I was introduced to woodworking 20 years ago when my father in-law and I built all the cabinetry for a total remodel of the house my wife and I were living in at the time. The house never had a garage while we lived there, only a carport so all the woodworking we did was at her dad's house. After we finished the remodel my stint in woodworking came to end. Fast forward to present day and we live in a new house with a garage. We have decided to remodel the kitchen and I'm going to restart my woodworking hobby and build the cabinetry. Once that is done I envision branching out some and making some interior doors as well as built ins. Since my wife is getting a new kitchen it wasn't difficult to convince her it was only fair I get a shop to build the cabinetry in rather than displace our cars and all the other stuff occupying our garage. As construction has been going on I've been acquiring equipment for the shop via Craigslist as well as some new purchases.
As far as large and stationary equipment I think I'm pretty well set:
Delta cabinet table saw. Jet 15" helical head planer. Jet 6" jointer. Jet belt disc sander (6x48 & 12). Delta 14" bandsaw with resaw riser. Jet 17" drill press. Supermax 19-38 drum sander. Clear Vue 1800 dust collector. Bench Dog router table with lift. (In addition to the Bench Dog I plan on building an extension to the Delta TS and incorporating a lift mounted Porter Cable 3hp router.)
Bench and hand power tools are where I'm needing prioritizing.
I've got an 18v Makita combo kit so for now my hand drill needs are met with the drill/driver/impact and an impact driver. The kit also has a circular saw and recipe saw. Corded tools include Milwaukee drill. Milwaukee hammer drill. Dewalt right angle drill. Dewalt palm sander. NEW Makita half sheet sander. Dewalt angle grinder. Hitachi 12" power miter. Milwaukee recip saw. Hitachi cut off saw. Hitachi framing nailer. Porter Cable finish nailer. Porter Cable brad nailer. Hitachi pin nailer.
All of my hand power tools have served me well over the years in both home projects and work. I do props and sets for TV commercials so I take them to the various locations and they get plenty of use and at times abuse, not to mention they get used my members of my crew that don't yet have an extensive selection of tools. The carpentry is I do in my work is not typically of a finish nature. Time is of the essence in my line of work and fine wood work takes too long. We build it fast and not meant to last.
I see the new shop being built in my back yard as a opportunity to separate work and pleasure and refine my tool inventory to more precise and never loaned tools. The work shop tools will stay in the shop and the others will be segregated. Fine woodworking will be done there. Enter Festool….
To date I have purchased the TS55, MFT3 and the CT 36. I've got about $2000 set aside to prioritize further Festool additions, but frankly it's like being a kid in a candy store, I don't know where to go next. I'd appreciate any input on how I prioritize my next purchases. I know I need the Domino and I assume the (500?) and the collection of tenons and cutters. That eats up half of my budget. What next?
Reminder. The bulk of my work in the shop will initially be kitchen cabinet making. Then built in book cases and after that perhaps doors and outdoor furniture.
Thanks to those who stuck it out and read this lengthy post.
As far as large and stationary equipment I think I'm pretty well set:
Delta cabinet table saw. Jet 15" helical head planer. Jet 6" jointer. Jet belt disc sander (6x48 & 12). Delta 14" bandsaw with resaw riser. Jet 17" drill press. Supermax 19-38 drum sander. Clear Vue 1800 dust collector. Bench Dog router table with lift. (In addition to the Bench Dog I plan on building an extension to the Delta TS and incorporating a lift mounted Porter Cable 3hp router.)
Bench and hand power tools are where I'm needing prioritizing.
I've got an 18v Makita combo kit so for now my hand drill needs are met with the drill/driver/impact and an impact driver. The kit also has a circular saw and recipe saw. Corded tools include Milwaukee drill. Milwaukee hammer drill. Dewalt right angle drill. Dewalt palm sander. NEW Makita half sheet sander. Dewalt angle grinder. Hitachi 12" power miter. Milwaukee recip saw. Hitachi cut off saw. Hitachi framing nailer. Porter Cable finish nailer. Porter Cable brad nailer. Hitachi pin nailer.
All of my hand power tools have served me well over the years in both home projects and work. I do props and sets for TV commercials so I take them to the various locations and they get plenty of use and at times abuse, not to mention they get used my members of my crew that don't yet have an extensive selection of tools. The carpentry is I do in my work is not typically of a finish nature. Time is of the essence in my line of work and fine wood work takes too long. We build it fast and not meant to last.
I see the new shop being built in my back yard as a opportunity to separate work and pleasure and refine my tool inventory to more precise and never loaned tools. The work shop tools will stay in the shop and the others will be segregated. Fine woodworking will be done there. Enter Festool….
To date I have purchased the TS55, MFT3 and the CT 36. I've got about $2000 set aside to prioritize further Festool additions, but frankly it's like being a kid in a candy store, I don't know where to go next. I'd appreciate any input on how I prioritize my next purchases. I know I need the Domino and I assume the (500?) and the collection of tenons and cutters. That eats up half of my budget. What next?
Reminder. The bulk of my work in the shop will initially be kitchen cabinet making. Then built in book cases and after that perhaps doors and outdoor furniture.
Thanks to those who stuck it out and read this lengthy post.