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Woodturning (rec.crafts.woodturning) To discuss tools, techniques, styles, materials, shows and competitions, education and educational materials related to woodturning. All skill levels are welcome, from art turners to production turners, beginners to masters. |
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#1
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![]() Now, before you scoff, allow me to elaborate. I don't buy HF stuff, and generally consider it one step below worthless. With that said, however, I was pleasantly surprised by this set of tools. This is NOT the Pittsburgh or the Windsor tool sets listed in the HF catalog. I was in need of a 1/2" round nose scraper, and ran across an 8 piece set of tools at a local Harbor Freight store. I went there purely out of desperation after finding the only other tools available locally were carbon steel / alloy AND vastly overpriced for their quality. This set does not appear in the HF catalog, and appears to be the same set sold by The Woodworkers Choice as Item 3494. The handles are well contoured, and dyed a dark rosewood color. (Presumably to emulate a Crown or Sorby handle.) They blades are marked HSS and are, of course, made in China. The blades are securely mounted, and there is a tight fitting, thick brass ring around the shank/handle junction. The 8 individual tools are sold in a lined, finger jointed wooden box. The set includes 3 gouges, 1 round scraper, 2 skews, 1 flat parting tool and 1 half-diamond parting tool. The business end of the tools were well shaped and smoothly ground. I took these things home, expecting the worst, but after using them for a few hours, found that they held their edge well, the handles were comfortable, and they were sufficiently well ground that they required no sharpening before use. Out of the box, I could shave a nice ribbon of green cherry from a mounted blank. Whether they are truly HSS remains to be seen, but they are considerably higher quality than the Buck Brothers tools I picked up on closeout at the BORG for $10. I can find no mention of a brand name, or another source for these tools. Only a similarity to the aforementioned TWC tools. The box is labeled: HSS Chisel Set Wood Turning 8PC High-Grade Quality Professional Quality Lathe Chisels SKU P35444 Wood Turning Set-HSS 8PC Made in China UPC 7 92363 35444 8 The set sold for $39.95. A winner in my book - and I'm a skeptic! FWIW, Greg G. |
#2
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This set does not appear in the HF catalog, and appears to be the same
set sold by The Woodworkers Choice as Item 3494. The handles are well contoured, and dyed a dark rosewood color. (Presumably to emulate a Crown or Sorby handle.) They blades are marked HSS and are, of course, made in China. The blades are securely mounted, and there is a tight fitting, thick brass ring around the shank/handle junction. The 8 individual tools are sold in a lined, finger jointed wooden box. The set includes 3 gouges, 1 round scraper, 2 skews, 1 flat parting tool and 1 half-diamond parting tool. The business end of the tools were well shaped and smoothly ground. I couldn't get any pages of the woodworker's choice to work other than the main page, but the HF chisel set that I've used for about a year and a half sounds nearly identical - the only variation being the variety of chisels, I got one skew and two scrapers. Because the two scrapers were identical, I ground one to a different profile. Overall, I've considered them to be perfectly adequate for my needs. Harbor Freight isn't completely useless, just mostly so. steve |
#3
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I am also a HF skeptic and I too bought the same set of turning tools.
