custard
Established Member
Ask yourself which of these statements most closely fits your woodworking,
A. I often spend several straight hours thicknessing boards to finished dimensions with hand tools.
B. I have a machine that does the grunt work, I mainly use my bench for joint cutting.
If it's A. then be guided by the older books. Before the 1960's (or 70's...or 80's) few hobbyist woodworkers had access to machinery, so those older books are as appropriate for you as the day they were written.
If it's B. then in terms of the evolution of woodworking you're right at the cutting edge of modernity. Because it's such a conservative occupation there's a huge reticence to changing established custom and practise. My guess is that we're in the middle of seeing bench heights sprout up. Right now 38" is seen as daring, but in twenty years time 40" and 42" will be commonplace. The top of my Moxon vice is 45" above the floor...and I've never enjoyed dovetailing so much!
A. I often spend several straight hours thicknessing boards to finished dimensions with hand tools.
B. I have a machine that does the grunt work, I mainly use my bench for joint cutting.
If it's A. then be guided by the older books. Before the 1960's (or 70's...or 80's) few hobbyist woodworkers had access to machinery, so those older books are as appropriate for you as the day they were written.
If it's B. then in terms of the evolution of woodworking you're right at the cutting edge of modernity. Because it's such a conservative occupation there's a huge reticence to changing established custom and practise. My guess is that we're in the middle of seeing bench heights sprout up. Right now 38" is seen as daring, but in twenty years time 40" and 42" will be commonplace. The top of my Moxon vice is 45" above the floor...and I've never enjoyed dovetailing so much!