTC Gold (1998) differed from its competitors at the time in that is was aimed towards CNC  while retaining the major features of manual use. Shoptask are still around at shopmasterusa.com (now seems to be chicagolathe.com) and they are still making the descendant of my machine - the Mill Turn 2019. This is now a dedicated CNC system without the manual controls. My machine came with the mountings for CNC components, the first design iteration, with the CNC components themselves as optional add-ons - which at the time were beyond my budget. So what I ended up with was a manual machine with a design compromised to aid CNC use - without the CNC. Also with some other quirks related to Shoptask's forward thinking.

Rolling forward to 2020 - at least two of the competitors to Shoptask are still selling roughly equivalent machines - without the CNC options or compromises. These are the Smithy Midas and the Grizzly G9729 . (note that the current Grizzly G4015Z appears from the pictures to be exactly the same as the earlier Shoptask 17-20 BB 1985 – 1988.) There are some minor design differences between these machines, but the overall layout is the same:

Smithy also have a beefier machine - the Granite - with 2HP variable DC motor and a quick change gearbox and a 4-7/8" quill travel (and the whole head can be raised another "30%"). If I were not fixated on having CNC and manual use on my machine, I'd probably upgrade to one of those, rather than fixing up my Shoptask.

The Shoptask differs in two major ways from these other 3-in-1 designs

Things to do - General

Things to do - Lathe

Things to to - Mill/Drill

Things to do - CNC