Being new to turning, and not having much spare cash after buying the lathe, I thought these would be a great cheap starter set to learn how to turn and sharpen without fear of destroying an expensive set. Although I have nothing to compare them to, I really have no complaints about them thus far. They are sized well, comfortable to use and they seem to hold an edge well. On the other hand, whenever I decide to purchase a good set, I have a cheap set to regrind into other profiles. While I was at HF I also grabbed several 50 yd. rolls of 1" emery cloth in assorted grits for I think $3or$4 a roll. This cloth is nice for finish sanding spindles while still in the lathe. -dave Greg G. wrote in message ... Now, before you scoff, allow me to elaborate. I don't buy HF stuff, and generally consider it one step below worthless. With that said, however, I was pleasantly surprised by this set of tools. This is NOT the Pittsburgh or the Windsor tool sets listed in the HF catalog. I was in need of a 1/2" round nose scraper, and ran across an 8 piece set of tools at a local Harbor Freight store. I went there purely out of desperation after finding the only other tools available locally were carbon steel / alloy AND vastly overpriced for their quality. This set does not appear in the HF catalog, and appears to be the same set sold by The Woodworkers Choice as Item 3494. The handles are well contoured, and dyed a dark rosewood color. (Presumably to emulate a Crown or Sorby handle.) They blades are marked HSS and are, of course, made in China. The blades are securely mounted, and there is a tight fitting, thick brass ring around the shank/handle junction. The 8 individual tools are sold in a lined, finger jointed wooden box. The set includes 3 gouges, 1 round scraper, 2 skews, 1 flat parting tool and 1 half-diamond parting tool. The business end of the tools were well shaped and smoothly ground. I took these things home, expecting the worst, but after using them for a few hours, found that they held their edge well, the handles were comfortable, and they were sufficiently well ground that they required no sharpening before use. Out of the box, I could shave a nice ribbon of green cherry from a mounted blank. Whether they are truly HSS remains to be seen, but they are considerably higher quality than the Buck Brothers tools I picked up on closeout at the BORG for $10. I can find no mention of a brand name, or another source for these tools. Only a similarity to the aforementioned TWC tools. The box is labeled: HSS Chisel Set Wood Turning 8PC High-Grade Quality Professional Quality Lathe Chisels SKU P35444 Wood Turning Set-HSS 8PC Made in China UPC 7 92363 35444 8 The set sold for $39.95. A winner in my book - and I'm a skeptic! FWIW, Greg G. |
#4
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On Fri, 08 Oct 2004 22:12:03 -0400, Greg G. wrote:
I have a completely different view of HF.. I love it... IMHO, you get what you pay for, and a lot of the stuff I buy doesn't need to be 1st class... Though I agree that I wouldn't buy lathe chisels, precision tools, or things like that there, I'm often online ordering their sanding disks and belts, bench clamps, etc..... If you are looking for supplies of seldom used stuff, and expect to get what you pay for (there ARE no free lunches *g*) it's a great place to shop and they ship free if you spend $50... and it's hard NOT to spend $50 there.. YMMV (and probably will) Now, before you scoff, allow me to elaborate. I don't buy HF stuff, and generally consider it one step below worthless. With that said, however, I was pleasantly surprised by this set of tools. This is NOT the Pittsburgh or the Windsor tool sets listed in the HF catalog. I was in need of a 1/2" round nose scraper, and ran across an 8 piece set of tools at a local Harbor Freight store. I went there purely out of desperation after finding the only other tools available locally were carbon steel / alloy AND vastly overpriced for their quality. This set does not appear in the HF catalog, and appears to be the same set sold by The Woodworkers Choice as Item 3494. The handles are well contoured, and dyed a dark rosewood color. (Presumably to emulate a Crown or Sorby handle.) They blades are marked HSS and are, of course, made in China. The blades are securely mounted, and there is a tight fitting, thick brass ring around the shank/handle junction. The 8 individual tools are sold in a lined, finger jointed wooden box. The set includes 3 gouges, 1 round scraper, 2 skews, 1 flat parting tool and 1 half-diamond parting tool. The business end of the tools were well shaped and smoothly ground. I took these things home, expecting the worst, but after using them for a few hours, found that they held their edge well, the handles were comfortable, and they were sufficiently well ground that they required no sharpening before use. Out of the box, I could shave a nice ribbon of green cherry from a mounted blank. Whether they are truly HSS remains to be seen, but they are considerably higher quality than the Buck Brothers tools I picked up on closeout at the BORG for $10. I can find no mention of a brand name, or another source for these tools. Only a similarity to the aforementioned TWC tools. The box is labeled: HSS Chisel Set Wood Turning 8PC High-Grade Quality Professional Quality Lathe Chisels SKU P35444 Wood Turning Set-HSS 8PC Made in China UPC 7 92363 35444 8 The set sold for $39.95. A winner in my book - and I'm a skeptic! FWIW, Greg G. |
