Looking for a new project to do. I've been spending a few months upgrading the workshop / fixing minor annoyances, and really need to actually build something. I ran across this in a magazine ad. The furniture is supposedly solid teak, though I don't think that will be in the cards for...
Last Post By: Mike King Today, 10:32 AMRecently purchased this Graule at auction in Germany, it went for cheap but import and shipping resolved that bargain aspect pretty quickly. I'm rather unsure of what the voltage is, the tags seem to be giving mixed signals. I wrote the company, but I expect it'll be a while before they provide...
Last Post By: Brian Holcombe Yesterday, 1:17 PMI need to downsize my hobby woodworking shop a bit, and would like to have a table saw that is smaller than a cabinet saw with the extension table. Is there a smaller table saw that would still be as accurate as a cabinet saw? Most of the smaller saws are jobsite saws, and they don't seem to have a...
Last Post By: Geoff Crimmins Today, 12:08 PMHere's one I've been going over for the last 6 months. We have sliding pocket doors that separate our dining room and our family room. There are two of them 30 inches wide and they meet in the middle to form one 60 inch opening when open and a solid "wall" when closed. When they are open,...
Last Post By: Doug Garson Today, 12:14 PMGood day all. I appreciate the time to read and give feedback. I think this is the right machine and price, but want feedback. The time has come. I need a CNC to stay competitive and I also just want to create in new ways. I have “non-buyers remorse” for stopping bidding on a beautiful 5x10...
Last Post By: David Buchhauser Today, 2:18 AMSure - why not? (Votes: 9)
Never. If I needed something, I'd buy or rent it. (Votes: 10)
Maybe. Depends on the person and the tool. (Votes: 52)
No place for juvenile wood before any other consideration.
Tom M King Today, 12:57 PMFrom the paper cited in another current thread on powderpost:
"Prevention:
...Wood that is suspect should not be used, especially
The points for narrow rabbets are #1 diamond points.
https://www.toolboxsupply.com/produc...-1-diamond-3-8
Probably depending on how hard the wood is. The gun makes it very fast and easy.
Tom M King Today, 12:39 PMLee, I appreciate the advice. I might relay that to the client and see what they say!
Jarod Johnson Today, 12:38 PM
Time for some levity
Thread Starter: Dave Anderson NHWith all of the negativity and political stuff going on with the Covid-19 virus it is time to look at the humorous side of things. Feel free to add more, but keep it clean or it will be deleted.
Last Post By: Bert Kemp Yesterday, 8:28 PM