I just had a minor epiphany thanks to a comment in an email from my friend Ed. He said, “…I focus on my project and not on the tools unless they impact the project.” What a profound statement. I have been preaching that concept since day one on my web sites.

I often get asked, “What machine should I buy to get started in the hobby.” My stock reply has always been, “First decide what you want to build.” “Second, how much can you spend?”

Ed is an outstanding builder of small scale live steam locomotives and has a wonderfully equipped home machine shop, all top notch machines and tools. His comment hit me so true I could hear the angles singing. Well, almost.

I have read most of Kozo’s books and have seen photos of his modest workshop. He shows his shop in at least the A3 book and several others. I know THAT master builder has a very modest workshop.

Wonderful works are not judged by the machines used to create them. It is the skill of the operator that makes it art, not the chisel and hammer. Are the workshop and tools of Michelangelo famous and on display? No, just what was produced by their use. It is the work that is remembered, not the tools in the shop.

Yes, yes, someday there may be a special on TV about the tools of Michelangelo because some people will be interested, but it is not the tools that have made him and his work immortal.

We all have to decide for ourselves, what is my hobby? Is it making miniature live steam locomotives or owning fabulous machine tools? Neither answer is wrong. Doing both is fine if there is the space and the money. But if my primary desire is for what I can make and not the brand of tool I use to make it, then the choice of tool is clearly defined by the work and funding at hand.

For me, I cannot imagine a worse feeling than sitting in a workshop full of sparkling tools with no idea of what project I want to make or do. I have been in my own professional construction / installation type businesses for most of my life. I bought only the tools I needed to do the work that was providing my income and of a high enough quality to insure ultimate dependability. I still have some of those tools, still in operation after decades of hard and constant use.

I have often expressed “tool lust” in my writings. I think it is a common affliction for creative construction people. The best thing I do is expose it for what it is, an emotion and not a need. Yeah, it hard to keep them separate but all I have to do is ask myself, “Do I need it for what I am doing now?”  I force an honest answer and decide on that naked truth. Well, most of the time.  It has saved me from many squandering purchases.

Just yesterday I saw a 3n1, 12 inch, combo shear, break and roll tool in a HF tool flyer I got in the mail. “Wow”, I thought on impulse, “I can really use one of those in my shop for sheet metal work!” So I ran the test. “Do I really need it now?” “NO.” “Can I buy it later when/if I need one?” “YES” …and probably a better one as most versions are notoriously poor quality imports. The result is my cash is still safely in my business account.

Oh, I did look around and found a better quality version for when I do need one!

Zowee! It’s 95 degrees F. in the shop this afternoon. I have been working in and out of the shop most of the day. Mostly drawing things in Vectric  Software then running out to run them on the HB2. My biggest concern is proper cooling for the computer but it seems to be doing fine. They are short runs from 10 to 45 minutes. I am stopping now that we’ve hit the 95 temp in the shade. I don’t even want to think about working in the sun. The front porch also in the shade is showing 98. We have had over 3 weeks of near and over 100 degree days.

I grabbed some pictures with the cell phone so quality isn’t too great. The pictures are showing about 93 degrees at 3:15 in the afternoon. I also got the main bench cleared and am doing some surface work on it. Getting ready for new projects! You can see the new (old) computer under the HB2.

I have been doing some engravings in Corian and just basically getting the feel (yes hot) of how long I and the equipment can hold up in this weather.

The change is THMS is going to manufacturer many of the products it sells. The Hobbyist’s Machine Shop will be refined and improved as necessary into a higher volume work shop in order to enable production runs of some finely crafted products we have long considered making. These products will then be offered for sale through our e-commerce store or perhaps regional sales representatives.

The Hobbyist Machine Store (THMS) is an Internet e-business. The initial mission statement of the business was to provide replacement steel gears for the popular Asian made mini lathe and mini mills. THMS next expanded its mission statement to include supplying small machine tools, accessories and powered hand tools to any hobbyist constructing precision projects in their personal workshops. THMS does not cater to just the machinist hobby, but to any kind of hobbyist who requires small high quality machine tools for their workshops.

The original plan put THMS into limited competition with other Internet and catalog based small tool providers. I have stated on these pages, it is not the intention of THMS to be yet another supplier of lookalike goods. We never intend to become a large discount supplier of common brand tools and machines, just competing on price.

I have been considering making this THMS mission statement “adjustment” for more than a year. I can’t call it a change of mission as this direction has always been a part of my long range strategy. A change in emphasis may be a better description. The emphasis to produce and market my own products.

