(08-06-2017, 08:04 PM)JGrout Wrote: do you own a router table? If you do you own a cheap and far less accurate shaper you have limited yourself out of an entire facet of woodworking
This right here is the PERFECT example of why one should not fear tools and learn and experience the joys of operating a machine that actually can do things you never dreamed about while doing them efficiently
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Having these discussions on open forums are just killjoys for those who have not had even a rudimentary education in the safe practices of tool usage
Years ago, I bought a cheap router table at Costco to do a job. When I started to do the job, it was immediately obvious that it was an unsafe setup. I stopped and changed the setup so that I could do the work with a handheld router safely.
I have everything that I need to build a good router table. One is on my todo list, but the projects that would use it are pretty far down on my todo list as well.
Yes, I recognize that a shaper is a scaled up router. I very much respect and am careful with routers. In the same way, the car that I drive is a scaled down version of a nitro race car. I have no desire to drive a nitro race car.
There are many more facets to woodworking than I will ever have time to explore. Time and life expectancy already tells me that there are facets of woodworking that I will not get to.
That being the case, I am perfectly happy for others to make a living using tools that I have no good path to learning how to use safely.
As for open fora being "killjoys for those who have not had even a rudimentary education in the safe practices of tool usage," why would you think that that is a bad things?
Open fora can serve to educate people new to woodworking and DIY that there are safety hazards involved in the use of tools. That can prompt the newcomer to find a mentor or to take classes rather than just buy tools and hurt themselves. Sometimes they even find a mentor through the fora.