#5
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Larry Blanchard said:
In article , Greg G. says... This set does not appear in the HF catalog, and appears to be the same set sold by The Woodworkers Choice as Item 3494. The handles are well contoured, and dyed a dark rosewood color. (Presumably to emulate a Crown or Sorby handle.) They blades are marked HSS and are, of course, made in China. When these appeared a few years ago, there was a discussion of them on the woodturning newsgroup. The consensus was that they were well worth the money, but experienced turners would probably want to turn a new set of handles. As mentioned in the OP, these are not the tools that appear in the HF catalogs. The handles are these are almost identical to the crown handles, albeit not real rosewood. I've seen the Windsor sets previously discussed, and the handles are thick and natural colored. These are profiled completely differently and stained a rosewood color. Perhaps they read the wreck and altered the handle profiles? I bought a set (on sale, when else) and am ashamed to admit I've never gotten around to trying them. Too much other stuff to have time for woodturning. I understand completely. I'm getting to spend some time in the shop because SWMBO is off visiting friends and family in CA. Last winter, I didn't get a chance to do ANYTHING in the shop. This year is gonna be different - yea right... ;-) Greg G. |
#6
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On Sat, 09 Oct 2004 18:03:43 -0400, Greg G. wrote:
Larry Blanchard said: In article , Greg G. says... This set does not appear in the HF catalog, and appears to be the same set sold by The Woodworkers Choice as Item 3494. The handles are well contoured, and dyed a dark rosewood color. (Presumably to emulate a Crown or Sorby handle.) They blades are marked HSS and are, of course, made in China. When these appeared a few years ago, there was a discussion of them on the woodturning newsgroup. The consensus was that they were well worth the money, but experienced turners would probably want to turn a new set of handles. As mentioned in the OP, these are not the tools that appear in the HF catalogs. The handles are these are almost identical to the crown handles, albeit not real rosewood. I've seen the Windsor sets previously discussed, and the handles are thick and natural colored. the windsor turning tools come in clear finished handles and dark reddish brown finished handles. mine are the dark ones. These are profiled completely differently and stained a rosewood color. Perhaps they read the wreck and altered the handle profiles? I bought a set (on sale, when else) and am ashamed to admit I've never gotten around to trying them. Too much other stuff to have time for woodturning. I understand completely. I'm getting to spend some time in the shop because SWMBO is off visiting friends and family in CA. Last winter, I didn't get a chance to do ANYTHING in the shop. This year is gonna be different - yea right... ;-) Greg G. |
#7
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Steve Wolfe said:
I couldn't get any pages of the woodworker's choice to work other than the main page, but the HF chisel set that I've used for about a year and a half sounds nearly identical - the only variation being the variety of chisels, I got one skew and two scrapers. Because the two scrapers were identical, I ground one to a different profile. Overall, I've considered them to be perfectly adequate for my needs. Harbor Freight isn't completely useless, just mostly so. Mostly... ;-) Actually, I went back and bought another set so I would have spares and could practice/experiment with regrinding different profiles on something that didn't cost me $95.00. I turned a lidded vessel yesterday, and I am quite pleased with their performance - especially for the price! I can fill in the holes with better/pricier units. My biggest disappointment was the lack of a bowl gouge. I was thinking of altering the 3/8" gouge in the set with a steep side bevel and other mods for this purpose. But from what I now understand, most bowl gouges are apparently made from rod steel and flex more than the hard, brittle HSS used in these gouges. I'm no expert, however... Greg G. |
#8
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Dave jackson said:
