Daniel
Member
I have been thinking of adding a few additional pieces of equipment to my shop.
1. Buffer
2. disc/ belt sander
3. jointer
First a bit of background. When I first started putting my shop together I knew very little about a lot of the equipment. Mainly my purchases where pure price driven. I ended up with a lot of machines that where far short on the quality.
A $100 floor standing drill press that is still in use but has major quill problems. A $100 lathe that has seen enough use to average about 50 cents an hour in costs by now but has been a struggle every minute of it. A craftsman 14 inch tilting head band saw that was the tool that finally convinced me to never buy another Craftsman tool for the shop again.
A craftsman Table saw that is as big a disappointment as the Band saw was.
So far I have replaces the Band saw with a Grizzly GO555, bought two new lathes, one a mini metal lathe and a HF 34706 which is basically the same lathe as a Jet 1236. a Radial arm saw that is a dream. a scroll saw that is not top of the line but is a very good saw.
So far I am very happy with the 2nd round of buying equipment so I want to keep that track record going.
I am not looking for the most expensive name brand tools. I am of the general opinon that there is a line between low quality cheap tools and high priced name brands where the high quality mid price stuff lives. that is the sort of equipment I am looking for.
Buffer, I want a dedicated buffer since there are 3 people working in my shop at this time. The wheels need to be a common size so that they can be replaced easily and variety in wheel types available is a plus. It is likely I will use this to buff anything that can be buffed.
Basically I know squat about buffers or what features are available or which ones are desirable and which ones are not.
Disc/ Belt sander. this one I am really concerned about. it the parts cannot be set and stay where you put them. don't bother mentioning them. I don't like having to give handles that extra little bump and then wonder if they are going to hold or not. I want the tool to do the job right the first time every time. May seem a bit much over a disc sander until yo think about relying on it to put that perfect edge and angle on your work.
Again never owned one so the field is pretty much wide open on this one.
Jointer. Actually I may hold off on this one and see how much that disc sander will do for me but once again quality without paying for all the advertising of the name brands.
I like the HF knock offs of top of hte line tools and am pretty familiar with what needs to be done to tweek them. but HF has far more garbage than it does really quality machines hiding under a rough looking skin.
Thanks all in advance.
1. Buffer
2. disc/ belt sander
3. jointer
First a bit of background. When I first started putting my shop together I knew very little about a lot of the equipment. Mainly my purchases where pure price driven. I ended up with a lot of machines that where far short on the quality.
A $100 floor standing drill press that is still in use but has major quill problems. A $100 lathe that has seen enough use to average about 50 cents an hour in costs by now but has been a struggle every minute of it. A craftsman 14 inch tilting head band saw that was the tool that finally convinced me to never buy another Craftsman tool for the shop again.
A craftsman Table saw that is as big a disappointment as the Band saw was.
So far I have replaces the Band saw with a Grizzly GO555, bought two new lathes, one a mini metal lathe and a HF 34706 which is basically the same lathe as a Jet 1236. a Radial arm saw that is a dream. a scroll saw that is not top of the line but is a very good saw.
So far I am very happy with the 2nd round of buying equipment so I want to keep that track record going.
I am not looking for the most expensive name brand tools. I am of the general opinon that there is a line between low quality cheap tools and high priced name brands where the high quality mid price stuff lives. that is the sort of equipment I am looking for.
Buffer, I want a dedicated buffer since there are 3 people working in my shop at this time. The wheels need to be a common size so that they can be replaced easily and variety in wheel types available is a plus. It is likely I will use this to buff anything that can be buffed.
Basically I know squat about buffers or what features are available or which ones are desirable and which ones are not.
Disc/ Belt sander. this one I am really concerned about. it the parts cannot be set and stay where you put them. don't bother mentioning them. I don't like having to give handles that extra little bump and then wonder if they are going to hold or not. I want the tool to do the job right the first time every time. May seem a bit much over a disc sander until yo think about relying on it to put that perfect edge and angle on your work.
Again never owned one so the field is pretty much wide open on this one.
Jointer. Actually I may hold off on this one and see how much that disc sander will do for me but once again quality without paying for all the advertising of the name brands.
I like the HF knock offs of top of hte line tools and am pretty familiar with what needs to be done to tweek them. but HF has far more garbage than it does really quality machines hiding under a rough looking skin.
Thanks all in advance.