Hi all
This is an interesting video about mass production of kitchen cabinets, no woodworkers needed.
This is an interesting video about mass production of kitchen cabinets, no woodworkers needed.
Agreed Bob, I worked at a similar place for a year or so though the machinery wasn’t as rudimentary as some in the video. There were certainly some very clever chaps there, the guys who ran the CNCs making bespoke sized cabinets were on dam good money & made programming those machines look like rocket science to me.The guys working on these lines still have skills.
An edgebander is the most complicated piece of machinery in a workshop. To run one and maintain it is a skill, even assembling a unit to keep it tidy should not be underestimated, however I accept it's not rocket science.
Yep. I bought one of those....Reminds me of uk caravans built by minimum wage guys without enough care and attention and then you wonder why they leak 1,3,5 years later!!
Cheers James
Custard is spot on. Focussing on a single or small number of tasks and getting both highly competent and efficient is no mean feat and is very important in a commercial sense. Tips and tricks to simplify or tune a process is part of it and rarely acknowledged by the casual observer. Bricklaying may be repetitive, but the quality and pace of expert brickies leaves me in awe. A skill is a skill.I strongly disagree with the notion that there's a hierarchy of skills, with traditional hand tool cabinet making somehow at the top and anything involving power tools or machines somehow inferior.
I trained in one of the UK's most most prestigious workshops, actually one of the world's most prestigious workshops, and I'd put my hand tool skills alongside almost anyones. But I've met plenty of people that simply leave me for dead in so many other critical aspects of furniture making.
There's a guy I know who operates a bobbin sander all day long, I can't hold a candle to his ability to kiss a curve absolutely fair for metre after metre. There are dozens of situations like that, someone who puts in thousands of hours with a particular machine and elevates their abilities way higher than the rest of us.
Ripping on a table saw is a definite skill, the fact is most custom furniture makers don't actually rip all that much, so none of us are particularly quick or even all that accurate. The most basic and junior operator in a joinery workshop might rip more in a week than a Guild Mark craftsman or woman does in a year, believe me that experience shows in the quality of their components.
I only use mechanical drawer runners a handful of times each year, so I'm really ploddy installing them, and it's a banker's bet that I'm not exploiting anything like their full potential for adjustability.
Going back to custom furniture makers, they don't even judge each other on hand tool skills. The things that really win kudos are inventing ingenious jigs or simply turning out decent quality work in double quick time.
I could go on and on, but you get the point. The many, many people I know who really are right at the top when it comes to hand tool skills, oddly they're never the ones disparaging machine or power tool skills.
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