Thanks for the great advice! I went to a local "Woodcraft" store and spoke
to an employee who has been doing professional cabinetry for a few years and
enjoyed woodworking as a hobby his entire life, and he echoed a lot of what
you had to say here. He sponsors a "Woodworking 101" series of classes
where he goes over the safe use of power tools and basic techniques, as well
what the different models are capable of and what you will/won't need, etc.
For $40, it sounds like a deal to me, especially for something like a table
saw that you could easily drop a grand or more on. I was impressed to note
that he didn't always recommend the most expensive thing they sold. He
showed me the Bessey clamps, explained why he preferred them, but pointed
out the price and what the difference is. He told me the Swiss chisels are
(again, in his opinion) the best bang-for-the-buck high-end chisel but
somebody started out would do well with a 6-pack of Marples.
My shop will be 15x17, and if I needed to, I could resize it to add another
13x8 section. Should I build my wall to include that part now? It sounds
like a foregone conclusion that we end up consuming as much space as
possible.
The fellow at Woodcraft also mentioned dust control systems and the variable
humidity (I live in Missouri - it's REAL humid. Sometimes.) and recommended
a few systems that I felt were reasonable.
I'm leaning towards purchasing my first workbench - it's a
chicken-or-the-egg deal. I need a workbench, but I'm not sure how to build
one, and even if I did know how, I don't have a workbench to use to work on
one. :) The Woodcraft guy said benches are fairly easy to knock together -
I saw somebody mention
I went and got myself a library card and requested about a dozen books on
woodworking and craftsmanship. The Tage Frid one was among them, so I think
I've got a good start with reference materials and reading.
We've got both Woodcraft and Rockler (I live in St. Louis), so it sounds
like those are good resources.
Here's my list of starting basic equipment:
Circular saw, drill/bits, backsaw, chisels, c-square, bench plane,
sharpening stone, orbital sander, as many clamps as reasonably possible,
straightedge, marking guage, doweling jig, block plane, file, workbench,
dust control, safety glasses
For stationary equipment, I'm eying a table saw and thickness planer. The
guy at the store recommended one other piece of "large" hardware to start
with but I forget what it was. I also don't know what half of the stuff
does yet, which is why I thought a tech school class might be worth it.
Thanks again for all the input! If anybody has any other words of wisdom or
caveats on the learning curve, I'd love to hear them. You'll probably be
hearing a lot from me, I tend to ask a lot of questions before I leap into
something.
On Sun, 27 Jul 2003 03:16:44 GMT, "Ben Siders"
<[email protected]> wrote:
>I'm leaning towards purchasing my first workbench - it's a
>chicken-or-the-egg deal. I need a workbench, but I'm not sure how to build
>one, and even if I did know how, I don't have a workbench to use to work on
>one. :)
Hi Ben,
As others have said, building a workbench allows you to hone the
skills you'll use on every other project that comes out of your shop.
I wanted to add that this idea is true for every fixture in your shop.
Tom Watson did a wonderful post here recently on "Your shop _is_ a
tool." Google the group, it's well worth the read.
If you look at your entire shop as a tool, you'll find that everything
you build for it becomes a means to improve your craft. Building
"utility" drawers for the bench? Dovetail them. A "professional",
who has time constraints to worry about, might glue-and-screw them
together, but for us hobbyists doing that would be a wasted
opportunity to improve our dovetailing technique.
The journey _is_ the destination. Welcome to the wRec.
Michael Baglio
Chapel Hill (who's closing on a house in 2 weeks, and trying to figure
out how to shoehorn a shop into a 1/6th acre back yard. ;> )
Ben Siders wrote:
> I'm leaning towards purchasing my first workbench - it's a
> chicken-or-the-egg deal. I need a workbench, but I'm not sure how to build
> one, and even if I did know how, I don't have a workbench to use to work on
> one. :) The Woodcraft guy said benches are fairly easy to knock together -
> I saw somebody mention
Buy a workbench? For a beginner, making one will be good practice.
You say you don't have anything to work ON? Ok, your first project
should be building a set of sawhorses.
(for instance: http://christophermerrill.net/ww/shop/sawhorses.html)
Throw a sheet of plywood on the sawhorses...and you have a workbench
for building your workbench. There are LOTS of plans online for making
clamps, too. Again, an excellent way to practice your skills.
