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View Full Version : 2018- What have you learned this year?



Matt Lau
12-31-2018, 3:55 PM
Hey Creekers,

As the year is ending, I like to reflect on stuff that I've learned in the past year.

Do you have any lessons that you've learned this year (woodworking or otherwise)?
As to why I'm posting this on the neanderthal subforum, I figure that it takes a special type of person to do things the hard way.

-Matt

Joe A Faulkner
12-31-2018, 7:38 PM
My youngest son asked me to help him restore an old rusty saw. After we finished that project, he asked if I had an axe head we could restore. I remembered that I had purchased a hewing axe head a couple of years back at an antique store in western Maryland. After de-rusting the axe head, I learned how to shape an axe handle which then meant I had to learn how to tune a spoke shave, which then led me to explore basic leather craft (see the axe sheath - my first leather project in 42 years). After shaping the axe handle, I decided I really want a shaving horse. That lead me to hand split my first log; in this case a 10" walnut log that the electric company dropped about a year ago. Not sure that I can bring myself to use walnut for a shaving horse though.

lowell holmes
01-01-2019, 4:43 PM
I just can not resist. I learned not to talk back to SWMBO.

:) just kidding.

Christopher Charles
01-02-2019, 2:18 AM
After moving this year, I learned (again) that I'd rather be working IN the shop than ON the shop!

Frederick Skelly
01-02-2019, 6:31 AM
Cool story Joe! Like that sheath a lot!
Fred

steven c newman
01-02-2019, 10:48 AM
Mine was more about the remembering of skills I had forgotten about....

Chuck Nickerson
01-02-2019, 2:07 PM
I hope I learned to keep much better notes during a project, particularly on prototypes. If I've got to change something it would be nice to know what I'm changing.

I'll know soon enough if I learned the lesson.

Rob Luter
01-02-2019, 3:00 PM
With respect to my woodworking hobby:

- Sharp solves all manner of problems.
- Time spent on a good plan is time well spent.
- Quality drills make really accurate holes.
- There's no sense having 10 back saws when you only use 3

JohnM Martin
01-02-2019, 5:19 PM
I'm sure this is common knowledge to most here, but I learned to always check mortise and tenon fit for square after it goes together because it may not seat fully square and more work might be required to keep an entire carcass square. This is one of those things that seems so obvious looking back, but when trying to learn everything from online videos and forums, I guess it's a minor detail that had escaped me until I attempted to fit a drawer into a side table that wasn't square at all.

Paolo Trevisan
01-02-2019, 10:37 PM
most important lesson for me was to keep hands behind sharp chisels.
fyi I managed to cut clean through my finger with a 5/8" chisel.
at least doctor was impressed at how sharp it was...
guess it was a good news and bad news
p

Frederick Skelly
01-03-2019, 7:54 AM
I'm sure this is common knowledge to most here, but I learned to always check mortise and tenon fit for square after it goes together because it may not seat fully square and more work might be required to keep an entire carcass square. This is one of those things that seems so obvious looking back, but when trying to learn everything from online videos and forums, I guess it's a minor detail that had escaped me until I attempted to fit a drawer into a side table that wasn't square at all.

John, I had to learn the same thing. :o

Frederick Skelly
01-03-2019, 8:16 AM
I second what others have said: dull tools don't work and sharp tools are amazing in what they can do. I managed to somehow sharpen my favorite smoother well enough to pull a 0.001 thick shaving. The finish was simply amazing - better than any sandpaper I've ever used. Now, if I can just get it that sharp EVERY TIME.

Things I already knew but learned again:
* Stop working when I find my attention wandering or I'm in a hurry. I ruined a Forrest WW-II blade by running it into my miter gauge. Was lucky it wasn't my hand.
* The Lee Valley Shooting Plane is one of the best hand tool purchases I've ever made.
* What a great resource SMC is for me!

Prashun Patel
01-03-2019, 8:21 AM
Over design is the enemy of good design.

Chris Hachet
01-03-2019, 10:19 AM
With respect to my woodworking hobby:

- Sharp solves all manner of problems.
- Time spent on a good plan is time well spent.
- Quality drills make really accurate holes.
- There's no sense having 10 back saws when you only use 3

I have a dozen...probably overkill...but I really like having a dozen back saws.

Personally, I learned to love hand tools again after falling in love with the machine side of the shop.

Matthew Hartlin
01-03-2019, 10:33 AM
John, I had to learn the same thing. :o

Same thing here, lots of M&T in my projects this year. Have gotten much better at cutting and chopping by hand, but have certainly learned the importance of squaring the mortise after doing so to the tenon with the router plane.

Tom Bender
01-06-2019, 7:06 AM
Mahogany hides a dutchman pretty well

Plaster in shellac will fill the grain of Oak and tone it down

al heitz
01-07-2019, 9:14 PM
Faulkner ..........That lead me to hand split my first log; in this case a 10" walnut log that the electric company dropped about a year ago. Not sure that I can bring myself to use walnut for a shaving horse though.
___________

But, Joe, you could use the shave horse to work the walnut.

Norman Pirollo
01-07-2019, 9:45 PM
Took stock of the tools I have and used them in more projects. This instead of seeking new tools. I was pleasantly surprised at some of the gems I found in shop drawers...
Get back to basics and focus on techniques I had learned in the previous years rather than take on new ones.
Work with hand tools more than ever.
Essentially did a reset to appreciate my investment in tools.
Shared knowledge and techniques on social media much more regularly.

Norman

Larry Frank
01-08-2019, 7:15 AM
I learned to make a Maloof style rocker. Used both hand and power tools.

Bob Leistner
01-08-2019, 9:10 AM
Never mention Aldi's or sharpening on here : )

Osvaldo Cristo
01-08-2019, 4:29 PM
After 30 years using only my faithful coarse and fine files, occasionally a glass plate and sandpaper, I decided last year to learn really to sharp knifes, chisels and plane irons.

I purchased during the year a set of diamond plates, a buffing bar, a jig to maintain the blades at a consistent angle and finally, a set of Japanese sharpening stones... I got from the net, including this site, lots of info on selection those sharpening tools, how to use them and I applied time practicing the just learned know-how. I am very glad with the results.

Frederick Skelly
01-08-2019, 4:36 PM
I also learned (today) that you cannot use shellac as a sealer under LATEX paint. DAMHIKT.

JohnM Martin
01-08-2019, 5:33 PM
Same thing here, lots of M&T in my projects this year. Have gotten much better at cutting and chopping by hand, but have certainly learned the importance of squaring the mortise after doing so to the tenon with the router plane.

I don't feel so alone now :)

Tony Wilkins
01-08-2019, 5:42 PM
I was supposed to learn something last year? Well darnit, I wish someone had told me earlier.

Bob Glenn
01-08-2019, 7:13 PM
It's easier to keep a tool sharp than to sharpen a dull tool.