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Adam Robins

Joined
Dec 23, 2024
Messages
10
Likes
3
Location
Aloha, Oregon
Hello from Aloha, Oregon.

I got my first taste of woodturning in middle school shop class. I made four table legs, all of them slightly different, that never actually saw use on a table, but loved the process. After years of wanting to get a lathe and get back into woodturning I made the leap a few weeks back and bought myself a Jet 1221, and joined my local chapter (NWWT in Portland).

Other than woodturning, I like cycling, board and minis gaming, languages, art, and music. My favorite ice cream is chocolate chip cookie dough. By day I am an architect.
 
I got my first taste of woodturning in middle school shop class. I made four table legs, all of them slightly different, that never actually saw use on a table, but loved the process. After years of wanting to get a lathe and get back into woodturning I made the leap a few weeks back and bought myself a Jet 1221, and joined my local chapter (NWWT in Portland).

Other than woodturning, I like cycling, board and minis gaming, languages, art, and music. My favorite ice cream is chocolate chip cookie dough. By day I am an architect.

Ah, so you are a "long time" woodturner! :) Can almost guarantee you are going to have a blast!

I've read of very broad interests here - almost always have something in common with others. I have a good electric mountain bike but don't get out much now but do like playing in the dirt with big equipment, enjoy making art and playing music, favorite ice cream is pralines&cream, raise peacocks and llamas, and one son is design manager a large architect firm. Haven't turned a table leg but have made some shovel handles.

Can't remember the last time I've been to Aloha, but it might have been, ah yes, never. Been to Portland, though!

JKJ
 
Ah, so you are a "long time" woodturner! :) Can almost guarantee you are going to have a blast!

I've read of very broad interests here - almost always have something in common with others. I have a good electric mountain bike but don't get out much now but do like playing in the dirt with big equipment, enjoy making art and playing music, favorite ice cream is pralines&cream, raise peacocks and llamas, and one son is design manager a large architect firm. Haven't turned a table leg but have made some shovel handles.

Can't remember the last time I've been to Aloha, but it might have been, ah yes, never. Been to Portland, though!

JKJ
Haha. I am only a long time woodturner if we count a thirty nine year period with very limited lathe access since those days in sixth grade shop as years of woodturning.

That's a wide variety of interests as well. Do you mean big equipment like excavators?

There isn't much to Aloha. It's between Beaverton and Hillsboro. That's about it. I grew up in Portland and lived there most of 47 years.

Adam
 
That's a wide variety of interests as well. Do you mean big equipment like excavators?

Yes, after using the tractor with a fairly small (but useful) backhoe attachment for years, I saved up and finally got an excavator, then later got a tracked skid steer. The excavator, although not a huge one, is something I'd hate now to be without!

This is the little backhoe I had for the tractor, could do most things but had a pretty small hydraulic pump. Without lot of power it took some finesse at times! This is a relatively small hackberry stump - their roots are some of the worst to break loose.
stump.jpg

I sold the backhoe attachment when I got this machine. I tell people it's a woodturning tool since I can hold heavy logs at waist height to cut off chunks with a chainsaw. (I primarily turn dry wood so to feed my addiction I cut log sections into turning blanks and dry them.) Zounds but it's nice, and the cab has heat and air conditioning!
trackhoe_20190916_190256.jpg
The engine isn't huge but it's amazingly powerful because of the hydraulics. I may be accused of "advertising" it too much, but if at some point you might be interested in using a bandsaw to cut green wood into turning blanks for drying, a few years ago I made a video for an on-line turning club demo. (I said "advertising" but I don't make a penny from any of this)

I had this small John Deere wheeled excavator for years - had a lot of power but was pretty old and had a few mechanical issues. I kept it until I could get something better. I used it to remove and move this fairly big hackberry tree in the way when I built my shop. Again, hackberry roots - ug! Too big to lift but I rolled it into the woods and after 8-10 years it rotted away to nothing - not a trace..
stump_2012-08-03_10-55-34_587.jpg

I eventually replaced it with the Kubota tracked loader (skidsteer) in my profile picture - it's way more machine than I deserve - great for digging and moving dirt and rocks. A perfect compliment to the excavator. We have 27 acres here and a lot of opportunity to get out and play!
tracked_skid_steer.jpg

Pushing 75 I'm slowing down some, had to give up some things from younger days like wild motorcycle dirtbikes, insane whitewater, cave diving, flying Cessas and such. But there's still plenty keep me entertained!

