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| 14903 | Jeff Peterson <peterson@e...> | Mar-11-1997 | BIO |
*** This is an update to my Bio as the first bio never made it in to the archives. *** As requested I am supplying a bio with my subscription to this server. My name is Jeff Peterson. I live in Northern California in the Sacramento area (Folsom to be specific). I am a newcomer to woodworking for fun, although I have done light construction and repair work with my father occasionally. Consequently, I have a few handheld power tools (jigsaw, circ saw, router, etc.), enough hand tools to do most basic things, tablesaw, drill press and a good start on a set of planes. This last is mostly due to my brother, Sam, who also subscribes to this server; I have tried to find reasonable prices on used planes in No CA, but it is difficult as even well-used planes are high-priced. Instead, my brother has been able to find some good planes for good prices in the midwest where he lives - and he sharpens them for me before he sends them ! :-) By day I have 2 jobs: I work part-time at Intel Corp in Folsom, CA as an engineer in the Memory Components Division core reliability group, and most of the time I work at University of CA - Davis doing research in semiconductors and working on my doctorate in Electrical Engineering (ETA 1998). I am also involved in our church, so this only leaves me a little time left over for woodworking. Most of the time I keep work and fun separate, but I did catch myself wondering yesterday if I could cut a cove in a Silicon wafer by running it at an angle through the wafer saw ... :-> Unfortunately, it runs at 35K RPM, and I might end up breaking something (most likely me). My shop is in one side of my garage and I have wood storage in another corner. My present project is to build my workbench to replace my Workmate (still in one piece). The top is 3" tongue-in-grove hard maple taken from a bowling alley floor my Dad and brother tore up. The base will be pine or fir. I have been going through a copy of "The Woorkbench Book", and I would recommend it highly for anyone building a workbench or just interested. I will be using European style tool vises and building a board jack to fit the bench. It was a real challenge to get the above-mentioned workbench surface home as I live in CA and the wood was in MO. We finally ended up sliding it flat under the seats of our van on a trip to MO and carting it home that way. We have transported assorted Galoot stuff using the airlines as well: my wife couriered home 70Lbs of walnut for me, and (you may want to cover your eyes here) a 5" jointer; I removed the motor (huge old thing) from the jointer and carried that myself so we could sneak by under the weight limit. At the beginning of this year my brother and I bought a bit of rough-sawn walnut and oak from an Amish sawmill; I figure I have another year while it dries to figure out how to get some of it home.... I have a homepage at: http://www.ece.ucdavis.edu/~peterson/ which has a few topics on woodworking; you are welcome to browse and give inputs if desired. Well enough about me - lunch is over anyway. Regards, Jeff | |||
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