joshagrady
Member
- Joined
- Jan 26, 2012
- Messages
- 10
- Reaction score
- 1
For whatever reason, I always seem to stall when the time comes to introduce myself on a forum. I've been a longtime lurker and am a fervent admirer of several of the mainstays of this forum. Words fail me when I try and acknowledge the debt I owe to "Bogstandard" and the passion he has incited in me for machining. I've learned more than I deserve from Arnold, Marv has given me insight on the value of technical data, I could go on and on. This forum has given me focus, has kept me sane, and has inspired me in ways that seem almost absurd.
I first came into contact with machining when I was eight, many moons ago, in my grandfather's shop. He'd somehow "liberated" a lathe from the Navy machine shop where he'd served during the war. Afterwards, he puttered around, helped neighbors fix their cars, and just generally enjoyed getting grease under his fingernails. As an impressionable lad, his shop seemed like paradise. However, real life imposed; I lived in New Mexico, on the other side of the country from my grandfather and his Philadelphia shop, and a living must be made, etc.
Somehow, along the line, I ended up moving to Spain, and eventually collaborated as a consultant with the Spanish government on a bill establishing sanitary requirements for the body piercing industry. Over the course of that consulting gig, metallurgy somehow crept into my awareness, As I fell deeper and deeper down the rabbit hole, I rediscovered an interest in how metal was processed from raw chunks of material into a finished product. The discovery of this forum was a byproduct of that exploration.
I'm slowly setting up a home machine shop of my own, do some welding to create furniture for neighbors, the odd commercial venture, etc., and do some volunteer work at my daughter's school to get kids interested in building things. In the meantime, I continue to study, continue to learn, and hope to some day contribute at least a fraction of what I've received from this community.
I first came into contact with machining when I was eight, many moons ago, in my grandfather's shop. He'd somehow "liberated" a lathe from the Navy machine shop where he'd served during the war. Afterwards, he puttered around, helped neighbors fix their cars, and just generally enjoyed getting grease under his fingernails. As an impressionable lad, his shop seemed like paradise. However, real life imposed; I lived in New Mexico, on the other side of the country from my grandfather and his Philadelphia shop, and a living must be made, etc.
Somehow, along the line, I ended up moving to Spain, and eventually collaborated as a consultant with the Spanish government on a bill establishing sanitary requirements for the body piercing industry. Over the course of that consulting gig, metallurgy somehow crept into my awareness, As I fell deeper and deeper down the rabbit hole, I rediscovered an interest in how metal was processed from raw chunks of material into a finished product. The discovery of this forum was a byproduct of that exploration.
I'm slowly setting up a home machine shop of my own, do some welding to create furniture for neighbors, the odd commercial venture, etc., and do some volunteer work at my daughter's school to get kids interested in building things. In the meantime, I continue to study, continue to learn, and hope to some day contribute at least a fraction of what I've received from this community.