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24th December 2016, 05:45 AM #1New Member
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[Need Help! ]I want to know most problem about woodworking.
Hello, My name is Diego.
I am student from Thailand, I doing my research about most problem about woodworkers and woodworking.
I need you help,
Please tell me 5 problem about your woodworking.
And If have any solution, what do you want ?
Sorry about my English
Thank you everyone !
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24th December 2016 05:45 AM # ADSGoogle Adsense Advertisement
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24th December 2016, 07:02 AM #2GOLD MEMBER
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- Jun 2014
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- Seattle, Washington, USA
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Can we possibly get a bit of context on the research project? Are you a student? A university academic? A marketing director?
In other words, why do you want to know this information?
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24th December 2016, 07:13 AM #3New Member
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- Dec 2016
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- Thailand
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I am student in Chulalongkorn university in Thailand, yes this is research of my subject.
I want to know information because I will make the thesis and find the solution for fix problem of woodworkers.
I research in Thailand, Lao, Myanmar, Australia, Canada, U.S.A...
for some reason in my table of content, I just comparing the different of woodworking in different country.
SO.. I don't want to spam or selling any products to you, because I'm real student and want to doing my research.
Thank you.
Best Regards,
Diego
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25th December 2016, 09:31 AM #4GOLD MEMBER
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- Aug 2016
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- Brisbane
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In Australia and NZ many if not most people do woodworking for a hobby. Do you want to hear the 5 top problems from hobbyists or the 5 top problems from professionals or both?
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25th December 2016, 11:26 AM #5GOLD MEMBER
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- Jan 2009
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- Australia
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- 1,222
Good luck with your thesis.
To help us help you what is your thesis title.
Do you want 5 topics on
Safety
Finishing
Obtaining equipment spare parts etc
Costs of workshop eg labour costs insurance etc.
So many areas without us knowing where to give you the best ideas.
You will need to try and be a bit more specific.
Lyle.
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25th December 2016, 01:45 PM #6GOLD MEMBER
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One of my personal frustrations is that many tools are still sold in imperial but everything else in Australia is metric. Also things made in South East Asia are only availble via USA at great expense. Smart manufacturers would supply things to Australia directly and in metric.
Another issue for hobbyists is the expense of this hobby. However it should be remembered that we are demanding. We want great quality but since it is only a hobby we struggle with the costs.
I agree with Lyle that you need to be more specific. One of the things I enjoy is working with my hands to solve a design or process problem or learn a new skill to do something better. These kind of 'problems' are part of the enjoyment of woodwork.
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25th December 2016, 07:29 PM #7SENIOR MEMBER
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- Oct 2011
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- Langwarrin
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My major problems won't help I don't think, however if you find a solution then my guess is you'll be able to retire on the royalties.
1. Time (or lack of)
2. Procrastination (standing in my shed thinking of all the projects I will eventually get round to)
3. Motivation (when time permits)"All the gear and no idea"
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25th December 2016, 11:09 PM #8GOLD MEMBER
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- May 2011
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- Murray Bridge SA
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- 3,339
One of the major problems I see, is the manufacturers of Machinery. The dust outlet ports are a bare minimum, 100 mm, when ideally they should be 125 mm or even 150 mm would be better, and in a suitable position to be more effective. The makers of smaller dust extraction equipment put guards in front of the impeller, causing blockages, by large chips from a lathe as an example. The design of the dust extractor leaves a lot to be desired, the inlet port finishes square, instead of a bell mouth shape being a proper design, I can't see that making a proper bell mouth would add a lot of extra cost in the manufacture. There is a lot of good reading in this article by our resident Guru BobL, which will explain things a lot better.
Improving machine cabinet dust ports
If someone was to be able to manufacture a bell mouth inlet similar to what Bob has suggested, at an affordable price, I'm certain that there would be a lot of people requesting one.
Hopefully this is the sort of thing you're able to base your research on, and good luck.
KrynTo grow old is mandatory, growing up is optional.
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26th December 2016, 06:41 PM #9Senior Member
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I'd say noise is an enormous problem which is hardly mentioned. Hearing aids cost from about $3,000 to $7,000 a pair, or more, need replacing every few years, are a nuisance to wear and are only a partial solution. My ears are shot because I spent my youth in ships' engine rooms, not so much woodworking, but now I'm old it is degrading my quality of life. But I can't recall any discussion about ear protection or ear protectors in this forum, or in woodwork magazines - there are, rightly, animated discussions on dust but nothing about hearing.
The second problem is woodworking without annoying the neighbors. That must keep a lot of people out of the hobby, or annoy a lot of neighbors. When I was on acreage I could use my saws, thicknesser and dust collector without worrying anybody, but it wouldn't be fair to do that in the suburbs.
I'm told that the spiral blade thicknessers are a lot quieter than the straight bladed ones, and that's great. But a lot of machine noise is caused by simple things like fans which could be made a lot quieter for a slight increase in cost, if it were a marketing advantage. But in the meantime I'd urge everybody to buy a good set of ear protectors, not the cheapos you get in the big box stores, and wear them conscientiously when they are using noisy machines.Cheers, Glen
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26th December 2016, 07:06 PM #10Taking a break
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26th December 2016, 08:29 PM #11Senior Member
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- Vevey, Switzerland
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- 407
I'd like to see more mainstream awareness of industrial deafness. I had a routine hearing test about 30 years ago, the doctor looked at the chart (it was paper and ink in those days) and said "I see you were a ship's engineer". I asked him how he knew and he showed me the characteristic dip in the chart. He said "you won't notice it at all now, but you'll be deaf in twenty years". It didn't seem important at the time, but it does now, the deafness and the tinnitus.
Cheers, Glen
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26th December 2016, 08:49 PM #12GOLD MEMBER
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- Oct 2014
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- Caroline Springs, VIC
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- 1,645
You will find dust control discussions more common because noise in the workplace is pretty well covered. The employer has to do a bunch of stuff to reduce the noise, and if all that fails he/she then needs to supply appropriate hearing protection (though a lot of cockroaches I have worked for didn't or chose not to know this). In personal home shops, it's an easy fix via a $45 pair of earmuffs. But with dust control you can spend $1000's and still end up sucking in dust all day because the system is just wrong. Personally I wear earmuffs all day, even when hand planing. People love the sound of a well tuned hand plane, I say it's just noisy!
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26th December 2016, 08:55 PM #13Taking a break
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I think Glen means that not as much emphasis is put on the long term effects of noise, especially if you think your exposure is lower than it really is; if there's lots of dust and you can't breathe it's a clear problem, but sound is less immediately obvious unless it's actually hurting your ears
Hand sanding is the noise that gets me... feels like i'm sanding my eardrum.
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27th December 2016, 06:31 PM #14
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6th January 2017, 08:29 AM #15GOLD MEMBER
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- Brisbane
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Space. You can never have too much of it.
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