Got lucky as I've been wanting a lathe and found a Laguna 1836 actually in stock, had it in 5 days. Things go in and out quickly, have to be ready to jump on it.
Got lucky as I've been wanting a lathe and found a Laguna 1836 actually in stock, had it in 5 days. Things go in and out quickly, have to be ready to jump on it.
Still waiting on a couple of platform ladders I bought on a Black Friday sale.
FWIW - I have my first colonoscopy coming up in a couple of weeks, oh joy! On my last doctor visit, it was recommended that I pick up the prep well in advance in case they ran out. Apparently, tools and building materials aren't all that's in short supply these days :/
Would you be interested in a 7C with a little chunk missing from the base side? Great user, but recently found a perfect one so the user gets upgraded.
Thanks for the offer, Richard. But I appear to have found a direct replacement for the one that's on a 6-month back order.
A big thanks to all those who reached out in response to my post in the SMC Classifieds. And a big thanks as well to John Jordan for suggesting I post there in the first place!
I had the same thing happen with Woodcraft. I ordered a WR 5½ which was supposed to come in at the end of this month.
Checked the other day and it's been moved out until the middle of December.
I lucked onto a forum member who had one for sale, so I cancelled and bought his.
Of course I've always been a fan of instant gratification.
It's never too late to have a happy childhood.
+1, from a guy who has anesthetized >30,000 patients for them. They truly save lives. Lots of them. If it's your time to get one, guzzle the prep (which sucks), crap your brains out, then go in and possibly save your life. The procedure is simple. You get hooked up to a bunch of monitors, then lights out, lights back on again, fart your brains out, then go home. Easy-peasy.
Now imagine if you do your prep and find out your GI doctor is back-ordered for months.
Who know, everything else seems back-ordered.
- After I ask a stranger if I can pet their dog and they say yes, I like to respond, "I'll keep that in mind" and walk off
- It's above my pay grade. Mongo only pawn in game of life.
Here's a weird backorder occurrence - I get emails from a certain company with deals on 'overstock' yet when I click through to see if the price is worth it, I get a ship date of 2-3 months out. How is this 'overstock' that must be cleared if....it's backordered??
Rustic? Well, no. That was not my intention!
The product may very well be in "overstock" status...but it may be physically located elsewhere with a transportation bottleneck between there and you. A lot of freight is sitting waiting to ship or somewhere in the pathway waiting for a ship to get unloaded or transportation from there to be available, etc.
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'Glad you found a solution, Mike!
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The most expensive tool is the one you buy "cheaply" and often...
I feel the pain. My Veritas cabinet scraper, ordered in March, was first scheduled for June, then July, now September. I've gotten by without one for 40+ years, a few more months won't be a problem, but I think we all hate waiting once we've hit the buy button!
--I had my patience tested. I'm negative--
Backorders are the norm now because we don't make much that's completely done with local (USA) materials and production. Raw materials might be from any one of many cheap labor (and/or lax pollution/safety law) countries and not available due to Covid shut down mines or foundries or due to lack of shipping containers to fill with offshore motors, circuit boards or other bits needed to assemble a tool. Perhaps a complete foreign made item is sitting in a ship off the port of LA waiting for a slot to come into port and unload. Items are expected and then not unloaded when promised - so B.O. date changes. Then there's no trucks (or trucks without a live breathing truckers in the cab) available meeting California's very strict smog requirements to pick up the load at the port. No old stinky trucks allowed. All this all at the same time that companies are using just in time stocking and manufacturing to reduce inventory tax costs and to increase profits. So nothing stocked and nothing being made until there's demand will be the norm for a long time. OBTW, don't even think about just fixing up an old tool, again no spare parts being stocked or perhaps even being made, once an item is obsoleted by the maker. A throw away society doesn't fix things.