When we get wind storms at AC they generally are post frontal out of the NW, but this one has a steady southerly component. It started on Friday and didn’t end until front passage Sunday morning.
Many of the Aspen groves were at peak so this served to strip the trees bare ending some of the more colorful views in the area. It is/was still a good weekend for colors with gold, rust and reds. Most of the Ponderosa’s have dropped there needles also, so the look of an early stage beetle bit tree is ending.
On Friday night as the front would waver there would be times when the quiet was deafening, and then you could hear the train a-coming round the bend. When it would hit the house, beyond the boom of impact there was not the shutter, which had been our experience in previous homes, e.g. Parker, Eagan and Omaha. I guess the engineering on Pinon Rock, although a bit of a pain in the arse last year (4/9/06 post) is paying off…knock on wood. If you remember we ended up putting a steel I-beam in the floor of the great room to support the prow against just these types of forces.
This was a four day weekend for me and my goal was to get a few things marked complete on my project list. I also wanted to work on some none house projects like setting up a new table saw,
Herb and I also wanted to do some work on the snow fences, e.g. repairing, moving and figure out how much more should be put installed. Eventually Jim would also show up to help and bring the end of day beer. This would turn into some real Keystone Cop scenes with the wind rolling up the fence as fast as we laid it out and the need for Jim to “gauge” the setting of each t-post before we could move on. The joke telling also got kind of dangerous when the punch line coincided with the lifting of the t-bar driver. We were lucky there were no on the job accidents that a set of Depends couldn’t resolve.
Over that last few weeks I have been researching the purchase of a new table saw. I have had a
After a few weeks I was pretty confused, after reading numerous reviews it was clear each saw had good and less good points and unless there was a sale they were not in range of my price point of $500. When I have run into this before “tools of the trade.com” helps me get back to the basics of what I want. This is a web site that reviews tools people actually work with, not just sit and admire. Many of the high-end woodworking sites will do a great review, but there tends to not be any room for compromise (ah, the real world) so their picks tend to be high-end tools with a matching high-end price. My price point was very much in the bottom feeder range for this type of saw.
TOTT had a comparison review of contractor saws that caught my eye. After reading it they pretty much said that the Rigid TS 3650 even though it had a low end price its features were that of a saw at the higher end of the range. This was not a saw on my radar screen. I have seen them plenty of times in Home Depot; they are hard to miss because they are pumpkin orange.
I started to look into them and about the only complaint on one forum was that someone thought they wobbled and wouldn’t handle large sheet goods well, which was one of the reason I wanted a larger saw. A number of other folks said this must have been a poorly assembled saw, because they used it for large pieces day in and day out. So last weekend I did my own survey. First I went to Home Depot and butt checked the end of the front rail to get a feel for my baseline wobble index. Then over the course of the next two days I butt checked a number of Deltas, two Jets, a Powermatic, a Hitachi and a General. Of all of these the Powermatic was the most solid, the cast iron Jet was about like the Rigid and all of the other seemed to wobble more, but let me put this in context, none of them moved much and the leveler adjustment on the legs was the most critical item (if the table was assembled correctly).
So I went over to buy a saw.
They had a scratch and dent model for $50 off the list price, but that didn’t move me off of a brand new one in the box. I asked if there was any type of discount if a HD card was used and they said only if it was a new account, damn I had used that discount up when I bought the miter saw 5 years ago. Then a voice from the Contractors Desk said come over here for a minute, which I did. I was told that if I signed up for a Commercial Account I would get a credit and a discount applied to my first purchase. Sold!
One of the other items mentioned on the review forums was that you should plan to spend about 6-8 hours assembling the saw, and to get some help because with a complete cast iron top it could be a beast to stand up. No problem I figured I could call Mike or Herb, if I got stuck. Plus, no tools had ever taken me more then an hour to setup, so this must have been written by a woos.
So what did I give up; a magnetic on/off switch (safety) and a Biesmeyer Fence (the gold standard and costs as much as the saw), either of which I could retro at a later date.
So what else did I accomplish this weekend?
- Re-trimmed the garage doors after the door installers scratched the crap out of the trim
- Installed the Hot Water Lobster underneath the utility sink to stop the cold water line
- I also finally got around to sealing the coax entry point on the rear gable where the satellite dish cabling comes into the house.
- I also vacuumed up a number of wasps and crickets that moved inside from the change in temperature…I hope. For insurance I bug bombed the entire house when we left on Sunday.
- I also shooed a number of large Angus cows away that kept moving in on me as worked down near the barn on Sunday. This was accomplished by waving my arms and saving shoo doggie. As they meandered a few feet away I noticed from the rear that they had intact swinging appendages. I also remembered that bulls attacked the movement, not the color of the cape. So I stopped, and let them watch whatever it is they though I was doing that was so interesting. I should have taken a clue from Dusty, who the day before when finding “real cows” by the barn barked a few time to move them away, but on this day didn’t do anything, but look at these bovine bulls.
-
- We also bought a coat rack for the front door that is made
I think that’s enough for now. Until next time.
No comments:
Post a Comment