~A saw that cuts straight
~A screwdriver that doesn't slip
and
~A hammer that doesn't bash my thumb
~A screwdriver that doesn't slip
and
~A hammer that doesn't bash my thumb
I have a Epson v750 that works well and wasn't too expensive. I have had it for years so they may not make that model now. The hardest part is cleaning the slide. Amazing much dust gets on the slide even while it is boxed up.I have a pretty complete wood working shop that has given me a lot of pleasure even though my skills never progress beyond moderate. Not sure if it qualifies as a 'machine' but these days I would love to have a quality photo slide scanner and photo quality printer. Have thousands of slides from my father and myself that are history but, I'm sure, will be discarded by my children after I pass over.
Got it. Sent you a reply. Thanks.Cruzatte, I pm,d you.
I took machining classes at my local community College at 50. Worth the time.I would just like to have the knowledge required to operate all those fancy machine shop machines! My kid brother who retired out of the Navy as a machinist and now has another 18 years working as a master machinist for the Navy as a civilian contractor will be my instructor in another 2 years when he retires and moves close enough! I may be too old and feeble by then, but at this moment the learning bug still bites me.
I do OK with my inherited Craftsman Bandsaw from the late 50's from my grandfather and a very cool homemade vertical 1" slack belt sander put together by my late Father In Law. That machine is priceless to me!
Had to sell my Bridgeport mill, and Atlas lathe when I moved into town. Replaced then with mini lathe, mill. They are almost useless the way they come. I put tapered roller bearings on the spindles of lathe, replaced the compound rest on lathe with block of A-6, put on a bigger chuck, replaced plastic gears with metal, added digital caliper ‘DRO’, its useable now. Mill was converted to belt drive, put angular contact bearings on spindle made power table feed from windshield wiper motor and , locked colllume w/ 3/8 plate. They are useful now.Always wanted to get a small metal lathe an/or milling machine. Just don’t have room to set them up now.
A good leather sewing machine. I've been doing all my stitching by hand. These 63 year old fingers really do alot of complaining on belts and such.Like most on this forum, I've built a few ML'ers over the years. With some of the basics, (bench, vices, lighting, files, gouges, sharpening stones) I go out there and get them when I need them. It's the price of entry. $20, $30, 40 isn't a budget buster (usually), but some of these things (or systems) are pretty dog gone expensive. It becomes a question of; "can I really justify the purchase price of $XXX with what I'm going to do with it? Will I use it enough?" Or, "if I get it, will that motivate me (or my domestic situation allow it) to use it enough?"
What are your dream tools that you are either saving for, or, wish you had? I can name about 4 that I wish I had, but am wrestling with the above. In my case, most are powered systems, (like a Lindsay pneumatic engraving set up) but not everything is.
I stitched one belt by hand, decided to never do it again and bought a nice leather stitcher and never looked backA good leather sewing machine. I've been doing all my stitching by hand. These 63 year old fingers really do alot of complaining on belts and such.View attachment 158175
Thanks, I'll look into it.I have a Epson v750 that works well and wasn't too expensive. I have had it for years so they may not make that model now. The hardest part is cleaning the slide. Amazing much dust gets on the slide even while it is boxed up.
oxed up
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