Uncle Bulgaria
Member
The wife and I were having a cuppa in a local cafe yesterday morning.
The toast was burnt, a not infrequent event in that establishment. "Why doesn't Seamus (the owner and cook) just buy a toaster?" my wife asked the waitress. "He thinks it's unprofessional to need one, a chef should be able to cook toast under the grill " was the gist of the reply.
That set me thinking, what other activities are there where professionals insist on using a technique, time consuming to learn and difficult for beginners to master, yet a device exists which gives perfect results every time for even a beginner for marginally more effort.
Don't worry, I'm not going to mention sharpening at all - I know better than to stir that puddle. :lol:
Actually my first thought was cambered jointer plane irons versus a straight iron and fence. I notice that Veritas are now selling add-on fences (with fancy rare earth magnets and brass clips to hold the fence to the plane) but at very fancy prices. I've always managed with bits of wood screwed or clamped to my planes. The first time I saw the idea online it was demonstrated with a 4" G-clamp holding the fence onto the plane.
Just wondering if I'm missing other techniques which would help an aspiring amateur?
One thing which caught my eye recently is the Veritas system of saw guides for different purposes, one for tenons, another for dovetails. The basic structure of each seems to be a clamp with a magnetic side and a low friction coating to hold and guide a saw.
I’ve never had too much trouble cutting joints where I can scribe a line across with a knife and use a chisel to define a starting trench ( as described by amongst others Bob Wearing, Paul Sellers and Christopher Schwartz) but I’ve always had difficulty with dovetails. Anyone care to weigh in to say if the Veritas dovetail guide
a) makes the process any easier
b) is worth the rather large sum they ask for it
c) requires the Veritas saws (which would put it well outside my budget)
d) is easy to align to the cutting line ?
Thanks
The toast was burnt, a not infrequent event in that establishment. "Why doesn't Seamus (the owner and cook) just buy a toaster?" my wife asked the waitress. "He thinks it's unprofessional to need one, a chef should be able to cook toast under the grill " was the gist of the reply.
That set me thinking, what other activities are there where professionals insist on using a technique, time consuming to learn and difficult for beginners to master, yet a device exists which gives perfect results every time for even a beginner for marginally more effort.
Don't worry, I'm not going to mention sharpening at all - I know better than to stir that puddle. :lol:
Actually my first thought was cambered jointer plane irons versus a straight iron and fence. I notice that Veritas are now selling add-on fences (with fancy rare earth magnets and brass clips to hold the fence to the plane) but at very fancy prices. I've always managed with bits of wood screwed or clamped to my planes. The first time I saw the idea online it was demonstrated with a 4" G-clamp holding the fence onto the plane.
Just wondering if I'm missing other techniques which would help an aspiring amateur?
One thing which caught my eye recently is the Veritas system of saw guides for different purposes, one for tenons, another for dovetails. The basic structure of each seems to be a clamp with a magnetic side and a low friction coating to hold and guide a saw.
I’ve never had too much trouble cutting joints where I can scribe a line across with a knife and use a chisel to define a starting trench ( as described by amongst others Bob Wearing, Paul Sellers and Christopher Schwartz) but I’ve always had difficulty with dovetails. Anyone care to weigh in to say if the Veritas dovetail guide
a) makes the process any easier
b) is worth the rather large sum they ask for it
c) requires the Veritas saws (which would put it well outside my budget)
d) is easy to align to the cutting line ?
Thanks