Woodenfish said:
[…]
His channel is a public display of madness where if you spend a lot of money on tools you don’t know how to fully use you can bypass experience by learning.[…]
I’m going to be slow to hop on that train.
I found that when I am being self-taught, it makes sense to buy the best equipment that I can afford.
The thinking on that is, “This turned out lousy. Where does the fault lie? With the cheap machinery I bought? Or with my lack of skills?”
If I have fully competent equipment and my work is lousy, I know that I need more practice or more knowledge or both.
With crappy equipment, it is me? Or is it the equipment?
Last year I bought a cheap scroll saw (Wen) to make the toys I’ve been making. In the beginning, I had a struggle to control the cut. (Should I have bought a Pegasus?). I’ve gotten a lot better, but I am certain that some of the intricate cuts I’ve seen on the Internet are quite beyond me. Is it me? Or the crappy Wen?
However, I cannot justify the expense of a Pegasus (or other fine scroll saw) for products I am giving away for free to total strangers.
My point is, I am very slow to condemn people who over spend on equipment.
As an aside, in the 1970s I worked briefly at a high end camera store. Almost all the Leicas we sold were to rich dentists and medical doctors. Most of them came back to the store asking, “How come my pictures look like junk.” And we would give lessons on how to make the pictures less crappy.
In that case, they assumed that buying an expensive camera guaranteed excellent photos. I don’t think that is the case here with the expensive saw.
(And I have a sliding table saw that is dedicated to make 45 degree angle cuts, and it does that to perfection.)
Would I get a sliding table saw, absolutely.