I saw this over at Practical Machinst - he must have posted the resto in both forums. For sure, it is totally sweet. That is a big saw, and you can tell that it is a whole different caliber of machinery - using the pallet mover and forklift...which brings up an interesting philosophical question of machinery.
A while back I was talking to a local friend who is also into OWWM (old wood working machinery) and we were talking about different items, including some of the heavier 1500-2500lb sliding table saws from back in the 1920s-1930s. He told me that he would never be there because the guys who go after those type of tools usually find them in another state, which isn't a problem because they hook up a big trailer to their super duty dually truck and head out, then once they get home, bust out their forklift and and get the machine down, etc etc. He told me that he would never really be at that stage, plus machines of that caliber would become a huge burden for his wife should something ever happen to him.
That last sentence really got to me. I started thinking...wow, what if something did really happen to me? And what if I had my dream 2500lb saw in the garage? What would she do with it? I can only imagine the ensuing nightmare to try and get someone over to the garage who even had the ability to get it in the first place, getting a forklift in there, trying to find some way to load it into who knows what and have to do that with several other machines. It got me thinking about my responsibilities. It made me start wondering if having 10 table saws was really the best thing (for others)...or wanting the biggest, baddest industrial equipment. The more I thought about it, the more I started having a paradigm shift in my mind. When I go to estate sales, I can easily find some pretty neat and cool stuff, including big tools. A lot of the time, I think "why don't they just keep this great stuff?" ...and there is an answer to that - it is because the 'stuff' became a burden to the family and they just want it gone. I think I realized I don't want that to be me.
I think I can be okay with the smaller home/hobbiest type tools. Perhaps a good rule of thumb is anything that I can move myself can stay. So far, just about everything in the garage I've moved myself, including that ridiculous lathe haha (I did get a bit of help from my brother-in-law moving the 18" band saw). But really, the bottom line is that life is finite and I would hate to saddle someone else (especially my wife) with the burden of having to deal with this stuff. Like my friend said, it isn't really about value because even though we both love these fabulous old tools, they aren't worth much. It is much more about making your time count with loved ones instead of racking up the biggest, baddest, and heaviest tools that you'll leave for someone else to deal with some day.
So...where are you guys on this continuum? I think it is a natural progression to start little and keep going bigger. However, I think I've plateaued and now it is about staying in the sweet spot. And lets be realistic - I am a family man with a 2-car garage, not a business owning machinist with a 30x60 and a huge truck/trailer. I'm okay with that