LBCarpentry
Established Member
I'm a joiner.
I suppose still a young one compared to most, but at 27 I have my own business and workshop and fully believe I have trained 'properly' and to not lower my standards, just to make an extra £40 a week or whatever savings that corner cutting makes these days.
There is another joiners unit right next to mine and I have been chatting with the owner for the last two weeks. His work looks and is very good and he has the level of joinery knowledge, thought and consideration that I would expect from someone who has been in the game a few years, and actually cares about what they produce.
We were chatting today and he told me that in order to keep his prices down, he doesn't bother rebating and moulding components (doors or windows) any more, but that he actually glue's and pins the rebates/mouldings on after. Obviously this saves him a CONSIDERABLE amount of time.
This is what he now has to do to compete with other joinery firms (he's a lot more well established than I am, and my business is not joinery alone) to keep the work coming in.
He even said my way (rebating, scribing, profiling) was 'old school'
Alternative method? Cheating?
I've been pondering over it all day. What do you think?
At this very end point, i'll say I recently brought a domino 700 for floating tennon joints. So I guess in some form, i'm no better. (but much more acceptable in my eyes :wink: )
I suppose still a young one compared to most, but at 27 I have my own business and workshop and fully believe I have trained 'properly' and to not lower my standards, just to make an extra £40 a week or whatever savings that corner cutting makes these days.
There is another joiners unit right next to mine and I have been chatting with the owner for the last two weeks. His work looks and is very good and he has the level of joinery knowledge, thought and consideration that I would expect from someone who has been in the game a few years, and actually cares about what they produce.
We were chatting today and he told me that in order to keep his prices down, he doesn't bother rebating and moulding components (doors or windows) any more, but that he actually glue's and pins the rebates/mouldings on after. Obviously this saves him a CONSIDERABLE amount of time.
This is what he now has to do to compete with other joinery firms (he's a lot more well established than I am, and my business is not joinery alone) to keep the work coming in.
He even said my way (rebating, scribing, profiling) was 'old school'
Alternative method? Cheating?
I've been pondering over it all day. What do you think?
At this very end point, i'll say I recently brought a domino 700 for floating tennon joints. So I guess in some form, i'm no better. (but much more acceptable in my eyes :wink: )