weirdbeardmt
Established Member
Hi all,
I'm a hobbyist woodworker, doing it for approx 3 years, limited in space to a single garage and time/patience due to busy life/kids etc.
I admit that in the early days I was heavily informed by the school of YouTube, and went on a bit of a splurge buying all the tools I thought I needed based on what I saw in the videos. I think my first (and only post) on this forum was how to buy a huge table saw. Fortunately you talked me out of that! I still enjoy the videos but now use them for inspiration/entertainment rather than actual technique.
About 18 months ago I realised I was tripping over a lot of unused tools and so culled a lot of them, wanting to get better at the basics with a smaller selection and then build up the tools again when I was ready to use them properly. The stuff I make currently is mostly functional things - outdoor furniture / planters, basic utilitarian things (cupboard organisers etc.)... i.e., project thats are fairly forgiving if you're not completely accurate / make mistakes. Opted/forced to use pre-milled / edged wood.
More recently have wanted to start trying to make "nicer" pieces that are on display and require more time / accuracy... picture frames, and I made this little key box (below). Pre-moulded trim from the orange DIY shop but mitred corners and rebates to accept the backing etc. but nevertheless a step in the right direction, I think. I would like to start doing nicer joinery.. maybe box joints, dove tails, and cutting my own moulding/trims etc.
I currently have a decent compound mitre saw, circular saw (with rails), jigsaw, drills, small bandsaw, orbit sander, 1/4" palm router and a small selection of chisels. Admit I opt to use power tools over hand tools... laziness / time / skill mostly. In an ideal world I would do more with hand tools.
The other day I was making a box and it would have been nice to be able to cut grooves on the edges and in the middle etc. I attempted this with the palm router and a straight edge and the result was.... ok... passable but not really satisfactory.
So it got me thinking whether now was the time to invest again... so thoughts on options please... should I
(a) Don't buy anything. Get better at using the tools I already have, i.e., the palm router.
(b) Get a router table. It will enable cutting more accurate rebates and open up more moulding options
(c) Get a table saw... it will... alllow you to cut nice square boards... and possibly rebates. (I've seen the whole debate over dado stacks and whatnot.)
(d) Get a spindle moulder... can it replace a router table and a table saw? I watched an Axminster video which showed a replaceable spindle for a router spindle...? Size is definitely a restriction so if I can combine things, so much the better but a groover attachment would likely take care of the rebate side of things?
Anyway, appreciate any input and thoughts.
I'm a hobbyist woodworker, doing it for approx 3 years, limited in space to a single garage and time/patience due to busy life/kids etc.
I admit that in the early days I was heavily informed by the school of YouTube, and went on a bit of a splurge buying all the tools I thought I needed based on what I saw in the videos. I think my first (and only post) on this forum was how to buy a huge table saw. Fortunately you talked me out of that! I still enjoy the videos but now use them for inspiration/entertainment rather than actual technique.
About 18 months ago I realised I was tripping over a lot of unused tools and so culled a lot of them, wanting to get better at the basics with a smaller selection and then build up the tools again when I was ready to use them properly. The stuff I make currently is mostly functional things - outdoor furniture / planters, basic utilitarian things (cupboard organisers etc.)... i.e., project thats are fairly forgiving if you're not completely accurate / make mistakes. Opted/forced to use pre-milled / edged wood.
More recently have wanted to start trying to make "nicer" pieces that are on display and require more time / accuracy... picture frames, and I made this little key box (below). Pre-moulded trim from the orange DIY shop but mitred corners and rebates to accept the backing etc. but nevertheless a step in the right direction, I think. I would like to start doing nicer joinery.. maybe box joints, dove tails, and cutting my own moulding/trims etc.
I currently have a decent compound mitre saw, circular saw (with rails), jigsaw, drills, small bandsaw, orbit sander, 1/4" palm router and a small selection of chisels. Admit I opt to use power tools over hand tools... laziness / time / skill mostly. In an ideal world I would do more with hand tools.
The other day I was making a box and it would have been nice to be able to cut grooves on the edges and in the middle etc. I attempted this with the palm router and a straight edge and the result was.... ok... passable but not really satisfactory.
So it got me thinking whether now was the time to invest again... so thoughts on options please... should I
(a) Don't buy anything. Get better at using the tools I already have, i.e., the palm router.
(b) Get a router table. It will enable cutting more accurate rebates and open up more moulding options
(c) Get a table saw... it will... alllow you to cut nice square boards... and possibly rebates. (I've seen the whole debate over dado stacks and whatnot.)
(d) Get a spindle moulder... can it replace a router table and a table saw? I watched an Axminster video which showed a replaceable spindle for a router spindle...? Size is definitely a restriction so if I can combine things, so much the better but a groover attachment would likely take care of the rebate side of things?
Anyway, appreciate any input and thoughts.