Cincinnati
Member
- Joined
- Sep 26, 2010
- Messages
- 53
Regretfully, I didn’t have time to read everyone’s counsel before adding mine. I’ve run a couple of non-woodworking businesses, including a photography studio, so my advice comes from trying to make an undercapitalized business profitable. I’ve seen more people transform a profitable part time business into a miserable failure than I have make it a successful career. The common link is in what startup items they choose to invest their available capital costs during the transition/growth phase.
If you’re building and selling items now, you obviously have what it takes to complete the job. I would keep going and adjust your pricing so you can set aside money for replacement tools or for tools that fill the gap and do something you currently can’t do. For your business to be viable, it will have to cover all your costs, including tool replacement, your salary, and a profit to grow. Otherwise you fall into the trap of buying business cards, postage, and tools from the family budget.
To answer one of your concerns, Festool has some tools that shine above the competition in my opinion. - sanders, the Domino, and the track saw. I think there are better choices in a cordless drill, and maybe the jigsaw although I have both. If you can justify their routers, they are well made, precision tools, have little vibration, excellent dust collection, and very little runout. I prefer the 1010 or 1410 for hand held routing. But for a router table I’d go with a Milwaukee 5625-20.
If you can continue your business with what you have that is a wise choice.
If you’re building and selling items now, you obviously have what it takes to complete the job. I would keep going and adjust your pricing so you can set aside money for replacement tools or for tools that fill the gap and do something you currently can’t do. For your business to be viable, it will have to cover all your costs, including tool replacement, your salary, and a profit to grow. Otherwise you fall into the trap of buying business cards, postage, and tools from the family budget.
To answer one of your concerns, Festool has some tools that shine above the competition in my opinion. - sanders, the Domino, and the track saw. I think there are better choices in a cordless drill, and maybe the jigsaw although I have both. If you can justify their routers, they are well made, precision tools, have little vibration, excellent dust collection, and very little runout. I prefer the 1010 or 1410 for hand held routing. But for a router table I’d go with a Milwaukee 5625-20.
If you can continue your business with what you have that is a wise choice.