Dennis Leigh Henry
Well-known member
I once saw a video of a kid maybe 12-14 in some foreign country operating a metal lathe. My first thought was this guy is going to be one hell of a machinist by the time he's 18. I'm sure the child labor laws have prevented kids from injury or death but they've prevented them from learning valuable skills if they were trained safely and properly.
I ran a South Bend 10" tool room lathe in 8th grade shop class making a center punch "turning between centers" amongst other things, 13 years old.. Also ran a metal shaper, did hand forging work, etc. In 7th grade I made a couple of projects on a wood lathe.. We could not run the table saw because around that time someone in the school corp. got serious about table saw blade guards.. The old saw we had didn't have one, so we were not allowed to use it unless the shop teacher was right there with us.. The year before, as I understand it, students were allowed to use it without direct supervision..but of course with proper training. A year later as a freshman in high school, I was on 13' South Bend lathes, running horizontal mills (Cincinnati, Van Norman), large shapers, and a Bridgeport vertical mill.. Much of it without direct supervision of the teacher but with good dose of teaching and warnings..
The second thing I'll say.. I've seen plenty of "grown ups" I would not want touching my mower, let alone using it under power..
Good luck to the OP getting your son gainfully (both monetarily and skill wise) employed this summer..
