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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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Posted to rec.woodworking
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On 3/6/2018 5:18 PM, DerbyDad03 wrote:
On Tuesday, March 6, 2018 at 1:46:39 PM UTC-5, Leon wrote: On 3/6/2018 11:02 AM, dpb wrote: On 3/5/2018 9:08 AM, Leon wrote: On 3/5/2018 8:46 AM, dpb wrote: On 3/4/2018 3:49 PM, Leon wrote: On 3/3/2018 5:03 PM, dpb wrote: On 3/3/2018 11:23 AM, Leon wrote: On 3/3/2018 8:57 AM, Brewster wrote: ... I'm still amazed at how a tree can be peeled so perfectly like that. It just don't seem right 8^) -BR Yeah, a very sharp knife on a lathe like machine.Â* Little waste! VERRRRY, VERRRRRRRRRRY sharp, indeed! And to really boggle your mind, just how sharp are the cutters that are used for for making "3 ply" plywood that is only 1/64" thick?? That is not even a hair thicker than .005" for each ply, assuming glue is thinner than that. https://www.easybuiltmodels.com/ply.htm ... Indeed.Â* I've not seen one of the super-thin ply mills but many of the furniture-grade veneer mills use a rotating squared blank that isn't spun on its center but rotated like a cam against the knife. That's cutting flitches for book-matching and the like, not face sheets like for ply, of course. -- Wow I would like to see that! Yeah, too bad when I was doing all that stuff lo! those many years ago there wasn't such a thing as a cell phone with video capability; No Kidding somewhere in the depths of the storage/moving boxes are photos, but those haven't been unpacked since the move back to the farm in 2000... I miss analog/film, except for that part. ;~) I don't miss analog film. I'm doing so much better now than if I had stayed at the big yellow box. The kick in the butt they gave me (and 60K+ others) was the best thing they could do for me. Certain things I do not miss. The cost of film and developing plus storage. I was talking to a friend the other day and mentioned that I missed using film. With film you have to think about your shot, it was going to cost you 15 cents to see the result. And that was 40 years ago. I only liked shooting slide film. That film was easy to develop in the kitchen sink and you could immediately see the results with out having to process further and transfer to paper, like you do with negative film. I studied light and lenses in college so learning to shoot a relatively manual SLR and get the effects that I wanted came pretty easy for me. Today with digital it is point and shoot a hundred pics. And hope that a few are keepers. It is letting the camera do more and you doing less. And shooting fast still leaves you with artifacts and noise on the point and shooters. I think digital photography is great, but like the dwindling number of woodworkers, the process is lost. I also used to play a LOT of golf, 5 days a week when I was in school. I walked and did not use a golf cart. Today it is hard to find a course, in this area, that will let you walk. Again, if you can ride to where your ball ended up you really don't try as much to get a good shot. The better your shot the less walking in the weeds you do and the fewer balls you lose. ;~) They expected film to be their cash cow forever while other imaging companies were leaving them in the dust. In reality, it was great for me that they were so stubborn/short sighted. |
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