Cheshirechappie":3iu8yrgj said:
.........Earlier in the thread, someone asked what the magnet was for in the Barron dovetail guide, and I suggested (a little tongue-in-cheek) that it was for winding Jacob up. Here's the proof that it works!
Look fellas, there are more ways than one to saw a dovetail. Training aids, guides, call 'em what you will are just one way, and they're NOT compulsory. If you don't want to use them, then don't. Whether the price is 'rip-off' or not is a decision for the person paying to make, and if you are a complete newcomer and your skill level is basically zero, then deskilling isn't really an issue because you don't have much yet anyway, and it could well help to build some confidence and skill (as others have attested above).
Give newbies a break. For some, better a gentle introduction and slow build of skill than chucked in the deep end, metaphorically drowning, and giving up woodworking for something else.
Ordinarily, this is fair comment, but I've re-read the thread, and can't see anyone sneering at newcomers, or guides even. It was me who asked about magnets, and it was because I was genuinely puzzled as to what it was trying to achieve, and how it could improve on the same bit of kit without a magnet. I'm only slightly clearer now. As always, the problem isn't that these sort of aids exist, it's the pressure people are under to buy stuff which A/ they could make in 5 minutes flat, and B/ makes the job appear more complex than it actually is. It is doing newbies more harm than good to give the impression that X, Y & Z bits of kit are essential, because skills A, B & C are just soooooo difficult they couldn't possibly be tackled without both a lifetime's experience and the latest expensive gizmo hand crafted by a 400 year old hermit living in cave in the Hoggar mountains. I'm guessing more people are driven away from woodworking by this relentless pressure to have more shiny things than are by skill deficits.