Both as a 'lurker' and now as a member, I've come across a lot of comments which are either anti-handwork or which perpetuate (or possibly result from the perpetuation of) myths about the difficulty of using handtools.
I'd be interested to hear the reasoning from both sides of the divide... (and the middle ground too come to it).
I'm in an odd position, in that I personally choose to avoid powertools like the plague, as a reaction to working in a manufacturing environment where they dominate, sometimes beyond the point of common sense... I do however appreciate them for high volume work for exactly the same reason.
I read a post in which someone said that creating jigs and attachments for their powertools satisfies their "inner design engineer" which struck a chord, as I never can pass up the chance to work in the fitters shop or toolroom and learn their craft... It's fascinating. (For my sins, I wanted to be a patternmaker when I was younger; However, a helpful careers advisor pointed out that there were fewer and fewer press shops left, and even less doing work that needed hand tooled dies)
I'd be interested to hear the reasoning from both sides of the divide... (and the middle ground too come to it).
I'm in an odd position, in that I personally choose to avoid powertools like the plague, as a reaction to working in a manufacturing environment where they dominate, sometimes beyond the point of common sense... I do however appreciate them for high volume work for exactly the same reason.
I read a post in which someone said that creating jigs and attachments for their powertools satisfies their "inner design engineer" which struck a chord, as I never can pass up the chance to work in the fitters shop or toolroom and learn their craft... It's fascinating. (For my sins, I wanted to be a patternmaker when I was younger; However, a helpful careers advisor pointed out that there were fewer and fewer press shops left, and even less doing work that needed hand tooled dies)