http://techshop.ws/durham.html You can't believe how stoked I am about this . . .
. . . somebody told me about it at work today! [
] ]'>
. . . somebody told me about it at work today! [
That's a real problem for many of us. We might be able to afford to buy the equipment we want to use. We cannot afford a workshop sized space to keep it in and in which to use it. Plus, realistically, it just won't get used that often. Intensely during a project, and then not at all for months at a time.A year's membership would pay for a great tabletop Drill Press and a Harbor Freight Shear, Press Brake and Slip Roll . . .. . . but I haven't got a place for that either. :-/
Don't forget that you have to have such an individual who truly knows how to use the stuff. If someone uses a bandsaw to cut some 25mm steel that is 150mm wide, that's one thing. Knowing that you shouldn't cut more than 50mm at a time (or about 24 teeth) unless you want to cook a $80 blade is another. (Solution: Prop it up slightly at an angle. Pro tip: Make sure the prop material can't catch the teeth as it comes down, otherwise it will get grabbed and slammed against the backstop, taking out the blade with it.)What a cool concept, although, as gorgonops pointed out, it is vulnerable to some tragedy-of-the-commons problems. They could fix that with closer monitoring by staff, but that would add to the cost. Still, pay someone $10 - $15/hour to keep an eye on things and make sure folks clean up, shouldn't be a big expense compared to the cost of the equipment.