For just a second my brain was wondering why Stuart had a "miniature" steam hammer that weighed 400 lbs!Pretty neat. I'm not sure about affordable though its 400 pounds ~ $680 cdn.....
https://www.stuartmodels.com/product/steam-hammer-unmachined/
Would be a pretty cool fidget toy/stress reliever for the desk though.
I always wondered why folks wanted their toilet hanging from the ceiling.......For just a second my brain was wondering why Stuart had a "miniature" steam hammer that weighed 400 lbs!
Which reminds me of one of my daughter's friends who, at 17 years old, was watching a UK house flipping show. They were looking at 3 houses. One was 480,000 pounds, one was 520,000 pounds and one was 450,000 pounds. She turned and asked her mother ":How do you weigh a house?"
It must be contagious.
(I feel I should point out that the didn't actually "flip" the houses. They. just bought them and sold them again).
Yeah, it's nearer Wales though, called "The Mach Loop". They let other planes than just Tornadoes in though! LOL!Is there a Tornado Alley in England?
It'd be a helluva stapler...Pretty neat. I'm not sure about affordable though its 400 pounds ~ $680 cdn.....
https://www.stuartmodels.com/product/steam-hammer-unmachined/
Would be a pretty cool fidget toy/stress reliever for the desk though.
Yeah, Stuart is like to go the way of Myford, by pricing themselves right the hell out of the market! They make great casting kits, but so do a bunch of other folks that are not selling at prices that would make a mob Lawyer flinch to pay out!Pretty neat. I'm not sure about affordable though its 400 pounds ~ $680 cdn.....
https://www.stuartmodels.com/product/steam-hammer-unmachined/
Would be a pretty cool fidget toy/stress reliever for the desk though.
Pretty sure they are all in house, but even so, they used to be pretty affordable, for a working man to buy, and they no longer are.Sometimes it's just the cost of doing business. Does Stuart do their casting in house? How much control do they have over the entire process, or are they just a design and distribution house, and are at the mercy of vendor pricing.
Modern reality. Look around here, and see how many kids are clamoring to learn how to do what we are doing for fun! In Myford's case, much like the low speed implosion of the Original South Bend Lathe company, before the name was bought up and plastered over import machinery, they simply did not evolve and develop with the times, and as the times went on, it cost them more and more to stay operating, while they were mainly competing against used items of their own, previous, construction! Lots more things too, but eventually you run out of guys willing to pay what needs be charged to keep the company alive!that's actually kind of sad...is there that much competition or lack of ideas to advance the craft to foster that attitude I wonder...