FSG
Flying Steam Goat
- Joined
- Nov 27, 2013
- Messages
- 7
- Reaction score
- 8
It all started innocently enough. I needed some spacers to mount a larger than stock headlight on a motorcycle that I was overhauling, but everything I could find that might fit was just wrong. The setup that was close, but not quite what I wanted was outrageously expensive. Then I ran across a deal on a 9X20 lathe in distress, which was slightly less than the cost of the not-quite-right mount, and I figgered that I could buy and freshen up the lathe, turn my spacers, then sell the lathe for a tidy profit when I was done. Cue the organ music, in a minor key.
The lathe still had the cheesy ring type compound clamp, which was good enough to bore the socket for the compound post, but my dadburned drill press was insufficiently precise to get the four holes exactly where they needed to be. I could go on, but I suspect that many of y'all sing a similar song. Fast forward to the present, five years down the road. I've just completed the move from my former 175 square foot 3/4 car garage into the newly born hacker space/community workshop in a 1935 brick former agricultural pump manufacturing facility with the most beautiful 3 ton bridge crane over our 12,000 square feet of naked possibility. I make short runs of low material cost/high labor cost machine components for a couple of local manufacturers, tooling for various printing and machining processes, and the odd one-off parts for motorcycles and antique make & break engines. I built a version of the LMS wobbler for show and tell with the hacker group, and now I'm teaching basic machine shop practice to a group of enthusiasts with widely varying backgrounds. I'm really looking forward to digging into the archives here, and I believe I'll just listen attentively until I have something meaningful to contribute.
The lathe still had the cheesy ring type compound clamp, which was good enough to bore the socket for the compound post, but my dadburned drill press was insufficiently precise to get the four holes exactly where they needed to be. I could go on, but I suspect that many of y'all sing a similar song. Fast forward to the present, five years down the road. I've just completed the move from my former 175 square foot 3/4 car garage into the newly born hacker space/community workshop in a 1935 brick former agricultural pump manufacturing facility with the most beautiful 3 ton bridge crane over our 12,000 square feet of naked possibility. I make short runs of low material cost/high labor cost machine components for a couple of local manufacturers, tooling for various printing and machining processes, and the odd one-off parts for motorcycles and antique make & break engines. I built a version of the LMS wobbler for show and tell with the hacker group, and now I'm teaching basic machine shop practice to a group of enthusiasts with widely varying backgrounds. I'm really looking forward to digging into the archives here, and I believe I'll just listen attentively until I have something meaningful to contribute.