I am also a HF skeptic and I too bought the same set of turning tools. Being new to turning, and not having much spare cash after buying the lathe, I thought these would be a great cheap starter set to learn how to turn and sharpen without fear of destroying an expensive set. Although I have nothing to compare them to, I really have no complaints about them thus far. They are sized well, comfortable to use and they seem to hold an edge well. On the other hand, whenever I decide to purchase a good set, I have a cheap set to regrind into other profiles. While I was at HF I also grabbed several 50 yd. rolls of 1" emery cloth in assorted grits for I think $3or$4 a roll. This cloth is nice for finish sanding spindles while still in the lathe. -dave My sentiments exactly. Greg G. |
#9
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mac davis said:
I have a completely different view of HF.. I love it... IMHO, you get what you pay for, and a lot of the stuff I buy doesn't need to be 1st class... Though I agree that I wouldn't buy lathe chisels, precision tools, or things like that there, I'm often online ordering their sanding disks and belts, bench clamps, etc..... If you are looking for supplies of seldom used stuff, and expect to get what you pay for (there ARE no free lunches *g*) it's a great place to shop and they ship free if you spend $50... and it's hard NOT to spend $50 there.. YMMV (and probably will) I am a little leery of their motorized things that spin at high RPM. I did see a set of electric "haircutting" shears that I almost bought to shave the dog with... I was afraid they would just entangle the hair and stall, leaving us with a dog with a huge bald spot from where we had to cut the Chinese POS from her coat... ;-) What bothers me the most about the place is that almost everything is "imported". As it getting to be in Wal-Mart, Target, and insert vendor's name here. WTF is happening to our economy? I have a box of marbles. I trade some to your for your slingshot. You trade some to me for fixing your bicycle. Millions of other people do this same thing - everybody's happy, and the marbles stay here, being swapped around for various things. Enter country X. I give X some marbles for a bike tire. Country X hoards the marbles and doesn't ever trade them back. Millions of other people do the same and you lose your job at the bike tire plant. Eventually we have no more marbles to trade with. Making more marbles simply devalues the value of our remaining marbles. They take our marbles and buy land and invest in banking ventures - and eventually have a controlling interest in every facet of our lives - including the production of ALL of our goods. We are losing control of out own destinies. Anyway... Enough OT ramblings... ;-) Greg G. |
#10
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Larry Blanchard said:
You're right. AFAIK, they've never been in the catalog. The original appearance I was talking about was on their web site and the handles were "rosewood" even then. Gee, and I thought I was getting something special... ;-) IIRC, I got them at the local HF store, not the web site. But I'm not sure, it's been several years. I've looked for them anywhere else. I've not found them on the HF web site or in their catalog. Whatever - they do work, and seem a pretty good deal. I can't quite justify $350 for Sorby tools just yet... Greg G. |
#11
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On Mon, 11 Oct 2004 07:37:32 -0400, Greg G. wrote:
mac davis said: I have a completely different view of HF.. I love it... IMHO, you get what you pay for, and a lot of the stuff I buy doesn't need to be 1st class... Though I agree that I wouldn't buy lathe chisels, precision tools, or things like that there, I'm often online ordering their sanding disks and belts, bench clamps, etc..... If you are looking for supplies of seldom used stuff, and expect to get what you pay for (there ARE no free lunches *g*) it's a great place to shop and they ship free if you spend $50... and it's hard NOT to spend $50 there.. YMMV (and probably will) I am a little leery of their motorized things that spin at high RPM. I did see a set of electric "haircutting" shears that I almost bought to shave the dog with... I was afraid they would just entangle the hair and stall, leaving us with a dog with a huge bald spot from where we had to cut the Chinese POS from her coat... ;-) snip rant.. you're preaching to the choir) I've used and abused my sander for almost 3 years now... never had a problem, especially with the motor.. I've sanded things that were too big and/or heavy for it several times and it seems to have lots of power.. My budget was small and my sanding not precision, so at the time (and I'd do it again) the choice was a craftsman 4" belt/6" disk bench model or the HF 6" x 48" belt/9" disk with floor stand... The HF sander was $10 more than the Sears one, so it was "bang for the buck".. I've had to made a better table support for the sander, but I might have had to for the sears one, too.. the idea of maintaining a 90 degree level with a set screw on a rod just doesn't cut it.. |
#12
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Larry Blanchard said:
