- Joined
- May 14, 2013
- Messages
- 104
So another hobby of mine is aquaria (freshwater), and in my varied travels throughout that realm I came across 'Mr. Saltwater Tank' who has an actually really nice way of introducing people into the saltwater aquarium world. He calls it 'know your tank personality', and the gist of it is that by answering a questionnaire, you can properly orient yourself, set proper goals, and (most importantly) set proper boundaries.
Has anyone done something like this for the machinist world? Cuz it's exactly the same depth of rabbit hole, and exactly the same expense factor (you would not believe where saltwater aquariums can go).
For example, my 'machinist personality' would be:
- Here's my budget, time commitment, space available, I am a hobbyist (not income generating)
Therefore...
- Limit yourself to 120v tools
-> Which limits you to small endmills, vises, collet sets, etc
- Limit yourself to ebay or used tools/metrology
-> Which limits me to certain surface finishes, tolerances to expect, etc
- Don't expect tolerances better than 0.001"
- etc etc etc
Just curious. Over the years of me figuring things out, researching, dreaming, etc, I've come to learn what my 'tool personality' is and therefore set expectations accordingly. For example, we limit our budget due to religious/social commitments - so I shouldn't have spent countless hours learning about Bridgeport knee mills - because it's not part of my machinist personality. We don't want the expense of adding 220v power to the garage, so don't waste time looking into those tools - and recognize the limitations around what my capabilities will be. I am big into fabrication, but I have 3 small children to raise, so I should limit my expectations/tool purchasing accordingly.
Etc.
Anyways...thoughts? After writing this out, seems like you'd need to be in the right stage of life to honestly answer yourself...so maybe not helpful.
Has anyone done something like this for the machinist world? Cuz it's exactly the same depth of rabbit hole, and exactly the same expense factor (you would not believe where saltwater aquariums can go).
For example, my 'machinist personality' would be:
- Here's my budget, time commitment, space available, I am a hobbyist (not income generating)
Therefore...
- Limit yourself to 120v tools
-> Which limits you to small endmills, vises, collet sets, etc
- Limit yourself to ebay or used tools/metrology
-> Which limits me to certain surface finishes, tolerances to expect, etc
- Don't expect tolerances better than 0.001"
- etc etc etc
Just curious. Over the years of me figuring things out, researching, dreaming, etc, I've come to learn what my 'tool personality' is and therefore set expectations accordingly. For example, we limit our budget due to religious/social commitments - so I shouldn't have spent countless hours learning about Bridgeport knee mills - because it's not part of my machinist personality. We don't want the expense of adding 220v power to the garage, so don't waste time looking into those tools - and recognize the limitations around what my capabilities will be. I am big into fabrication, but I have 3 small children to raise, so I should limit my expectations/tool purchasing accordingly.
Etc.
Anyways...thoughts? After writing this out, seems like you'd need to be in the right stage of life to honestly answer yourself...so maybe not helpful.