>Old shop burned. New shop nearly complete. Tool buying time.
> Need advise about what to buy. First big purchases will be a
> table saw, planer, and joiner. I would like a joiner larger than
> the six inch one I had before. One of the important things for
> me is the ease of changing and aligning the blades. The Rigid
> joiner I had before required a slow tedious process to get the
> new blades aligned. My new shop is wired for 110 and 220 volts.
> Of course, affordability is important.
> Suggestion and advice please on these and any other tool
> purchases would be greatly appreciated.
George (aka Bumhead)
Hobby!!!!! I have messed with a lot of different kind of woodworking
just as a hobby. I built my the shop that burned. Made some
furniture, did some turning, was into pen turning as gifts. Made
jewlery boxes and recipe boxes as gifts. Built an outdoor purgola.
Made a walnut shotgun stock for a friend. (Turned out good, but
hopefully never again). Refinished some antique furniture that my
wife inherited from her grandmother. Hobby now, but hopefully I'm a
couple of years from retirement and I might try to make some stuff to
sell. For me it is fun and good thearpy and keeps me out of the bars.
George (aka Bumhead)
Old shop burned as results of fire from electrical utility pole that
sat in corner of lot. Took out some fence, my neighbors storage shed,
my shop with attached garden and yard tool storage, and attached patio
with grill, smoker, and outdoor furniture. CHECK YOUR INSURANCE...I
HAD UPGRADED MINE A FEW YEARS AGO WHEN I STARTED GETTING SO MANY
TOOLS, LAWN MOWERS, GARDEN TILLERS, EXPENSIVE GEN AIR GRILL, ETC.
INSRUANCE DID ME PRETTY GOOD!!!!!!!
On Tue, 21 Jul 2009 04:16:36 -0700 (PDT), Sonny <[email protected]>
wrote:
>For possible preventative measures in my own shop, what was the cause
>of your old shop having burned?
>
>As for as replacement tools, for what kind of shop, hobby or
>commercial... and any particular specialty, if applicable?
>
>Sonny
I know they are costly but have considered the new combo machinges that are
both jointer and planer. Many of them have spiral carbide cutter heads that
meet the easy align requirement. Several of the woodworking type magazines
have done reviews of these machines.
Russ
"bumhead" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> >Old shop burned. New shop nearly complete. Tool buying time.
>> Need advise about what to buy. First big purchases will be a
>> table saw, planer, and joiner. I would like a joiner larger than
>> the six inch one I had before. One of the important things for
>> me is the ease of changing and aligning the blades. The Rigid
>> joiner I had before required a slow tedious process to get the
>> new blades aligned. My new shop is wired for 110 and 220 volts.
>> Of course, affordability is important.
>> Suggestion and advice please on these and any other tool
>> purchases would be greatly appreciated.
>
> George (aka Bumhead)
jo4hn wrote:
...
> I have a PM66 which is a wondrous machine...
Second that altho will either have to find used or bite sizable $$
bullet (not that it isn't worth it imo, just that it doesn't fit well
into the "affordability is important" scenario. Of course, depending on
what the shop output is, it could well be important enough to justify
the cost; that info is lacking entirely for context.
...
> ... have a 14" Delta bandsaw ... but I wish I had bought something
> with a resaw capability greater than 6". ...
Buy the resaw height extension kit...
> ... The rest of my stuff is 20 yrs old or more ...
Everything here is at least 30 except for the portable tool stuff so no
current recommendations.
I personally recommend the largest jointer you can fit into the shop and
afford--10" is minimal; if I were really to get active again I'd be
looking for old 20" Crescent or larger... :)
--
bumhead wrote:
>> Old shop burned. New shop nearly complete. Tool buying time.
>> Need advise about what to buy. First big purchases will be a
>> table saw, planer, and joiner. I would like a joiner larger than
>> the six inch one I had before. One of the important things for
>> me is the ease of changing and aligning the blades. The Rigid
>> joiner I had before required a slow tedious process to get the
>> new blades aligned. My new shop is wired for 110 and 220 volts.
>> Of course, affordability is important.
>> Suggestion and advice please on these and any other tool
>> purchases would be greatly appreciated.
>
> George (aka Bumhead)
I have a PM66 which is a wondrous machine and an infinite improvement
over the Sears contractor saw. Also the Grizzly 8" jointer (G0500) is a
keeper. I also have a 14" Delta bandsaw which is OK (replaced broken
motor with a Grizzly after 6 years), but I wish I had bought something
with a resaw capability greater than 6". I can also recommend the
Ridgid belt/spindle sander and the Performax drum sander, if you have a
need for such equipment. The rest of my stuff is 20 yrs old or more
including a 12" Sears bandsaw and a Sears scroll saw (nee jig saw), both
of which are about 70 years old.
If you want to talk a bit more about some of this stuff, drop me an
email and drop the mahalo in the addy.
mahalo,
jo4hn