jpeter said:
I often get the feeling that lots of old timers feel any work done with the aid of CNC is, well, "the computer made it" and therefore of little value.
I don't think there is or can be a "general" feeling on CNC, except to each his own. Each of us will have his or her own opinion of it. Here is mine, and your word
Value is the basis for it. I will say however that there is a slippery slope involved . . . where is the line drawn between what is a hand tool, or when some tool artificially enhances your skills or replaces them. The discussion rages on . . . .
Metalworking is my hobby, I'm not in it to produce quantity against a clock. I also consider what I do to be a "craft" as much as anything else in that my objective is to make things with my hands and basic tools, some of them power tools. That being the case using CNC would run me afoul of my basic objective. However if someone's objective is producing quantity against the clock then he should help himself with any means available.
As for the
Value part, I value
most the things made by a skilled pair of hands by manual means. The best way for me to explain is . . . let's say I'm at a show or meet and two gentlemen display identical projects or objects and both are well-made, and both are worthy of admiration. Let's say one project is made using CNC and one is made by conventional means. The project and individual who will get most of my attention and admiration will be the one who used conventional means, because I
Value those skills more than I do the skills required for CNC work. That isn't to say that the CNC guy is a bad dude, or that his work doesn't have value, it's just the result of my individual value system. Simple as that.
The other thing in play here is ego and self-esteem. The most virtriolic arguments I've ever heard over CNC vs non-CNC have been because one party or the other demanded respect and admiration from the other. That approach to anything is a recipe for disappointment because there's no assurance that will ever happen. Respect yourself, do what you do because it makes you happy, don't worry about what some else thinks. That's much easier said than done I know.
Have I ever thought about just baggin' it and having someone CNC some particularly difficult part for me, such as a locomotive driver pattern? Sure, a number of times. But between time and cost and wanting the challenge of doing it myself I haven't so far. Life is long, one can never tell what might happen.