GweithdyDU
Established Member
Hi people. Old bugger, but new to here. I Don't use Social media of any kind, on the grounds that the world has enough pictures of people's cafe meals, hence reason for lack of contact details. Have spent a life living on very little but ever-so-much as well, I overall feel quite lucky to have made it this far. Have always been hands-on as well as 'bookish' and the two together have allowed me to mess-up so, many projects but in a way that was always at least fixable. Big proponent of John Seymore's approach to lerning things: 'Have a bash, at least you'll know how not to do it next time. Have another go and it'll be pretty rubbish, BUT it might at least work!. Keep that up, and by the time you've done loads, you'll be able to either become brilliant or at least show somebody ese the basics'. This approach has served me well with things like mechanical-engineering (did that professionally in the end), Metal-fabrication, (ditto), building (rarely ditto), Forestry(ditto), slaughtering my own meat-animals (from small to blooming huge), farming (more desperate small-holding really!) and so on. The one thing it has not worked on for me though is woodwork. I do site-joinery type stuff for myself, using a belt-n-braces approach, it certainly exceeds Building Control regs (but then we get weekly 60-70 mph winds and gusts of 100+), but if it needs to look nice, I'm scuppered. As well as being Autistic, I'm beginning to consider that I may be Dyspraxic, as I seem to often make perfect cuts, angles etc, but 90-degrees out. I also do this when plumbing but am a wizard solderer so I just 'cut-turn-n-solder'. Wood is less forgiving! However, neurological challenges aside, I usually have successful projects that 'come true' in the end.
Despite getting things 90-degrees out sometimes, I am quite a dab-hand with power tools (scars to prove it!) and having managed to transform my site joinery with a bench-saw, feel it is time to learn more. I was good at using a wood lathe as as lad, so I am hoping to purchase a router table and a hand-held router that if I practice lots, will allow me to construct things for my home. First project will be a pair of doors for a Victorian school book cupboard that I was given years ago, minus doors. After that? Well some rustic internal house doors and windows if I have still got all my fingers left. I'll likely be asking the daftest questions on the forum, and seeking very basic info if I can't find it easily via my books, YouTube etc., but bear with me and I will learn eventually.
Thanks/Diolch
Despite getting things 90-degrees out sometimes, I am quite a dab-hand with power tools (scars to prove it!) and having managed to transform my site joinery with a bench-saw, feel it is time to learn more. I was good at using a wood lathe as as lad, so I am hoping to purchase a router table and a hand-held router that if I practice lots, will allow me to construct things for my home. First project will be a pair of doors for a Victorian school book cupboard that I was given years ago, minus doors. After that? Well some rustic internal house doors and windows if I have still got all my fingers left. I'll likely be asking the daftest questions on the forum, and seeking very basic info if I can't find it easily via my books, YouTube etc., but bear with me and I will learn eventually.
Thanks/Diolch