Woodworking (rec.woodworking) Discussion forum covering all aspects of working with wood. All levels of expertise are encouraged to particiapte.

Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
  #1   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 164
Default WW Show - a Good Experience - for once

Went to the Chantilly, VA show Saturday.
Got married - for the 5 minutes it took to get in as "bring a spouse
free", with a divorce once we crossed the ticket taking threshold.

Initially, the show was the usual disappointment primarily due to the
lack of variety.

But, things took a turn for the better at the Fein booth (Glen Echo
Hardware in Bethesda). Needed to get replacement E_cut blades for the
Multimaster since I found out the hard way that they're not so hot for
cutting thru plaster (drywall, maybe; plaster, NO). Figured this out
after the teeth on the e-cut blade AND the sawzall blade all
disappeared after using them to cut thru my plaster walls.

Mentioned this to the guy in the booth and asked what would be the
right blade. He told me the grout cutting blade (duh!). Anyway,
after settling on which 3 pack to get, he opened a case of odds n
ends, pulled out a brand new e-cut blade, a slightly used grout blade
and handed them to me. Said, the e-cut was to replace the one I
ruined and the grout was to use to finish the plaster work I had left.
Very nice bonus I wasn't expecting.

Discovered how nice the Makita Li-Ion tools are. Alas, no Milwaukee
to be found for comparison.

But, the best was yet to come.

Went over to the Apollo booth to relate my tale of woe from a few
months ago, where I called customer support a few times, emailed them,
and got nary a response until one of the guys here interceded on my
behalf (thanx again!), finally prompting a call from tech support.

But the main reason to stop by Apollo was to ask about some of the
finishing issues I started having (that I posted here as well - just
when I thought I had things figured out AND was on the parts that
needed a perfect finish, things went into the proverbial handbasket).
He directed me over to the guy running the Finishing Lectures. Sat in
on the one just starting.

After the lecture, went up to talk to Mike Anderson, the lecturer. He
was a WEALTH of information. Had an Apollo HVLP system set up so he
demo'd how much finish I should be putting down on the wood (something
a phone call wouldn't have accomplished) - way less than I was doing -
and I thought I was being scrimpy. No wonder it wasn't drying as fast
as the directions stated (I thought it was too cold in the work area).
Talked to me about gun adjustments and set me straight there as well.
In fact, now that I think about it, in my mad scramble to try to
figure out what was happening, I was making things worse from the
knobs adjustments side of things.

The chat with Mike was VERY helpful for me and I can't wait to get
back to my cabinets (still working on prepping the kitchen for cabinet
hanging; drywall needs mud and tape, prime and paint, then I'm ready
for cabs). He also gave me a card and said I could email him if I had
any further questions.

So, in the end, because some important questions were answered, the
show worked out very well for me. In spite of the lighter wallet...

Renata



  #2   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 211
Default WW Show - a Good Experience - for once

Congrats on the marriage, best wishes to you, Sorry to hear it didn't work
out, your better off now. Sounds like a fun show though, what a way to
drown your divorce depression.
"Renata" wrote in message
...
Went to the Chantilly, VA show Saturday.
Got married - for the 5 minutes it took to get in as "bring a spouse
free", with a divorce once we crossed the ticket taking threshold.

Initially, the show was the usual disappointment primarily due to the
lack of variety.

But, things took a turn for the better at the Fein booth (Glen Echo
Hardware in Bethesda). Needed to get replacement E_cut blades for the
Multimaster since I found out the hard way that they're not so hot for
cutting thru plaster (drywall, maybe; plaster, NO). Figured this out
after the teeth on the e-cut blade AND the sawzall blade all
disappeared after using them to cut thru my plaster walls.

Mentioned this to the guy in the booth and asked what would be the
right blade. He told me the grout cutting blade (duh!). Anyway,
after settling on which 3 pack to get, he opened a case of odds n
ends, pulled out a brand new e-cut blade, a slightly used grout blade
and handed them to me. Said, the e-cut was to replace the one I
ruined and the grout was to use to finish the plaster work I had left.
Very nice bonus I wasn't expecting.

Discovered how nice the Makita Li-Ion tools are. Alas, no Milwaukee
to be found for comparison.

But, the best was yet to come.

Went over to the Apollo booth to relate my tale of woe from a few
months ago, where I called customer support a few times, emailed them,
and got nary a response until one of the guys here interceded on my
behalf (thanx again!), finally prompting a call from tech support.

But the main reason to stop by Apollo was to ask about some of the
finishing issues I started having (that I posted here as well - just
when I thought I had things figured out AND was on the parts that
needed a perfect finish, things went into the proverbial handbasket).
He directed me over to the guy running the Finishing Lectures. Sat in
on the one just starting.

After the lecture, went up to talk to Mike Anderson, the lecturer. He
was a WEALTH of information. Had an Apollo HVLP system set up so he
demo'd how much finish I should be putting down on the wood (something
a phone call wouldn't have accomplished) - way less than I was doing -
and I thought I was being scrimpy. No wonder it wasn't drying as fast
as the directions stated (I thought it was too cold in the work area).
Talked to me about gun adjustments and set me straight there as well.
In fact, now that I think about it, in my mad scramble to try to
figure out what was happening, I was making things worse from the
knobs adjustments side of things.

The chat with Mike was VERY helpful for me and I can't wait to get
back to my cabinets (still working on prepping the kitchen for cabinet
hanging; drywall needs mud and tape, prime and paint, then I'm ready
for cabs). He also gave me a card and said I could email him if I had
any further questions.

So, in the end, because some important questions were answered, the
show worked out very well for me. In spite of the lighter wallet...

Renata





Reply
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules

Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Baltimore/January show any good? Toller Woodworking 3 November 4th 06 11:30 AM
Chicago Woodworking Show...any good? Denver Woody Woodworking 1 October 10th 06 12:42 PM
Good background to show off wood? Tana Woodworking 2 May 1st 06 03:23 PM
Good show in 2 weeks in Connecticut Waynemak Metalworking 0 September 6th 05 02:12 AM
the router workshop show any good? Ah10201 Woodworking 32 November 22nd 04 01:00 PM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 07:03 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2024 DIYbanter.
The comments are property of their posters.
 

About Us

"It's about DIY & home improvement"