smorgasbord
Member
- Joined
- Jan 7, 2022
- Messages
- 1,063
This is more about the store than the process.
I've designed and figured out how to build tablesaw insert plates for an Inca-brand tablesaw. These are quite different than the thick, round at the end inserts common on most other tablesaws, as the Inca plates are only 7mm thick, 90mm wide, and over 500mm long. There are 9 (!) leveling grub screws and one front fixing screw. The original thin plates are made from aluminum, and so it's been hard for woodworkers to make their own replacement inserts, as 1/4" plywood just isn't flat/strong enough. I'm making mine from acetal copolymer (similar to delrin), using my CNC, router table, cordless drill and Festool ETS/EC 150/5.
Inca's always been kind of a cult brand, pretty much out of business now, but we owners love the tools for their build quality and accuracy. In talking with other owners, I've gotten a bunch of requests to make them for sale. That's fine - I'm happy to support the community on these, but I do need some way to take orders and receive payment. We're talking very low volume here - if I ever sell more than 100 of these I'll be shocked.
I've gotten suggestions from listing on EBay or Etsy, to just taking Venmo or Paypal via emails, to actually creating a simple Shopify storefront. The latter actually looks more promising than I originally thought, as they handle payment processing and don't charge as much as EBay/Etsy. I don't need to get the word out of these inserts - the mailing list is enough and I'm not charging enough to make this worth my while as business - probably be lucky to not lose money after all is said and done.
I'm sure that some woodworker's here have gone down the path of making items for sale - if so, how are you selling them and how's that working out?
I've designed and figured out how to build tablesaw insert plates for an Inca-brand tablesaw. These are quite different than the thick, round at the end inserts common on most other tablesaws, as the Inca plates are only 7mm thick, 90mm wide, and over 500mm long. There are 9 (!) leveling grub screws and one front fixing screw. The original thin plates are made from aluminum, and so it's been hard for woodworkers to make their own replacement inserts, as 1/4" plywood just isn't flat/strong enough. I'm making mine from acetal copolymer (similar to delrin), using my CNC, router table, cordless drill and Festool ETS/EC 150/5.
Inca's always been kind of a cult brand, pretty much out of business now, but we owners love the tools for their build quality and accuracy. In talking with other owners, I've gotten a bunch of requests to make them for sale. That's fine - I'm happy to support the community on these, but I do need some way to take orders and receive payment. We're talking very low volume here - if I ever sell more than 100 of these I'll be shocked.
I've gotten suggestions from listing on EBay or Etsy, to just taking Venmo or Paypal via emails, to actually creating a simple Shopify storefront. The latter actually looks more promising than I originally thought, as they handle payment processing and don't charge as much as EBay/Etsy. I don't need to get the word out of these inserts - the mailing list is enough and I'm not charging enough to make this worth my while as business - probably be lucky to not lose money after all is said and done.
I'm sure that some woodworker's here have gone down the path of making items for sale - if so, how are you selling them and how's that working out?