Out of curiosity, I Googled rec.crafts.woodturning and found a mention of the HSS set from Harbor Freight in 1999. So they've been around at least that long. BTW, they were $39 then. What are they now? Same thing - $39.95. No inflation here... Greg G. |
#13
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mac davis said:
On Mon, 11 Oct 2004 07:37:32 -0400, Greg G. wrote: snip rant.. you're preaching to the choir) Sorry about that - had a few minutes of time to blow and you were the graceful recipient. I was rather annoyed because the USA made Shop-Vac with 1 hours use released it's magic smoke earlier that day, but the Chinese stuff is still working. I've used and abused my sander for almost 3 years now... never had a problem, especially with the motor.. I've sanded things that were too big and/or heavy for it several times and it seems to have lots of power.. My budget was small and my sanding not precision, so at the time (and I'd do it again) the choice was a craftsman 4" belt/6" disk bench model or the HF 6" x 48" belt/9" disk with floor stand... The HF sander was $10 more than the Sears one, so it was "bang for the buck".. I understand - I have some "cheap" tools myself. I just don't talk about them in public. ;-) Several are rather crude - but they did the job I bought them for. I've had to made a better table support for the sander, but I might have had to for the sears one, too.. the idea of maintaining a 90 degree level with a set screw on a rod just doesn't cut it.. I used to own a lot of Sears tools, bought in the seventies - they were made pretty well, and the one lone survivor of a fire still works great. But I generally avoid them anymore. Greg G. |
#14
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I, as many previous posters, have not been a big HF fan. This is especially
true of their heavier machinery. However, I have had a couple of things come up that have swayed me (a little). 1) A couple of years ago I purchased one of their mortisers just because I needed one for a job, and it was on sale at what seemed a rediculous price. I had just returned a Delta drill press kit because it didn't fit my older drill press. The HF machine came with a set of 4 mortise cutters that looked almost identical to the returned Delta cutters, the machine was quiet, had good power, some of the metal seems a bit soft and the hold down mechanism sucked. After getting over the hold down shortcoming I gave it some test runs and lo-and-behold it cut square holes! It fact it does so quite well. I have used the machine on quite a few projects and have more than gotten my $99 worth. I am planning a future project that will improve the hold down capability with home-made hardware but for now we are gettting along fairly well. 2) An acquaintance, laid off from aircraft manufacturing 2-3 years ago, was getting himself into finish carpentry. Short of cash, he purchased a couple of HF's nailers: a finish nailer and a brad nailer. Both were bought at VERY low prices. He told me he always intended to upgrade after he got on his feet and the "cheap" HF nailers wore out. He told me a couple of months ago that he is doing well with his business but those ^&#)@ nailers won't wear out. He also said if they do, he'll probably replace them with the same tools, if available. He also said he is surprised at the number of old-timer's using the same tools. They keep their Delta and PC nailer cases in the back of their trailers for folks to see and beat the HF machines up on the job. Further proof that brand snobbery is probably a bad thing - You need to research your purchases and touch each tool before you buy. RonB |
#15
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On Tue, 12 Oct 2004 13:54:33 -0500, "RonB" wrote:
I, as many previous posters, have not been a big HF fan. This is especially true of their heavier machinery. However, I have had a couple of things come up that have swayed me (a little). 1) A couple of years ago I purchased one of their mortisers just because I needed one for a job, and it was on sale at what seemed a rediculous price. I had just returned a Delta drill press kit because it didn't fit my older drill press. The HF machine came with a set of 4 mortise cutters that looked almost identical to the returned Delta cutters, the machine was quiet, had good power, some of the metal seems a bit soft and the hold down mechanism sucked. After getting over the hold down shortcoming I gave it some test runs and lo-and-behold it cut square holes! It fact it does so quite well. I have used the machine on quite a few projects and have more than gotten my $99 worth. I am planning a future project that will improve the hold down capability with home-made hardware but for now we are gettting along fairly well. 2) An acquaintance, laid off from aircraft manufacturing 2-3 years ago, was getting himself into finish carpentry. Short of cash, he purchased a couple of HF's nailers: a finish nailer and a brad nailer. Both were bought at VERY low