G S Haydon
Established Member
- Joined
- 24 Apr 2013
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Ah Jacob, as blunt as ever!
Sadly the nuance of the discussion is quickly lost. There is a balance to be had.
If I were making a chest of drawers I would pick out my best material for the carcass, cut to size, plane and make. I would then move to the drawers. I wouldn't get all of the material out in one go.
So too with a door. I would get rails and stiles out but might choose to leave the panels if there was a chance they were to be left over the weekend and not installed into a door.
On making volumes of parts, or inventory, most modern settings shy away from it. You regulate your production by a bottleneck. No point making finished parts in volume if they can't be installed or sold. It's about a steady flow across everything. That's not to say you only mortice one door stile at a time, that would be stupid. Rather if you had 8 external doors you might make them in batches of 2. This allows others to be involved in the flow of work.
There should be no delay in processing, if a business can't set a machine or use hand tools to work small batches it's likely because it's not very good.
I was told a story of guy who bought a CNC, he was told at the time that he had an inventory problem, too many finished parts everywhere. But he was convinced that if he could make more parts in less time he would be able to reduce costs. He went bankrupt as he made even more inventory with no extra money coming in.
To your average weekend woodworker I would recommend breaking a job down. Making a table? Get out the legs and aprons, plane and join, glue up as appropriate. Same if it requires a drawer, then the top. I hope I've made some sense.
Sadly the nuance of the discussion is quickly lost. There is a balance to be had.
If I were making a chest of drawers I would pick out my best material for the carcass, cut to size, plane and make. I would then move to the drawers. I wouldn't get all of the material out in one go.
So too with a door. I would get rails and stiles out but might choose to leave the panels if there was a chance they were to be left over the weekend and not installed into a door.
On making volumes of parts, or inventory, most modern settings shy away from it. You regulate your production by a bottleneck. No point making finished parts in volume if they can't be installed or sold. It's about a steady flow across everything. That's not to say you only mortice one door stile at a time, that would be stupid. Rather if you had 8 external doors you might make them in batches of 2. This allows others to be involved in the flow of work.
There should be no delay in processing, if a business can't set a machine or use hand tools to work small batches it's likely because it's not very good.
I was told a story of guy who bought a CNC, he was told at the time that he had an inventory problem, too many finished parts everywhere. But he was convinced that if he could make more parts in less time he would be able to reduce costs. He went bankrupt as he made even more inventory with no extra money coming in.
To your average weekend woodworker I would recommend breaking a job down. Making a table? Get out the legs and aprons, plane and join, glue up as appropriate. Same if it requires a drawer, then the top. I hope I've made some sense.