General question, personal interest in this case.
Often, we make our own tools - at some point you cannot avoid it any longer. I started out wanting to make planes when I didn't need to but it took a while before I realized that the objective to make tools that you'll use has to hinge on making something as good as you can buy, or you'll make your own, find them deficient and buy what you would've in the first place.
Stems from the krenov discussion - I sometimes get messages on youtube from people who have questions, but they have questions about krenov planes and say they will eventually build a mortised plane. The planes I made the first four years I woodworked (granted, I didn't make that many) have all been thrown away by now. The planes I've made the last two, I haven't had to throw away any. I don't think the making took that much longer for the latter.
So, poll here - if you've made tools for yourself, are they now and forever the tools you turn to, or were they something fun to make but eventually you found bought planes better?
(my suggestion to people who want to build a mortised plane eventually is to build a handled mortised plane now, so that the second one they build is nice. Otherwise, the first two planes will be a non-handled krenov type plane that gets cast aside, and then when they build a mortised plane, they'll need to build a third. But once a decent mortised plane is made, the desire to continue making them for yourself sort of goes away).
Chisels are in the same category, except I'm sure the number of people who have made chisels is significantly smaller. Disregard small one-use chisels or tiny carving tools that you can't get around making (maybe that will limit people who've made chisels to those folks who have done something like turn a power planer blade into a paring chisel).
Often, we make our own tools - at some point you cannot avoid it any longer. I started out wanting to make planes when I didn't need to but it took a while before I realized that the objective to make tools that you'll use has to hinge on making something as good as you can buy, or you'll make your own, find them deficient and buy what you would've in the first place.
Stems from the krenov discussion - I sometimes get messages on youtube from people who have questions, but they have questions about krenov planes and say they will eventually build a mortised plane. The planes I made the first four years I woodworked (granted, I didn't make that many) have all been thrown away by now. The planes I've made the last two, I haven't had to throw away any. I don't think the making took that much longer for the latter.
So, poll here - if you've made tools for yourself, are they now and forever the tools you turn to, or were they something fun to make but eventually you found bought planes better?
(my suggestion to people who want to build a mortised plane eventually is to build a handled mortised plane now, so that the second one they build is nice. Otherwise, the first two planes will be a non-handled krenov type plane that gets cast aside, and then when they build a mortised plane, they'll need to build a third. But once a decent mortised plane is made, the desire to continue making them for yourself sort of goes away).
Chisels are in the same category, except I'm sure the number of people who have made chisels is significantly smaller. Disregard small one-use chisels or tiny carving tools that you can't get around making (maybe that will limit people who've made chisels to those folks who have done something like turn a power planer blade into a paring chisel).