Duker
Well-known member
I am in simple awe of the many members of this forum at not only their skills but their ingenuity. The wealth and depth of knowledge is amazing. The number of ideas I have pulled from my short time on the forum outnumbers my ability to implement them in my future dream workshop.
While there are some amazing dream workshops that have been chronicled here ( and I admit I am extremely envious ) its the guys who taken limited resources and restored equipment to better than new or have taken their limited space and have come up with creative solutions that have impressed me the most. You can almost feel the pride when they post their story to the board.
I thought my workshop and tool collection was OK but how quickly I have been humbled by guys who have nine drawers of screwdrivers and 5 drawers of sockets. Yes, maybe thats a little obsessive compulsive but we all have our own idiosyncrasies. I was actually doing alright on my tool budget until I joined this list but now I find myself browsing the SO catalog adding items to my wish list that I will probably never buy, hell I didn’t even know I needed those tools until I came here! Sure, the idea of blowing my children’s college fund on new tools and a new workshop has crossed my mind more than once, but for now like many I work out of my garage looking for opportunities to upgrade my tools whenever I can until the day I can build that dream shop.
But alas I digress....
A little brief history:
I am third generation woodworker as my family history goes but I pay the daily bills by my work in the investment business. Early on in my career I took a sabbatical from the investment world and worked full time as a cabinet and furniture maker. Business was good and soon I had a three year backlog of orders. However, life threw my wife and I a curve in trying to start a family and soon our only option was adoption. The good news is that three beautiful children now grace our home but at a cost of me going back into the investment business as the disparity of income was too great and two of my children have special needs. Now my time is limited to working on projects at night or on the weekends.
The goal of this thread is to contribute in some small way to guys like myself who love the challenge of building something but are not professional wrenchers or fabricators. I love to weld but I appreciate a good welder who is a craftsman and the same for mechanics. To me you can never fully appreciate someones skill (or why the charge what they do) until you have tried it yourself. This will be the story of my workshop adventures, mistakes and all....
Regards
Duke aka Duker
My first post in the thread is a video of a small conversion of a Rockwell Delta lathe that I bought at auction a few weeks back. The link below describes my weekend project of converting a three phase lathe I bought at an auction to single phase and wiring up a reversing drum switch. I also show the mobile base I built. However, as mentioned above I will show when things do not always go as planned....
The following projects will soon follow...
Wiring up a VFD- Variable Frequency Drive to a Powermatic 1200 Drill press (another auction buy)
Custom Wrench holders
Custom Socket storage
Custom Socket Rails
T-Handle Hex Key tote tray for metric and sae
While there are some amazing dream workshops that have been chronicled here ( and I admit I am extremely envious ) its the guys who taken limited resources and restored equipment to better than new or have taken their limited space and have come up with creative solutions that have impressed me the most. You can almost feel the pride when they post their story to the board.
I thought my workshop and tool collection was OK but how quickly I have been humbled by guys who have nine drawers of screwdrivers and 5 drawers of sockets. Yes, maybe thats a little obsessive compulsive but we all have our own idiosyncrasies. I was actually doing alright on my tool budget until I joined this list but now I find myself browsing the SO catalog adding items to my wish list that I will probably never buy, hell I didn’t even know I needed those tools until I came here! Sure, the idea of blowing my children’s college fund on new tools and a new workshop has crossed my mind more than once, but for now like many I work out of my garage looking for opportunities to upgrade my tools whenever I can until the day I can build that dream shop.
But alas I digress....
A little brief history:
I am third generation woodworker as my family history goes but I pay the daily bills by my work in the investment business. Early on in my career I took a sabbatical from the investment world and worked full time as a cabinet and furniture maker. Business was good and soon I had a three year backlog of orders. However, life threw my wife and I a curve in trying to start a family and soon our only option was adoption. The good news is that three beautiful children now grace our home but at a cost of me going back into the investment business as the disparity of income was too great and two of my children have special needs. Now my time is limited to working on projects at night or on the weekends.
The goal of this thread is to contribute in some small way to guys like myself who love the challenge of building something but are not professional wrenchers or fabricators. I love to weld but I appreciate a good welder who is a craftsman and the same for mechanics. To me you can never fully appreciate someones skill (or why the charge what they do) until you have tried it yourself. This will be the story of my workshop adventures, mistakes and all....
Regards
Duke aka Duker
My first post in the thread is a video of a small conversion of a Rockwell Delta lathe that I bought at auction a few weeks back. The link below describes my weekend project of converting a three phase lathe I bought at an auction to single phase and wiring up a reversing drum switch. I also show the mobile base I built. However, as mentioned above I will show when things do not always go as planned....
The following projects will soon follow...
Wiring up a VFD- Variable Frequency Drive to a Powermatic 1200 Drill press (another auction buy)
Custom Wrench holders
Custom Socket storage
Custom Socket Rails
T-Handle Hex Key tote tray for metric and sae
