OldTools Archive

Recent Bios FAQ

27622 <TomPrice@A...> 1997‑10‑05 Re: The voices within...
Patrick Leach wrote:

>So, when did it dawn on you that you were given to fits of
>handtool fundamentalism?

I'm guessing I was about 10 when I received a wooden tool box, a set of 
carpentry tools, and a small pile of lumber for Christmas. I made nothing 
of consequence from this wood but I still remember this as one of the 
most satisfying Christmas presents I ever got. From that point on until 
college I did very little woodworking except for the odd tree house. it 
wasn't until 1976 that I really got bitten hard by the woodworking bug 
when I took a woodworking course offered through the Student Union at 
Ohio State. The shop course was strictly p*wertools but I was somewhat 
attracted to the idea of using some hand tools. For one thing I didn't 
have squat for disposable income and certainly wasn't going to buy all 
the tailed apprentices that I used in the course. So I bought a crummy 
Stanley Handyman #4 and a couple of Kunz spokeshaves. I had a brace and a 
Sandvik backsaw. I had a Sears rout*r and a set of Great Neck chisels. I 
made a few small projects throughout my graduate education using various 
storage lockers in married student housing for workspaces. I ended up 
buying a used t*bl*s*w when I moved out to California and set up a shop 
in my garage. In 1985 I built my bench and in doing so began to 
understand how to tune a plane and use a scraper. Yet I continued to lust 
after various and sundry tailed apprentices and, with the exception of 
planes, tried to use tailed apprentices whenever possible. What kept 
turning me back to handtools was the limitations of my p*wertools.

I'm cheap. No doubt about it. Paying $1500 for a really nice t*bl*saw is 
something I'll never be able to do. Mine is an ancient 8" Delta I bought 
for $50. It is a solid, well made little saw (with loads of patina) but 
can't cut through much more than 2". I was pondering the replacement of 
this tool while standing in front of the Dominy workshop display at the 
Winterthur museum when it finally dawned on me that working with 
handtools is a different paradigm entirely. Bringing the tool to the 
material frees up all sorts of possibilities. T*bl*s*ws have a maximum 
blade size and thus height. B*nds*ws have a maximum resaw capacity. 
Jo*nt*rs and plan*rs have a maximum width and the latter a maximum 
height. Bigger machines mean more money and more square footage. Yet, you 
can physically surface an area you could never stick in a jointer or 
planer with a #4 or #5 and a card scraper. I could rip a 12 ft board with 
a Disston and a couple of sawhorses. If I want to shove this same board 
through my  t*bl*s*w it means that I need 12 ft behind the saw, 12 ft in 
front and some extra for maneuvering room. My shop isn't that long or 
wide. This is my hobby, not my livelihood, and I don't have the space or 
money for bigger p*w*r tools. I won't go into noise, dust, and the fear 
of decapitating much loved body parts. Discuss amongst yourselves.

Back to the voices. Two years ago I was increasingly disenchanted with my 
woodworking and wanted to try using more handtools especially beyond 
planes and chisels. I had already made a few attempts to find local 
sources for used tools but never really came up with good spots. I wasn't 
sure what was good stuff or what some of the stuff was worth. I had 
Patrick's Stanley Blood and Gore but as he mentions, it isn't a price 
guide. I wasn't yet aware of Jay Sutherland's Plane Dating page. I saw a 
mention of the OldTools listserv on rec.norm and joined up. My life 
changed. Before the list, woodworking was a solitary hobby. It did not 
appear to me that Neanderthals were getting a lot of respect on rec.norm 
at the time (although I think things have changed for the better) and it 
was hard to get useful information on hand tool topics through the noise. 
On the local front, I got together with friends to work on joint projects 
occasionally but participating in OldTools was a quantum leap on the 
interactivity scale. Now when I run into a problem or experience an 
epiphany I have several hundred Galoots to ask questions of or to share 
knowledge and maybe a good gloat with.

The voices in my head are _your_ voices and I carry them with me whenever 
I hit a flea market or enter my shop. 
****************************
Tom Price 
Brakes For Rust

The Stages Of A Galoot is a feature at The Galoot's Progress:
http://members.aol.com/tomprice/galootp/galtprog.html



Recent Bios FAQ