You said you like music - do you play as well as listen? Teaching woodturning and making music - "these are a few of my favorite things." :)

JKJ
 
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You've got a lot of nice equipment. We occasionally rent some equipment. The biggest piece we've rented was a medium large tracked skid steer. Normally, it's something more like a ditchwitch or a compacter. We have 1/4 acre so not as much need for bigger machines.

I used to ride motorcycles. Too many close calls because of inattentive drivers and I decided to hang it up. I'd consider doing some mild off-road/forest road. I have never been a super daredevil.

As far as music, I both listen to and play it. I have a background in brass instruments (trumpet primarily). I mostly play synths and guitar now. I enjoy it.

I will have to check out your bandsaw post and video. I have a small bandsaw. I'd like to eventually get a larger capacity one. My shop is basically part of the garage. It's tiny.

Adam
 
I have a background in brass instruments (trumpet primarily). I mostly play synths and guitar now. I enjoy it.

Nice! Brass for me too - started on trumpet in high school, then switched to french horn except for marching band. :)
I played in school and church orchestras, first with an old single, then a new double. A group of us would travel every year to an isolated are in the central highlands in Mexico to get a children’s camp ready for summer for a missionary friend (I was the electrician and construction consultant for the teen helpers) - we took mostly brass instruments and played in little communities all over the area every few days - it’s hard do describe how poor and how happy those people were. I eventually sold the double but kept the single for fun.

Currently have a cornet and bugle too but my lips are in horrible condition. I keep the cornet in the shop down by the barn and been slowly trying to build them up - I can now hit the high G in the star spangled banner - my horrible playing doesn’t seem to bother the llamas at all! Tried the trombone, but besides the tuba, the mouthpiece was so far from the trumpet and french horn I gave up almost immediately.

My parents believed a music education was just as important as the reading/‘ritin’/‘rithmatic so we all started on piano as kids. My brother and I would fight over whose turn it was to practice! Played a few trumpet/piano duets with him (I eventually hauled that old piano to TN from PA - it was a player with a mechanism in bad condition - and rebuilt it. My oldest son has it in his house now, with lots of rolls!)

So I’ve been playing piano for over 60 years, some in churches, a few weddings, duets with my cello-playing son. I’m pretty bad now - lost nearly all of my “muscle memory” after several years of not playing during recovery from medical issues and surgeries but I’m trying to work up some classical and improv again. I keep a Yamaha P525 in the shop (with a good dust cover!) so I can practice as hard and as much as I want without disturbing the family. I find I REALLY like having an electric piano there - makes for a great change of pace, especially when the old hands start getting cramped up from too much woodturning. (I had a woodturing student singing along just last week!) I have a Baldwin SF-10 in the house, bought new in 1980 - was recently telling someone here about my concert bench - I got it for a big discount because it was used, it was the one Billy Joel rented and sat on when he did a concert near here about that time. Good fun!

More recently took up accordion then had to stop - I’m still unable to work the bellows a year after a fall and shoulder surgery. I’m building a test bellows and my mentor is teaching me accordion repair so maybe that will be fun. Also been playing classical guitar since college, working on harmonica, a few other fun things. (Ever try a melodica?) Had a 12 string for years but like the classical far more. My wife made me get rid of the musical saw - she said it had to go or she would!! :) I fell in love with the sound after hearing someone flawlessly play “O Danny Boy” at a ventriloquist convention. (Don’t you just love those conventions!) My attempts at the saw got up to, how should I say, less than flawless. Hardest thing I ever tried.

I’m trying to find a local person who can use some “vintage” high-end synth/midi gear - I have a Kurzweil Midiboard and a Yamaha KX88 (the model Stevie wonder used for years) plus studio speakers, a rack of Kurzweil synths, midi switcher, reverb, mixer, and more. Don’t have room to set it up in this house so it’s stored in a spare room. Maybe I can trade it all for a cello! I’ve dabbled with cello and like it far more than violin and double bass - know anyone who needs a violin?

Need to find a home for an electric bass too (my left shoulder can’t handle it) - someone on this forum who doesn’t live too far away expressed an interest.

Sorry to ramble so much about music but it’s hard to stop - as I mentioned, it’s one of my mostest favoritest things to do!!

JKJ
 
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I built a couple partscasters last year, a tele and a strat. If I make another it will be an Esquire and I think this time I'm going to make the body rather than buy one.

My parents were both people who had music education sort of forced upon them, so they didn't push it. The desire to get a music education was all me.
 
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