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Woodworking (rec.woodworking) Discussion forum covering all aspects of working with wood. All levels of expertise are encouraged to particiapte. |
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This afternoon I tried to find some sort of tool in my garage (I forget what
it was). The search was more difficult than it should be. The original owner of the house was a "NEATNESS FREAK". He had the builder install a solid wall of cupboards on the back and sides of the garage. This is well and good . . . . EXCEPT . . . he put doors on them. Shelves - - - yes. Cupboards . . . NO. Instead of standing in the middle of the garage and doing a 180 degree scan (possible with shelves), I spent a fair amount of time opening doors and rummaging through the contents. Which brings up the subject of this rant: unnecessary, unneeded, unremembered, unexplainable tools. I couldn't believe the amount of gadgetry that has silted up the cabinet space in this garage since we bought the place. Someday I'll make an inventory of all this accumulated lunacy. In the meantime, it's interesting to contemplate the reasons for buying this stuff in the first place. It seems to fall into four categories: 1) TOOLS THAT HAVE BEEN REPLACED BY SOMETHING BETTER: I feel pretty good about these. They did their job when I needed them. Here is a pair of oil stones. They were replaced by a set of Japanese water stones which was an excellent sharpening system until I was clued in to "Scarey Sharp T". Several thin bladed bow saws (scroll saws) enabled me to do so some fairly exotic curved pieces (break arch cabinets, cabriole legs). It took a while, but they got the job done. Then I bought a Delta 16-inch band saw which does a great job on hardwood, softwood, PVC, frozen hamburger and dried gourds. I don't know how I ever got along without it. 2) TOOLS THAT SERVED THEIR PURPOSE FOR A ONE-TIME PROJECT: Mostly little stuff. A lot of router bits used to match molding or trim; a heat gun for curing epoxy on a cedar strip canoe. A large box of artifacts from tiling a 400 square foot kitchen. This includes sponges, chalk line, trowels and a diamond saw blade for a wet saw. I rented the saw, bought the blade (it was expensive) and can't bring myself to throw it away and (God willing) will never use again. If I ever even think of tackling a tile job again, I hope someone whacks me upside the head with a tire tool (I have one of those too). 3) TOOLS ACQUIRED FOR A PROJECT THAT NEVER GOT OFF THE GROUND: A tapered auger bit - - I seriously intended to tackle a Windsor chair. A 2 3/4 -inch forstner bit in it's own nifty little wooden box with dovetail joints. A boat builders slick which weights about as much as the M-1 I carried in the army and twice as dangerous. What's the point of starting (or even contemplating) a new project unless it provides an opportunity to expand the tool inventory? 4) TOTALLY IRRATIONAL Y-CHROMOSOME TOOLS: These suckers hook us because they are so damned good looking. Successful business plans have been built around selling this stuff. The good folks at Bridge City Tool Works, Restoration Hardware, Brookstone , Lei Neilson Tools, Sharper Image and Sur le Table have raised the merchandising of cute but unnecessary or over designed gadgetry to an art form. My stuff that fits this list include a tri-square that looks like it belongs in an orchestra, hand-crafted block planes, several exotic-looking spokeshaves, and one of the sexiest sanding blocks to come down the pike. These things don't have to be useful or even logical. They're like surgically augmented breasts on women which automatically and inexplicably activate the drool reflex. I just turned up an exquisitely crafted adjustable dovetail joint template. British made. "Collett Engineering, Mount Hawke, Truro, Cornwall". Brass and brushed steel with a satin finish. It's beautiful. Spending money on this thing makes about as much sense as lug nuts on a birthday cake. In five metric minutes I could make one that would cost nothing - - in fact it would save me money. All I need is a protractor, straight edge, exacto knife and my wife's credit card. The real problem here is STORAGE SPACE. I know deep down in my heart of hearts that there is no way in hell that I'll stop buying these things. I also know that I will never sell, contribute or discard anything that even remotely looks like a tool. Meanwhile, inside the house (where it is air conditioned), my wife is working on her "Imelda Marcos Memorial Shoe Collection" the components, of which; she will never sell, contribute or discard. I seem to recall that the maximum size that a fish will grow to is determined by the size of it's aquarium. My garage has reached its max as far as a mega-tool inventory goes. . A bandsaw, shopsmith, workbench and homemade table saw have pretty much filled the available space between the back wall and the front bumpers of a couple of vehicles. There are still all sorts of nooks and crannies in cupboards and cabinets for the inevitable purchases of irresistible little purchases that I definitely don't need but am certain to buy. |
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