Dave Jackson wrote:
> What happened? --dave
>
> "foggytown" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
> > When you need a machine that uses electricity to make something as
> > sharp as a razor travel several thousand RPMs and you will be
standing
> > less than a foot away from it during the process . . . DON'T buy
the
> > house brand!
> >
> > FoggyTown
> >
Nothing in particular. I was just thinking of buying a light-weight
1/4" router for light trim, etc. and there are some really cheap ones
out there. But the thought hit me. Do I want to trust Bosch or Makita
or something imported from Thailand with a crooked label showing a
brand name of "Busy Bee" or somesuch?
FoggyTown
In article <[email protected]>,
jo4hn <[email protected]> wrote:
>J. Clarke wrote:
>> jo4hn wrote:
>>
>>
>>>foggytown wrote:
>>>
>>>>When you need a machine that uses electricity to make something as
>>>>sharp as a razor travel several thousand RPMs and you will be standing
>>>>less than a foot away from it during the process . . . DON'T buy the
>>>>house brand!
>>>>
>>>>FoggyTown
>>>>
>>>
>>>Exactly why medieval chain mail and later full armor were invented.
>>
>>
>> Chain mail dates back to the Romans.
>>
>Recent research has the first powered routers being made by Aeolipile,
>Inc. Run by a chap by name of Hermington Wesley Hero. Little known
>drips of wisdom from jo4hn's john.
No shit??!!
foggytown wrote:
> When you need a machine that uses electricity to make something as
> sharp as a razor travel several thousand RPMs and you will be standing
> less than a foot away from it during the process . . . DON'T buy the
> house brand!
>
> FoggyTown
>
Exactly why medieval chain mail and later full armor were invented.
j4
On 25 Mar 2005 10:33:02 -0800, "foggytown" <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>Dave Jackson wrote:
>> What happened? --dave
>>
>> "foggytown" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>> news:[email protected]...
>> > When you need a machine that uses electricity to make something as
>> > sharp as a razor travel several thousand RPMs and you will be
>standing
>> > less than a foot away from it during the process . . . DON'T buy
>the
>> > house brand!
>> >
>> > FoggyTown
>> >
>
>Nothing in particular. I was just thinking of buying a light-weight
>1/4" router for light trim, etc. and there are some really cheap ones
>out there. But the thought hit me. Do I want to trust Bosch or Makita
>or something imported from Thailand with a crooked label showing a
>brand name of "Busy Bee" or somesuch?
Good thinking. The wife got me an el cheapo router, and it nearly
took my palm off. Now there's a nice PC 691 in it's place. OTOH,
there are some good uses for cheap tools- my dad got me a "tool shop"
(dirty words in my household) reciprocating saw last X-mas, and so far
it's worked just fine- all I use it for is roughly chopping holes in
drywall and lopping a bit off the occasional piece of angle iron or
rebar, so cheap is all I need.
Aut inveniam viam aut faciam
There was a great Herman cartoon where he had his arm around what looked
like a 30 inch saw blade. He was trying to loosen the nut and had it wedged
under his arm. The caption read "Get away from that switch!"
max
> foggytown wrote:
>
>> When you need a machine that uses electricity to make something as
>> sharp as a razor travel several thousand RPMs and you will be standing
>> less than a foot away from it during the process . . . DON'T buy the
>> house brand!
>
> I'm put in mind of the cartoon that appeared in Aviation Leak many years
> ago--two astronauts are in a Gemini spacecraft in orbit and one says to the
> other "I just realized that every part of this thing was made by the lowest
> bidder."
>
>> FoggyTown
What happened? --dave
"foggytown" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> When you need a machine that uses electricity to make something as
> sharp as a razor travel several thousand RPMs and you will be standing
> less than a foot away from it during the process . . . DON'T buy the
> house brand!
>
> FoggyTown
>
J. Clarke wrote:
> jo4hn wrote:
>
>
>>foggytown wrote:
>>
>>>When you need a machine that uses electricity to make something as
>>>sharp as a razor travel several thousand RPMs and you will be standing
>>>less than a foot away from it during the process . . . DON'T buy the
>>>house brand!
>>>
>>>FoggyTown
>>>
>>
>>Exactly why medieval chain mail and later full armor were invented.
>
>
> Chain mail dates back to the Romans.
>
Recent research has the first powered routers being made by Aeolipile,
Inc. Run by a chap by name of Hermington Wesley Hero. Little known
drips of wisdom from jo4hn's john.
j4
foggytown wrote:
> When you need a machine that uses electricity to make something as
> sharp as a razor travel several thousand RPMs and you will be standing
> less than a foot away from it during the process . . . DON'T buy the
> house brand!
I'm put in mind of the cartoon that appeared in Aviation Leak many years
ago--two astronauts are in a Gemini spacecraft in orbit and one says to the
other "I just realized that every part of this thing was made by the lowest
bidder."
> FoggyTown
--
--John
to email, dial "usenet" and validate
(was jclarke at eye bee em dot net)
jo4hn wrote:
> foggytown wrote:
>> When you need a machine that uses electricity to make something as
>> sharp as a razor travel several thousand RPMs and you will be standing
>> less than a foot away from it during the process . . . DON'T buy the
>> house brand!
>>
>> FoggyTown
>>
> Exactly why medieval chain mail and later full armor were invented.
Chain mail dates back to the Romans.
> j4
--
--John
to email, dial "usenet" and validate
(was jclarke at eye bee em dot net)
"foggytown" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> When you need a machine that uses electricity to make something as
> sharp as a razor travel several thousand RPMs and you will be standing
> less than a foot away from it during the process . . . DON'T buy the
> house brand!
>
I wouldn't use a Homier power tool (even if the didn't break in the first 5
minutes), but I doubt any tool sold by a normal store is going to fail
catastrophically. The law suits would quickly put them out of business.
Your house brand router is going have significant run out, the bearing will
wear out pretty quickly. and they might be poorly designed. It will not
explode. If bad run out and short life aren't problems for you, they can be
good buys.
On 25 Mar 2005 06:54:22 -0800, "foggytown" <[email protected]> wrote:
>When you need a machine that uses electricity to make something as
>sharp as a razor travel several thousand RPMs and you will be standing
>less than a foot away from it during the process . . . DON'T buy the
>house brand!
>
>FoggyTown
experience talking?