A
Anonymous
Guest
A riposte, from myself; I sorta mirror Midnight Mike's comments as far as ease of getting an LN, and guarantee of usability - I've also followed his newbie path, and made the same mistakes.
I do, however, also appreciate the galoot path, and indeed have a vintage 4 & arf that I picked up from a car boot sale for next to nothing, and that works like a dream. I also have a Ray Iles 5 & arf, with thicker iron. This doesn't work as well as the 4 & arf, and I have no way of telling how 'vintage' it actually was before it passed through Ray's hands - the tote & knob were replacements, and the sole/sides had been flattened, so not a lot of pointers.
My problem with the galoot path is simply getting hold of the old tools - around me, I keep going to car boot sales trying to pick up decent old stuff. The biggest boot sale in the area has a regular tool stall, but this guy is a cowboy! He has ticket prices of 20 quid plus on lumps of rusted no-name #4s, with cracked totes, knackered mouths, and deeply pitted just about everything! The only time I ever found a stall at a car boot sale that had decent tools on it, I bought the 4 & arf.
So, much as I'd like to follow the galoot path (any tips welcome!), it's just not practical for me, where I live (and the way I live, for that matter - 2 young kids don't lend themselves to traipsing around boot-sales all weekend!)
My riposte, anyway
I do, however, also appreciate the galoot path, and indeed have a vintage 4 & arf that I picked up from a car boot sale for next to nothing, and that works like a dream. I also have a Ray Iles 5 & arf, with thicker iron. This doesn't work as well as the 4 & arf, and I have no way of telling how 'vintage' it actually was before it passed through Ray's hands - the tote & knob were replacements, and the sole/sides had been flattened, so not a lot of pointers.
My problem with the galoot path is simply getting hold of the old tools - around me, I keep going to car boot sales trying to pick up decent old stuff. The biggest boot sale in the area has a regular tool stall, but this guy is a cowboy! He has ticket prices of 20 quid plus on lumps of rusted no-name #4s, with cracked totes, knackered mouths, and deeply pitted just about everything! The only time I ever found a stall at a car boot sale that had decent tools on it, I bought the 4 & arf.
So, much as I'd like to follow the galoot path (any tips welcome!), it's just not practical for me, where I live (and the way I live, for that matter - 2 young kids don't lend themselves to traipsing around boot-sales all weekend!)
My riposte, anyway