[gingery_machines] Re: New Here

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Wednesday, March 2, 2011

 

Hello John,

I see you have some of the same thoughts as me on Gingery and glad you have expressed them! I suspect we are in a minority of those who completed the machines? I agree, and in my opinion they should be built as designed before saying some part or all needs to be modified. As I was building I didn't have the network of folks like available here, so when I ran into troubles I had to work through it. Same with lower priced store bought machines!
Building is not for everyone and some of us learn that it takes a multitude of skills to somewhat master. The training most get in school is to master one thing, where-as it takes many to make a decent machine from scratch.
Thanks for your input!

Cheers Wonk

--- In gingery_machines@yahoogroups.com, John Schwytzer <jschwytzer@...> wrote:
>
> Wonk:
>
> I built the entire series except the hand brake. The lathe and shaper were finished in 1995, drill press in 1996, mill in 1998 (I went back to college in 1996), and the dividing head and change gears in 2003. The machines are all old enough that they need to be rebuilt.
>
> I bought a 10x22 lathe (Grizzley G0602) in 2008 and a mill-drill (Grizzley G0619) last summer, so rebuilding can wait. I'm planning to rebuild later this year after I finish some other projects. Right now I'm trying to finish a wood lathe.
>
> Since I don't post much I'll add a few opinions:
>
> 1. The series is a great way to learn, and you end up with machines that are capable of precise work. But the precision doesn't come fast. If you want fast you'll have to buy machines, so it's more expensive (I built my lathe for ~$250 and scrounging).
>
> 2. Use whatever you have on hand to build. Aluminum alloys are not created equal, but all will work. My machines are made of whatever aluminum I had at the time. Just make sure your cutters are sharp.
>
> 3. Before building a machine with a bunch of modifications you might want to build as designed first. That way you understand the entire process, and you have equipment to help. It takes longer but, in my opinion, you have a greater chance of success.
>
> 4. Don't give up. It takes a lot of work to build these machines. Stick with it and you'll finish eventually.
>
> John Schwytzer
> West Milton, Ohio
>
>
> On 28 Feb 2011 at 17:24, Wonk wrote:
>
> > I would be courious how many Gingery machines are actually made to
> > completion, and are being used now?
> >
> > Wonk
> >
>

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