> Circular saw, drill/bits, backsaw, chisels, c-square, bench plane,
> sharpening stone, orbital sander, as many clamps as reasonably possible,
> straightedge, marking guage, doweling jig, block plane, file, workbench,
> dust control, safety glasses
Not a bad list. Personally, I'd put a GOOD jigsaw in place of the circular
saw - since I got a good one, I can't keep it out of my hands!
Where's the router? 3rd project would be the router table ;)
> For stationary equipment, I'm eying a table saw and thickness planer. The
> guy at the store recommended one other piece of "large" hardware to start
> with but I forget what it was. I also don't know what half of the stuff
> does yet, which is why I thought a tech school class might be worth it.
He probably said jointer. I could live without mine - with a simple
router jointing jig. Although now that I have it, I DO use it a lot.
I'd buy the planer first, though.
Just my 2cents.
Chris
************************************
Chris Merrill
[email protected]
(remove the ZZZ to contact me)
************************************
"Ben Siders" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>
> My shop will be 15x17, and if I needed to, I could resize it to add
another
> 13x8 section. Should I build my wall to include that part now? It sounds
> like a foregone conclusion that we end up consuming as much space as
> possible.
Plan on using the space. Just trust us on this one thing, if nothing else.
>
> I'm leaning towards purchasing my first workbench - it's a
> chicken-or-the-egg deal. I need a workbench, but I'm not sure how to
build
> one, and even if I did know how, I don't have a workbench to use to work
on
> one. :) The Woodcraft guy said benches are fairly easy to knock
together -
> I saw somebody mention
>
You've already had some good advice here. You "can" buy your bench, but
what you learn building your own will pay dividends when you start doing
more detailed work. Also, you can customize a bench built by you to fit
your size, shape and the way you work.
> We've got both Woodcraft and Rockler (I live in St. Louis), so it sounds
> like those are good resources.
>
You'll figure this on your own, in your own time, but the quality of stuff
at Woodcraft is at least a full cut above that at Rockler (Sorry, Charlie,
but it's the plain truth). I don't have Woodcraft here. I got to visit one
while I was back in Colorado Springs, and I've got to say, I miss it.
> Here's my list of starting basic equipment:
> Circular saw, drill/bits, backsaw, chisels, c-square, bench plane,
> sharpening stone, orbital sander, as many clamps as reasonably possible,
> straightedge, marking guage, doweling jig, block plane, file, workbench,
> dust control, safety glasses
>
> For stationary equipment, I'm eying a table saw and thickness planer. The
> guy at the store recommended one other piece of "large" hardware to start
> with but I forget what it was. I also don't know what half of the stuff
> does yet, which is why I thought a tech school class might be worth it.
>
Here's a thought. There are a lot of people here who will tell you that the
jointer is the other half of a planer, and the two go hand in hand. This is
true, but there is an alternative jointer. It's called a #7 bench plane.
I'm finding I turn to my #7 more often than I turn on the Delta 6" jointer.
It really ends up being easier if I don't have to rip the boards so they
will fit the tool, and a lot of the stuff I'm doing is with boards wider
than 6". To move up to a large jointer gets into real money, so the $360
(show price) I spent on the Lie-Nielson #7 doesn't seem so much. As for
dust collection, I only turn that on to suck up the shavings when I'm done,
because a hand plane does not generate significant airborne dust.
In a way, there's a bit of philosophy in the route you take here. Learning
and using hand tools will give you a much better understanding of the wood
you are working with. There will probably be more failures, but they may
also be more easily fixed failures. You can rather rapidly turn a board
into a useless piece of firewood with a power tool, but it take much more
effort to really bung up the wood with hand tools. I use both, but more and
more I get more enjoyment out of hand tools than power tools. Now the
tablesaw and planer, I consider those essential. I'm not Conan. I respect
the work he does, but I have no desire to rip 500-1000 linear feet of hard
lumber just to build a bench. You may find that to be the way you
eventually want to go, and if so, more power to you.
> Thanks again for all the input! If anybody has any other words of wisdom
or
> caveats on the learning curve, I'd love to hear them. You'll probably be
> hearing a lot from me, I tend to ask a lot of questions before I leap into
> something.
>
>
Cheers,
Eric