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BronxFigs

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My name is Frank/BronxFigs. Born and bred in NYC, and lived in "The Big Apple" for 62 years.
Profession: Piano Tuner/Technician
Hobbies: Model Engineering, Stained Glass, Ceramics, Art, Wood/Stone Carving, Gardening, (especially, growing Figs).

I have very little experience with using computers, and I am having a hard time getting around this vast forum, and all its options. Please bear with my ignorance.

Anyway, just a short introduction, and a quick greeting to all the forum members.

Cordially yours,

Frank
 
Welcome Frank, that's certainly an impressive list of hobbies you have there! You'll get used to the forums in no time mate, the people here are a really good bunch I must say. Plenty of amazingly talented builders and lots of help. Wouldn't mind seeing some pics of your stained glass work, I'm quite a fan and am contemplating it myself for our kitchen window, although i'll probably cheat and use the stick on lead and liquid colours. ;)

cheers, Ian
 
Hi Frank,

You and I have most of the same hobbies, minus the stone carving and fig growing. Figs in NY :confused:, that's interesting. Anyway, have you built anything yet, or just starting?
 
welcome to the forum. thanks for the intro. looking forward to pictures.
Tin
 
Thank-you for the notices.

Being a child that grew up in the 50s and 60s, I lived next store to and old gent who loved to tinker in his basement workshop, and as payment for shoveling snow out of his driveway, he gave me a stack of older "Popular Science" and "Popular Mechanics" books. I spent many months going through these books and was fascinated by all the things that men could build in their home workshops. It was a different era then. Men actually knew a wrench from a screwdriver, and wives usually stayed out of the shop. My dad had a wood shop in the basement, and I learned about tools, and what they could do, from him. I can still remember the scent of freshly cut, pine, and sweeping up the fluffy sawdust. I spent many hours converting an old "Shopsmith" table saw into various configurations...drill, sander, etc. A pain in the butt....but it did the job. I still have some of the furniture that he built. He passed away two weeks ago, at 92 years old...just 6 weeks after my mom passed on. She was 90 years old.

As a young teen, I built spark-coils, little electric motors, electro-magnets, solenoid engines...and took apart anything that I could get my hands on. As I got older, I would rather walk through junk yards rather than play ball. Those were the early days.

Fast forward. Over the years, my interests veered into model engines, steam, compressed-air, gas....anything that would make a crankshaft turn. Sadly, my complicated life did not allow me to get into a well equipped shop, and I have so far, made nothing! That will change. I have collected many plans over all these years, and, I ain't gettin' any younger. I better start makin' some chips.... tick-tock!

As a first engine build, I was thinking about the Jerry Howell, V-Twin...but, a compressed-air version. Ball valves...rotary valves? Just a block, crank, pistons, cylinders, and valving. A stripped-down version, for air. Or, maybe the "Hoglet", simplified, to run on compressed air? Yes...no...? I met a gent at a "Cabin Fever Expo", many years ago. We are still friends. He has a complete shop of tools, tooling, and tons of various scrap metals. He is also a very experienced, and accomplished, machinist. He is constructing a large-scale steam train, and is almost finished. Steam trains are not really my "thing", but I think it's a little larger than the famous, Cagney...or, about that scale.

I am also interested in Black-Powder guns, cannons, knives, etc. Living in NYC has put the kibosh on many of my hobbies...but the Pastrami-on-Rye, from Katz's Deli, on Grand Street, could make you plotz! So, I stay. (N.B. the term,"plotz": a little New Yawk-yiddish... " to die for...to drop dead, with pleasure").

Happy to be part of this coterie of machinists, and also look forward to learning many good thing from you, too. Be gentle...just a virgin.


Frank
 
Frank:

living in the city you need to think big and machine small take a look at the sherline or taig machines. these machines are great for small tight spaces and can be set up as portable machine shops as needed. I have seen them set up in a box a box for the lathe accessories and tooling a second box fro the mill and tools and a third box for hand tools and other things.



something like this:

BoxShop2.jpg


BoxShop4.jpg


Leechshop2.jpg


look here for more ideas inspiration details etc.
http://www.sherline.com/shops.htm
Tin
 
Thanks for the warm welcomes. I will sit back and enjoy the ride, learning as I go along, building my first engine(s).

That portable workshop just proves "when there's a will, there's a way".

Best regards,

Frank
 
Hey Frank!

I'm new here too, and I don't really know a great deal about machining, however what I do know is that I like a man who doesn't mind getting his hands dirty. I'll stop being naughty now tehe, but on a serious note I would love to begin my first steam engine. lols

From Matt :)
 
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