Actually it does, I'm mortising Oak and you Elm.
You need a Helluva lot better chisel! ;-)
Actually you're right, and I agree.
I haven't been following the 100s of posts going
around lately, no time. I was simply making the
point that sometimes "the best" isn't always the
right choice for me.
And "specialized" is a whole 'nother matter.
I have a lot of tools which are both
indispensable for, and only suitable for, one
specific job. I understand your point perfectly.

Don

> -----Original Message-----
> From: Tom Reese [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Sunday, September 25, 2005 9:31 AM
> To: [email protected]
> Subject: Re: How Pentax Could Survive
>
>
> Don Sanderson wrote:
>
> > I no longer own crappy tools, I feel they pretty
> > much guarantee a crappy job.
> > However, that mortise job can be done as well with
> > a good, sharp $10.00 chisel or a $1000.00 mortise
> > router setup.
> > For me the chisel makes more sense, it takes too
> > long to learn and setup the router for the few
> > mortise jobs I do.
> > If I were a pro I'd want the $1000.00 job.
> > I feel Pentax cameras fall into the chisel cata-
> > gory, wonder if they'll ever build a "router"
> > DSLR?
> > For now I'm pretty happy with their chisels. ;-)
>
> This analogy doesn't work. The wood is always available to the
> carpenter and
> it doesn't move. Nature photographers might have to wait three
> hours for an
> opportunity to get the shot. When it finally comes, that opportunity might
> only last a few seconds. Wildlife photography is a specialized application
> and it requires special tools. With better tools, the
> photographer will get
> more good shots. That's critical when he's doing it to put food on the
> table.
>
> Tom Reese
>

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