Heres an example of workmanship of certainty:
With a CNC, everything is set up before the workpiece is ever at risk. Really, the craft is completed before the bit ever touches the aluminum.
If you want to see you workmanship of risk, head on over to Konrad Sauers site and take the time to study some of the posts where he walks you through the steps of turning wood and steel into $10,000 handplanes. Lathes? CNCs? Mills? Nope...pretty much just a hacksaw, rasps and files.
Yesterday while I was boring that hole all the choice through my new tote I was remembering a picture from Konrads site:
This was a jig he made for drilling the holes for the cap lever pin on a freaky badger plane. The nature of the plane is such that the angle of this hole is not normal to any axis of the plane body. I suppose the trig calculations arent that difficult, but Im pretty sure that he hadnt actually defined any of the angles contributing to it...trying to measure them with any degree of certainty would be futile because any measurement errors would be magnified by the other two angles. Thats why I really like his caption for the above photo:
"In the end I pretty much eyeballed it, took a deep breath, and went for it."But sometimes dowel holes do line up correctly. Sometime pins and tails mate satisfyingly snugly. Occasionally I can even cut a tenon whose sides are parallel and whose shoulders are all on the same plane--not often, but occasionally.
Perhaps this is all a long choice around examining the title of this blog. Most folks probably view woodworking--particularly handtooling--as a pretty tame, relaxing hobby. "Adventure" may not exactly be the first word that comes to mind. I can, however, assure you that there are moments of true exhilaration to be had from these high-risk situations.
I would encourage all to examine daily tasks and place them on the risk/certainty scale.
Baking cookies? I like them soft but not so much that I have to wash my hands afterwards. How much time in the oven it too much time?
Trimming fingernails? I like them really short, but dont want them tender.
Etc, etc.
Hopefully my saw kit will come in this week so we can get back to the normal posts instead of this nonsense.