Every two weeks, a team of Fine Woodworking staffers answer questions from readers on Shop Talk Live, Fine Woodworking’s biweekly podcast. Send your woodworking questions to [email protected] for consideration in the regular broadcast!
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Shop Talk Live 32: Vintage Machinery Bargains and Blunders
On this week’s edition of Shop Talk Live, Matt Kenney discusses the ongoing search for his “dream jointer” and how an incredible vintage 20-in. jointer got away from him. Plus, we answer some top-notch handplane questions and have a bit of fun at our own expense, revealing a few of our most recent boneheaded workshop blunders!
Links from this Week’s Show
Comments
Greetings guys
Good work on the podcast. Really good stuff for traffic jams!
I do have a suggestion. Perfectly fair to assume a certain amount of knowledge in the conversation, but sometimes I am sure that there are others besides me who aren't really on to the meaning of one word or another.
Examples: caul, various parts of the anatomy of a mortise and tenon or dovetail joint.
Solution: resuscitate that glossary that is moribund over there at the StartWoodworking site (I mean, do we need a definition of "door"?) Have one of your army of interns go through the podcast, find dubious words, define them in the glossary, and put a link for each word on the list in your blog.
Then, when you have another aspiring intern, turn him or her loose on providing illustrations or pictures to go with all the words in the glossary that would benefit from it.
Keep up the good work!
Ed, Matt, Mike!
Hello, Burled-Johnson here, thanks for reading my comment, glad you all thought it was funny! My last name is in fact Johnson, and I love when Nick Offerman talks of burled walnut on Parks and Rec, so that's where it all came from. Again, love the podcast- great work.
Oh, Matt-- nice Ben Folds reference with the Ascent of Stan, I'm a big fan too.
I'm a machinist by trade and all my on a stand wood working machines were bought used except for my miter saw. Example: I bought an 8" jointer that looked real nice and the shop owner sold it to me for less than half price after only two years of use. I tried it out and it worked OK, and being a machinist I thought I'll fix any little problem that may surface. I took it home on my pickup but had to dismantle it to shoot it up to my second floor shop. That's when I saw shims in the dovetails and I thought "not good". That's a hard fix, darn. After dismantling and a close inspection I noticed that paint had dripped, from the factory, and hardened on the dovetail surfaces for the adjustable feed tables. The shop owner must not have noticed that. I'm guessing that he must have figured out that it was a defective machine and was glad to see it go. I cleaned off the paint and the tables lined up perfectly. I scored on that one:). Whew
Thanks for show.
Chuck
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