Oh, I ain’t ruffled, Pat. Don’ t think that for a moment. You’ve never been anything but helpful and kind to me, AND ABOUT on this forum, I just took the chance to talk about me a little, I guess.
Purposely avoided all the stuff that never worked.
I, too, tied chicken feather flies when I was eight, in a bench vise, but my neighbor kept guinea fowl and peacocks, so some were fancy. Sewing thread, kite string, Christmas tinsel. Everybody used to do it like that a hunnert years ago. I don’t need a LOT more stuff, honestly, but maybe more time off, knowing more of the right people, knowing a few more things. We can’t all shoot the big elk, geese, and catch lakers and walleye, but my needs are relatively simple. As I once said to my dad, " Some men aspire to panfish, and some men have panfish thrust upon them…"
On top of that, I was serious, in a kidding way, about what I said in my first post. I really do get a kick out of finding a better way, or another way, to do something, that is simpler, takes less money, engineering, resources, etc. and actually works. It’s a hobby.
“they made it wrong…”
That sums up a lot of stuff.
**“like Thomas Edison and the light bulb, I have sometimes found a 1000 ways something would not work before finding something that would.”
**THAT’s the real problem! Fit and finish. Machining tolerances. Reproducibility. Not having the right scraps in your garage. That thing where you gotta make the tool, to make the tool, to make the thing… and ultimately not having enough time in a lifetime to try everything.
Lol, after I got into it I figured out it can be done with whatever you have on hand. It can be costly with melters, paints and such, I’ve spent alot over the years, but I like being able to come home and make something I might need the next morning cause I lost all I had made. I make 50-100 jigs at a time in various sizes, can color them real fast if I have to.