ColytonJohn
Member
Hi,
I'm a new forum member from Devon and feel it's only polite to introduce myself.
I've had an interest in woodworking for many years and built up a reasonable collection of tools and machinery with which I've renovated a couple of houses and made furniture and fittings for friends and family on a non commercial basis. A friend recently opened a coffee shop but was struggling with the refurbishment so I offered to lend a hand which grew somewhat and saw me make his counter, swing door, tables, benches, bookshelves, cake serving trolley and even a stand for his iPad 'till' - all at 'mates rates' (but I don't have to pay for my coffee!)
My preference is to work with reclaimed timer meaning my projects take on a rustic charm - no 'fine furniture' for me; just items that have that nice lived in patina of age straight out of the workshop
I have two workshops adjoining each other. The main one houses my radial arm saw, router table, jointer, floor-standing band saw, drill press, bench grinder and assorted hand tools. Sadly it also shares space with the 'junk' (my wife's word) that she won't allow in the house so is far too cluttered for comfortable working.
My other workshop houses the table saw, thicknesser , morticer, sliding mitre saw and bench-top band saw but shares space with a large motorbike that has to be wheeled out onto the lawn whenever I want access to the machinery - indeed, I often have to use the lawn as a workshop when more space is needed.
I think I have a reasonable balance with my tools and machinery but have long known the table saw was the weakness; it's a Clarke 10" with a hideously noisy brush motor and rubbish fence but, being an aluminium top, was light enough to move around easily and the 5/8" arbor took a stacked dado cutter (yes, I'm a fan of Norm). Recently the motor died in a smoky flash so I'm researching what to replace it with and my next post may well relate to that
Cheers,
John
I'm a new forum member from Devon and feel it's only polite to introduce myself.
I've had an interest in woodworking for many years and built up a reasonable collection of tools and machinery with which I've renovated a couple of houses and made furniture and fittings for friends and family on a non commercial basis. A friend recently opened a coffee shop but was struggling with the refurbishment so I offered to lend a hand which grew somewhat and saw me make his counter, swing door, tables, benches, bookshelves, cake serving trolley and even a stand for his iPad 'till' - all at 'mates rates' (but I don't have to pay for my coffee!)
My preference is to work with reclaimed timer meaning my projects take on a rustic charm - no 'fine furniture' for me; just items that have that nice lived in patina of age straight out of the workshop
I have two workshops adjoining each other. The main one houses my radial arm saw, router table, jointer, floor-standing band saw, drill press, bench grinder and assorted hand tools. Sadly it also shares space with the 'junk' (my wife's word) that she won't allow in the house so is far too cluttered for comfortable working.
My other workshop houses the table saw, thicknesser , morticer, sliding mitre saw and bench-top band saw but shares space with a large motorbike that has to be wheeled out onto the lawn whenever I want access to the machinery - indeed, I often have to use the lawn as a workshop when more space is needed.
I think I have a reasonable balance with my tools and machinery but have long known the table saw was the weakness; it's a Clarke 10" with a hideously noisy brush motor and rubbish fence but, being an aluminium top, was light enough to move around easily and the 5/8" arbor took a stacked dado cutter (yes, I'm a fan of Norm). Recently the motor died in a smoky flash so I'm researching what to replace it with and my next post may well relate to that
Cheers,
John