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I would like to say

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  • #372721
    Dalboy
    Participant
      @dalboy

      Even though I have not been here very long I would like to say how I have enjoyed reading a lot of the posts.

      There are certainly a lot of very knowledgeable people here that One day I will pick your brains when I am ready to take the plunge and buy some machines,( still saving for them and the pot is getting bigger)

      Some of the posts I do have to look things up not knowing what they relate too.

      As per the title I would like to say thank you all for a great forum

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      #35285
      Dalboy
      Participant
        @dalboy
        #372728
        larry phelan 1
        Participant
          @larryphelan1

          Dont spend too much time saving,time passes quickly and life is too short. By the time you have saved enough to buy all you want,you may be too old to use them,so just buy something and get stuck in.

          Who knows,you might even get to like it !!cheekydevil

          #372755
          Trevor Crossman 1
          Participant
            @trevorcrossman1

            + ! for that larry ! As one gets older the realization that lifetime is not infinite becomes ever more obvious so the sooner one gets started the better is my view. '' Action this day '' is one of my tenets .

            Derek, it's not really necessary to buy machinery before you start the hobby, why not choose your starting project, study the drawings and research the processes and see what you can do with just the hand tools that you already have to get the show on the road, because machines by themselves are of limited use, it is often the tooling and accessories that release their potential and quite possibly will cost you more than the machine itself. Most model projects have some sheet metal and/or barstock which you could start first and hone your sawing and filing skills which are needed just as much as turning skills, maybe more so.

            Trevor.

            #372781
            Dalboy
            Participant
              @dalboy

              Thank you guys know the score when it comes to buying starting tools as I have already brought some and some I already owned from my plant mechanic days.

              I already have a pillar drill which I use for both wood and metal as well as two bandsaws one I will dedicate for metal and the larger will be for wood. I know that the accessories can soon add up as that is the same as woodturning which I run two lathes with 4 chucks as well as different jaw sets for them.

              I plan to have one end of the workshop dedicated for wood and the other metal and the machines that I can safely use with both without cross contamination in the middle.

              To prevent wood shavings from the wood lathes will be screened off with a shower curtain as the shavings from them tend to fly everywhere.

              As for the wood dust I will have two dust extractors set up only one running at a time.

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