THM Store will continue to offer, as long as there are orders, the high quality products that are not readily available through other channels. One example is the excellent Proxxon PD400 metric mini lathe and accessories, imported from Germany. We will also continue to be a source for US made Taig products. Unfortunately sales and profit margins of either of these brands (or both combined) will not (by themselves) keep the doors open for any low volume hobby business. Neither will the Mini lathe/mill retrofit gears, but we intend supply and keep those metal gears turning out as long as possible. All sales do help, but profitable sales (higher than operating costs) are what’s needed to keep any business in the black.

The new  products I am considering are not limited to machine tools or machined metal parts, far from it. There will be no type of raw materials or end products off limits and may include all kinds of metals, plastic, glass, wood and composition and even electronics. CAD/CAM will contribute to accuracy and repeatability in the manufacture of our products but there will still be the craftsman hand very much involved. Making advanced machine tools (designing yet another CNC machine) is definitely not on the drawing board, but I never say “never.”

Some products considered are hobby based. That tends to warrant keeping the hobby business name. Other products may need a name change and could be marketed through the “Dimensional Art” web identity I published about a year ago. Now you know why that name was created. Sometimes “Hobby” isn’t the correct impression for a high quality product.

The primary reason for this change is total control over cost and profit margins. Second is quality control. With these goals, I should improve return on investment. Additionally, my personal passion is design and creation, working in the shop, and pride in well crafted products. I find this more personally rewarding than just trading (buy/sell) common market goods. If I were a farmer, I’d probably have a road side vegetable stand but I would still be a farmer.

If you are wondering, not a single paycheck has ever been issued by THMS.  This is because THMS is a sole proprietorship with operating cost and investment in growth presently higher than gross profits. The reason for operating the business without pay or net profit is the long range desire to develop the workshop into the profit making center. We are nearing that point and it is the reason for the mission change.

One risk is turning an enjoyable hobby into a stressful business. You will read that caveat in every small business guide. The same guide will also say the best business to be in is one the owner totally enjoys. There is no way to know until I try.

Changing my thinking from one-off “hobby” projects into limited production runs, has given me a fresh new insight on how I can spend the next 10 to perhaps 20 years of my life (whatever the “Master Planner” will grant me) to do things I enjoy. I very much enjoy sharing the fruits of my labor (and brain) with others.

OK, OK… I have kept this to myself for far too long.

There are lots of wonderful micro machine shop sites on the internet. One of them at the top of my list is called Micro-Machine Shop. Duh? I guess that’s not too hard to remember…

The site URL is http://www.finelinehair.com/home/index.htm.  I didn’t know what fine line hair meant; I assumed it could be something to do with ultra precise measurement.  Alan is a stickler for that, as a machinist should. I shortened the URL and it (he) is linked from a large hair products salon.

Yep, the creator of the site is named Alan. I haven’t found his surname yet, but it may be buried in there somewhere. Maybe he just likes to be more private than myself. No matter, Alan publishes a wonderful site for us machine tool addicts.

Somehow I think Alan has more tools and variations and measuring devices than actually exist in the world. Just take any major supply catalog like J&L, Enco, etc. and order one of each on every page. He must own both companies. In any case, he doesn’t have a big investment in full size machines (hence the name “micro-machine shop”) but there is no shortage of accessories.

Many getting started machinist ask me what machines are best for the money they have. You will see here it is not the machines that require the most money; it is what you add to them. Alan has far more money and time than I can ever hope to invest.

Did I mention his photography is nothing less than extreme topnotch?  Alan does in pictures what I do in words. In other words, about 1000 time more.

This is a highly recommended machine tool site to visit and bookmark. You will be very pleased I finally told you, but perhaps you already knew…

UPDATE: New URL

http://www.micro-machine-shop.com/

I just ordered a recertified* computer from NewEgg to put in my shop for use with the CNC machines. It’s old but has everything necessary to be a first class controller computer. The processor is a Pentium 4. It comes with a new install of Windows XP Pro which is a rock solid OS for use with MACH3 CNC controller software.

MACH3 is probably the ONLY software other than the OS I will have on this machine. The really good part is it only cost $140.00 including shipping, keyboard and mouse.

I may throw in some extra memory and maybe an old video card I have. I have boxes full of that old stuff here. The low price is unbelievable (but it IS an old, used machine.)

*I think this means it was plugged in and it booted. :) Other buyers say they are dusty inside so these are pull outs from some corporate office, but perfect as a cheap controller computer. The benefit from buying it from Newegg is if it is broke, I can exchange it.

UPDATE: 5/16/10

The little PC is now listed as not available at Newegg. Got mine no problem. Works perfectly to fit my needs. It was dusty inside so I blew it out with my shop air gun. I do that with all my older computers. It only had 256 Meg of RAM so replaced it with one Gig I already owned. Video seems fine for my needs. It now runs the HB2 machine from a permanent location. It is a perfect machine controller. No need to even see the Internet. Long live XP Pro.

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