Do you have a brand where you actually do not need a loan?Festool
Do you have a brand where you actually do not need a loan?Festool
Find the video from Matt Estlea where he worked on a Amazon £20 plane. The time it took him to get it sorted, he could have got a Lie Nielsen for the time=money equation.
I think it's less relevant with power tools
I hate my stanley No 9 block plane. It's never cut well, and thats on the flat. On actual endgrain,it's supposed design, it chatters like it invented the word chatter.
My fav is my No6 Record with solid tungsten blade and 2 piece stay set cap. Whispers through anything, curly to opposing grains, nothing tears out with it.
It's the A2 steel LN insist in using for their irons. A2 might be better at edge holding on problem wood, but unnecessary for most woodworking. Harder to sharpen, and not as keen an edge as O1.I'm fortunate to have a Lie Nielsen 140 skew plane...
...The blade is a bit of a sod to sharpen mind you.
It's the A2 steel LN insist in using for their irons. A2 might be better at edge holding on problem wood, but unnecessary for most woodworking. Harder to sharpen, and not as keen an edge as O1.
Cheers, Vann.
Very true, but this doesn't just apply in poor countries. Anyone on a fixed income could view things that way. It doesn't matter if your hourly rate is £300, if you don't have the option of doing an extra paid hour instead of fettling a tool, it is a false choice.I have seen this video earlier this year, but it is a bit misleading. He tells that his hourly rate is 30 GBP per hour. There are countries in the world, where people cannot earn 30 pounds in 2 weeks or even a month. So if someone is from Nigeria or Bangladesh, he would rather spend hours tweaking a low-end hand plane than estimating his time worth 30 pounds per hour and buying a Lie Nielsen.
Maybe not all in the same factory but certainly the East and China in particular, one day they will price themselves out of the market like we did and then some other cheaper economy will take over. One of our issues is that we have a very strong HSE which takes away some of competitiveness, they can do and use things we just would not.
Do you have a brand where you actually do not need a loan?
This is true, but i guess it comes back to what time you want to spend working on your tools to get them to perform adequately vs actually making stuff. You raise a valid question in the OP but its not as straightforward as you make it sound. For example, you say that 100 years ago makers made a superior product with cheap tools but at the same time, so many of us claim old tools, in particular old machinery is better than the stuff made today.I have seen this video earlier this year, but it is a bit misleading. He tells that his hourly rate is 30 GBP per hour. There are countries in the world, where people cannot earn 30 pounds in 2 weeks or even a month. So if someone is from Nigeria or Bangladesh, he would rather spend hours tweaking a low-end hand plane than estimating his time worth 30 pounds per hour and buying a Lie Nielsen.
I did have a Hitachi (or whatever they be called nowadays) & can't remember the chuck loosening on it. I also have an AEG which I keep for heavy work which doesn't loosen. What's happened to AEG 'stuff', I wonder?Can you advise me of a brand where this does not happen?
I have Makita tools made in Japan, China, Europe, & believe it or not, UK! Dewalt made in Mexico, China, & Czech Rep.aren't most power tools made in the same factory these days?
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