prices. He told me he always intended to upgrade after he got on his feet and the "cheap" HF nailers wore out. He told me a couple of months ago that he is doing well with his business but those ^&#)@ nailers won't wear out. He also said if they do, he'll probably replace them with the same tools, if available. He also said he is surprised at the number of old-timer's using the same tools. They keep their Delta and PC nailer cases in the back of their trailers for folks to see and beat the HF machines up on the job. Further proof that brand snobbery is probably a bad thing - You need to research your purchases and touch each tool before you buy. RonB my wife reminded me last night of the meat slicer that we bought at HF a few years ago... (how's that for OT?) We thought that e might use one, but didn't want a $75 - $100 appliance laying around if we ended up not liking it.. Bought the HF cheapie for $19.95 (magic tv number!!!) and us the hell out if it... no need to replace it, as it does a great job.. |
#16
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![]() snip Further proof that brand snobbery is probably a bad thing - You need to research your purchases and touch each tool before you buy. RonB If you look closely at many name brand tools, you will find they are just about twins of each other, with a few cosmetic changes. It seems that these days a lot of tools are made to the same design, probably in the same overseas factory. I have a hard time believing that having a specific brand name on a product makes it work any better. OTOH, there are times when you get what you pay for. |
#17
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Bob Peterson woke up and had the following to say....:
snip Further proof that brand snobbery is probably a bad thing - You need to research your purchases and touch each tool before you buy. RonB If you look closely at many name brand tools, you will find they are just about twins of each other, with a few cosmetic changes. It seems that these days a lot of tools are made to the same design, probably in the same overseas factory. I have a hard time believing that having a specific brand name on a product makes it work any better. OTOH, there are times when you get what you pay for. I am a big fan of their Pitsburg 6,12, and 18" clamps. I proably have 2 dozen in the shop and will buy more once they go on sale. |
#18
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![]() If you look closely at many name brand tools, you will find they are just about twins of each other, with a few cosmetic changes. It seems that these days a lot of tools are made to the same design, probably in the same overseas factory. I have a hard time believing that having a specific brand name on a product makes it work any better. OTOH, there are times when you get what you pay for. Oh yeah? Take a look through these links of tools made by Oneway. With the steel grain structure they profess... awesome. Snobbery not intended, just impression. http://www.oneway.on.ca/tools/index.htm But if I were beginning turning and at my financial level I would go to HF, even for the lathe. Alex |
#19
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![]() I am a big fan of their Pitsburg 6,12, and 18" clamps. I proably have 2 dozen in the shop and will buy more once they go on sale. Irony. I bought 14 1/2" Pittsburg pipe clamp fixtures recently @$2.99 each to help with building my 1st bench, and last tuesday just bought 14 34" black pipes. These things work really well too! Hard to imagine that many clamps for only $120. HF is great for some things. Alex |
#20
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Oddly, it's grain size in the castings which gave us fits with Grizzly stuff
at school. Castings were apparently quick-cooled versus properly annealed, and they broke in _huge_ crystals. Maybe that's one of the shortcuts that makes apparent clones different? "AAvK" wrote in message news:%subd.3949$bk1.823@fed1read05... If you look closely at many name brand tools, you will find they are just about twins of each other, with a few cosmetic changes. It seems that these days a lot of tools are made to the same design, probably in the same overseas factory. I have a hard time believing that having a specific brand name on a product makes it work any better. OTOH, there are times when you get what you pay for. Oh yeah? Take a look through these links of tools made by Oneway. With the steel grain structure they profess... awesome. Snobbery not intended, just impression. http://www.oneway.on.ca/tools/index.htm But if I were beginning turning and at my financial level I would go to HF, even for the lathe. Alex |
#21
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Anyone notice that running into a neighbor or fellow woodworker at Harbor
Freight is probably like running into them at an adult theater or bookstore? "Well.......I don't come here very much. Just curious." (sheepish) |
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