in looking at this guys profile, he signed up for the sole purpose of spreading his garbage, lol,,i love it, need not say more, im certainly not going down to his level, nuf said…
to all and any who care, what this guy says is just garbage, and i would assume his remark has been taken off, he is of no concern and has nothing to do with anyones life here, and not worth my time to say anything, as he has shown his colors,
Wow, ..O.O I think admin needs to step in here!!!!
What the heck is going on when someone on this friendly site is wishing death to another???
I think Crossman needs a look at! You have a problem with someone? Keep your comments to yourself and leave the rest of us out it! Especially when that person is a valued member who is not doing so well right now!
I am in currently rebuilding a '57 DeWalt MBF and have been following many of your recommendations regarding parts and suppliers. Thanks mucho! The information you posted while rebuilding your DeWalt has been invaluable.
At this point, I need the motor serviced. The cord was frayed where it entered the motor bell housing, and I'm afraid I don't have the proper pullers/presses to get the motor all apart and back together. My soldering skills are also kinda rusty. I've got a replacement coiled cord from Grainger but now I need it installed!
None of the motor shops that I've called in the CoS/Denver area have indicated that this is something that they'd do. Who did you use?
Again, thanks in advance and thanks for all of the advice you've provided so far.
Hi NBeener, My sister lives in Golden & has a mini Collie also an angora rabbit that she combs to use the fur for weaving, amazing stuff too, hats & art! A lot of inspiration here with all the great folks. Glad to hear from you, watch yer top knot pilgrim!
Roper: Many thanks. I'm still figuring out the LJ thing and just saw your and Alejandro's posts [blush]. I'm trying to work my way from newbie to hack woodworker. Many thanks for the kind offer.
Alejandro: Great advice! I also need to use MUCH more lighting in my shop area. Tengo que tener miedo de las sombras [I NEED to be afraid of the shadows] ;-) I think you're exactly right: simple joints and/or jigs. Also, patience. I have to know my limitations. Also, your English is QUITE good!
Welcome to LJ and thank you for your nice comment.
Use hand-tools, mark with red or orange colour the dangerous zones for your fingers and use all the safe guards in your power-tools, if you use any. Set your attention in volume design, on wood selection and not that much on complicate joints that require close sight. If you want to use dovetails there are many guides to get them with the aid of power-tools. Or use big dovetails. Here I show you an example: it is my one design and SU model.