CHJ
Established Member
I ask this because over this weekend I was able to make a direct comparison of Woodworking and Model Engineering from a hobbyist point of view.
My observations were:
1. Manufacture and or Supplier Participation:
Woodworking show, equipment suppliers and manufacturers participation almost non existent.
Model Engineering Exhibition, several hours’ worth of browsing and machine comparison available from a broad spectrum of suppliers meeting all levels of precision and size from table top to substantial CNC.
2.
Machine Costs:
Woodworking. A Higher end Lathe, suitable for a semi professional consisting of just a variable speed motor, rigid bed and an adequate tailstock and tool rest. Only One model on display and costing £1500+
Any others to be seen in current woodworking mags go on up to £3500+ and invariably consist of just a beefed up motor, supply inverter, and castings to compliment them.
Metal Working: For £300 upwards literally dozens of lathes, (mills etc.) capable of providing precision alignment, cutting tolerances to fractions of a millimeter and with a host of gear cutting, saddle traverse, cross-slide traverse and for £1500 one quite adequate for you to build your own motorbike engine.
Absolutely no comparison in engineering quality and bang for bucks between the two disciplines.
What gives, a car manufacturer can get his costs down to the point where an engine is produced for a few hundred pounds, how come a cast beam, a three phase motor with controller and 20 kilos or so of basic cast iron add-ons costs double or treble; surely it can't all be down to scale of production.
3.
Lectures/seminars equipment demonstrations:
Woodworking show, one outside demonstrator (cutting up logs) and less than a handful of the stalwart consumables suppliers doing anything other than a sales spiel and the latter, mostly only on demand when questions asked. A couple of lathe suppliers had working lathes in use demonstrating associated tool use.
Model Engineering Exhibition, Lectures running throughout the day, equipment in use and demonstrators actively stripping down and explaining construction and operating details, and co-ordinating link-ups with complimentary technologies for those interested.
4.
Invited Groups, Clubs and Individuals.
Woodworking: One Turning club I can remember and no other discipline that made enough impact to stick in my mind.
Model Engineering Exhibition: More clubs and individual displays of working models than I could comfortably absorb in a two stage coating of looking at.
Outdoor display of invited working models and their builders to keep an interest going for an hour or more.
5.
Bits and pieces consumables/tools etc.: (outside the Brand Names)
Woodworking: one regular attendee with a somewhat esoteric pricing policy with a high percentage of bits available in the local pound shop or market stall.
Model Engineering Exhibition: several tool and stock material suppliers with a depth of tooling and consumables that really needed a day or at a minimum a half day all to themselves if you wanted to explore the stock available, the pricing being very competitive and balanced across a wide spectrum of quality.
Rant Over, I feel better now but not much.
My observations were:
1. Manufacture and or Supplier Participation:
Woodworking show, equipment suppliers and manufacturers participation almost non existent.
Model Engineering Exhibition, several hours’ worth of browsing and machine comparison available from a broad spectrum of suppliers meeting all levels of precision and size from table top to substantial CNC.
2.
Machine Costs:
Woodworking. A Higher end Lathe, suitable for a semi professional consisting of just a variable speed motor, rigid bed and an adequate tailstock and tool rest. Only One model on display and costing £1500+
Any others to be seen in current woodworking mags go on up to £3500+ and invariably consist of just a beefed up motor, supply inverter, and castings to compliment them.
Metal Working: For £300 upwards literally dozens of lathes, (mills etc.) capable of providing precision alignment, cutting tolerances to fractions of a millimeter and with a host of gear cutting, saddle traverse, cross-slide traverse and for £1500 one quite adequate for you to build your own motorbike engine.
Absolutely no comparison in engineering quality and bang for bucks between the two disciplines.
What gives, a car manufacturer can get his costs down to the point where an engine is produced for a few hundred pounds, how come a cast beam, a three phase motor with controller and 20 kilos or so of basic cast iron add-ons costs double or treble; surely it can't all be down to scale of production.
3.
Lectures/seminars equipment demonstrations:
Woodworking show, one outside demonstrator (cutting up logs) and less than a handful of the stalwart consumables suppliers doing anything other than a sales spiel and the latter, mostly only on demand when questions asked. A couple of lathe suppliers had working lathes in use demonstrating associated tool use.
Model Engineering Exhibition, Lectures running throughout the day, equipment in use and demonstrators actively stripping down and explaining construction and operating details, and co-ordinating link-ups with complimentary technologies for those interested.
4.
Invited Groups, Clubs and Individuals.
Woodworking: One Turning club I can remember and no other discipline that made enough impact to stick in my mind.
Model Engineering Exhibition: More clubs and individual displays of working models than I could comfortably absorb in a two stage coating of looking at.
Outdoor display of invited working models and their builders to keep an interest going for an hour or more.
5.
Bits and pieces consumables/tools etc.: (outside the Brand Names)
Woodworking: one regular attendee with a somewhat esoteric pricing policy with a high percentage of bits available in the local pound shop or market stall.
Model Engineering Exhibition: several tool and stock material suppliers with a depth of tooling and consumables that really needed a day or at a minimum a half day all to themselves if you wanted to explore the stock available, the pricing being very competitive and balanced across a wide spectrum of quality.
Rant Over, I feel better now but not much.