Re: What are you buying, What's on its way?

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Garth wrote: Thu Jan 04, 2024 1:53 pm
twelvepoint wrote: Thu Jan 04, 2024 11:45 am I just replaced my old table saw and router with nice new SawStop stuff.
I thought I replied when you first posted about this but wow + super jealous. These are the two bits of equipment that terrify me the most using them. I built a sauna last year for my wife and used the table saw quite a bit + am using the cedar scraps for additional little things... both of which entailed a lot of ripping. It can be below freezing in my garage and I'll still be sweating buckets each time.

I think a track for my circular saw will probably end up being my table saw avoidance mechanism. Being a weekend warrior it's hard to justify the expense for the nice stuff; maybe in retirement when I get a lathe, a mill, a band saw, etc...
oh haha maybe I posted already about the table saw, but the router table part is new. (And I just paid it all off - ouch)

I definitely recommend a sawstop if you can swing it. We had a contractor last summer who lost the tip of his thumb (it was fortunately, uh "just the tip", and healed ok), and he's experienced but it was a wakeup call for me. The only injury I've had on a table saw was a piece of 1x1 kicking back and hitting me in the eye with enough force to pop the lens of my glasses out, which itself pressed into my eyeball and left me with blurry vision and panicking, I had to check that I still had my eye in my head. I didn't always wear glasses ("it'll be ok just this time"), and I'm super glad I did then. Now I wear a full face shield, always.

Anyway, off the soapbox. Did you post any sauna pics in the home improvement thread? Cool project.
he/him/his

www.bostontypewriterorchestra.com

Re: What are you buying, What's on its way?

972
If I didn’t have a saws top at work I would have one at home (if I could afford the space in california). Beyond the safety, it’s a nice saw that competes easily with anything at a higher consumer level.

I work with a guy in his 60s that is a brilliant woodworker, complete pro and he cut the end of his thumb off last year. If it happened to him it’ll happen to anyone else.

Re: What are you buying, What's on its way?

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TylerDeadPine wrote: Thu Jan 04, 2024 2:51 pm If I didn’t have a saws top at work I would have one at home (if I could afford the space in california). Beyond the safety, it’s a nice saw that competes easily with anything at a higher consumer level.

I work with a guy in his 60s that is a brilliant woodworker, complete pro and he cut the end of his thumb off last year. If it happened to him it’ll happen to anyone else.
Yeah, people always say they're really careful and know how to use a saw and all, and they probably do. But no one is careful 100% of the time, and there are inevitably times when you're working that maybe you're trying something new, unfamiliar or uncomfortable.
he/him/his

www.bostontypewriterorchestra.com

Re: What are you buying, What's on its way?

974
losthighway wrote: Tue Aug 29, 2023 6:56 am TC Electronics is the shit. A rare example of undervalued/used audio gear in today's market. Their M2000 multi effects unit has some great reverbs; plate and room emulations. The less ubiquitous Reverb 4000 is even a notch better, some have called it a poor man's Bricasti. The 2000 can be snagged for $300-400 on a good day. The 4000 takes patience to find for under $1k but they're both a fraction of what they fetched new when they were being manufactured.
I finally found a TC Electronics 2000 for $200. Pay in 4 don’t fail me now!!!

I got a Sony DPS-R7 for cheap a while back and somewhat radically eq’d but subtle 100% wet digital reverb going on an effects send turned out to be way more useful than I thought it would be, so having another option going to its own channel will be a great help.

Re: What are you buying, What's on its way?

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llllllllllllllllllll wrote: Thu Jan 04, 2024 7:12 pm
losthighway wrote: Tue Aug 29, 2023 6:56 am TC Electronics is the shit. A rare example of undervalued/used audio gear in today's market. Their M2000 multi effects unit has some great reverbs; plate and room emulations. The less ubiquitous Reverb 4000 is even a notch better, some have called it a poor man's Bricasti. The 2000 can be snagged for $300-400 on a good day. The 4000 takes patience to find for under $1k but they're both a fraction of what they fetched new when they were being manufactured.
I finally found a TC Electronics 2000 for $200. Pay in 4 don’t fail me now!!!

I got a Sony DPS-R7 for cheap a while back and somewhat radically eq’d but subtle 100% wet digital reverb going on an effects send turned out to be way more useful than I thought it would be, so having another option going to its own channel will be a great help.
Awesome.

Honestly I think eq'ing the send and/or return on any reverb is the key to making it sit well. I will often low pass a send so there's not a bright slap of stick, pick, or mouth and later find some kind of high pass and sometimes mid cut to keep it from getting too cloudy.

I'll be curious to hear how the TC treats you if it works out. $200 would have been a fantasy on that box a decade ago. I think they were $1k back when they were new.

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