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The Idea Hub.... Great techniques, insight, and methods.  
Some shockingly valuable in the shop!


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Save $200-$300 Dollars.....Build a very accurate fence....Save $200-$300 Dollars

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"Technology is many things, but one of it's most breakthrough achievements was the 
discovery of the methods in which tools could make tools."  Learn gauging techniques! 

  Qualified?
Needed Now, a Skilled
Executioner!
read more below.....

Hey! Teach me this technique.
This show's how to build a duplication fence....
A treasured device, an "Ageless method."

Read more below.

Get this manual....It reveals some shockingly valuable secrets....
Really! It has'em, it really has'em!

by

When we are working with expensive machines, and expensive wood, we need a surefire, dependable method of gauging and measuring our cuts.  Our time and money becomes a matter of "techniques or consequences."  Wasting wood wearing out tools by rushing into a project with little confidence happens all of the time.  That's why we need more insight into the ways of putting machines to the most efficient use.  Otherwise a $40 dollar piece of hardwood becomes fuel for the next cold snap.  

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Save $200-$300 Dollars.....build a more accurate 
fence, learn the most efficient methods for your saw!


Regular $39.95...Save Hundreds.... (Build your own special fence)
"Precision guesswork might become a thing of the past, 
because until this book, much of the knowledge worth 
sharing, just hasn't been."



Order 24/7.....Regular price, over....$40.00 for  both books.....Now $19.95 for both.. at.... PAYPAL

For all orders by mail...with check or 
money order, please inquire
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Mail order.....Arrives in 2-3 days!  

Why waste time....We need great tools, with skilled people ready to use them with the
greatest possible potential.  But we also need to know a few other things....Like 
what is detailed in this great E-book.


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How can building a simple device, or just learning a duplication method help you?  
Let's say that you have and idea for making a certain jewelry box, chest, chair, children's furniture, 
shelf, boxes or many other things out of wood, plywood, or other material.  You need to know how to 
duplicate, or how to have a solid technique.  You need a method, not just plenty of tools.  You need to 
grasp an age old, often obscure idea about how to insure all of your parts are identical.  Some will say 
that you need to know how to measure.  Some will say that you need to know how to be very accurate.  
The problem is, many products, many great new measuring devices are very accurate, and very well 
made, but they also need to be moved and readjusted often.  In manufacturing, you need either dedicated machines (with a division of labor), or, you need an efficient, universal device, custom built for your limited  amount of machines.  Now you can build your own.  This book explains in detail, how to build a gaging device for your saw.   Great tools, accurate, shiny tools don't always achieve accuracy.  Gauges and simply 
implementing  them are also needed.  If you have a relatively good machine, wouldn't you want to 
match it with a simple, accurate method to reduce waste and make a variety of projects without a 
whole shop full of fixtures, machines, and even mistakes made by guessing?

_________________


 From my experience in industry, and from what little is known about duplication, fixtures and 
gages by most technicians, I can say this is valuable to know.  To understand this means that you 
have made quite an obscure and  significant discovery. 
If you know how to manufacture just about 
anything with wood, you may not need this book.
  Otherwise, it is advisable to order this valuable book!

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Wanted! A skilled 
Executioner!

No, not that kind! 
The economy is not going to repeat any gory historic events. What is meant by an 
executioner here is: an executioner of a skills, of a method, of skillful production techniques.

Are some people still convinced that hand made, one at a time products can compete? 
Let's explain...... In a slow economy taxes rise, costs skyrocket, trade becomes stagnant, and some inefficient jobs are lost. Everyone buys at discount stores, and then more good jobs are at risk. But does anyone have an answer other than scream at the next guy? That is not a solution. It puts a temporary burden on someone else and it only
masks the problem for awhile, and even healthcare becomes more expensive. I have discovered that some of the reason for our economic problems is simply the lack of a technique, or a clue about how an economy all begins.  Read further to explain how the Industrial Revolution began....

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In the 1800's there was a problem in England. Things were becoming very, very expensive. Few factories were mechanized.  Everything had to be done by hand, by many thousands of people.  Britain was forced to tax it's colonies to afford some of their food, their defense, and economic programs. Buying tools, machinery, furniture and food was becoming more and more expensive, and many British manufacturers began to adopt mass production methods, but not all of them.  Hand made goods were gradually becoming a product which people couldn't afford. Farms were becoming mechanized and this made certain foods more affordable. Those who practiced the new methods, who learned any new techniques would often be at a greater advantage. Then..... Britain had some other major financial dilemmas, including the loss of the war with the Colonies and they surely had to come up with a solution. Surely, along came the steam engine, but there was more.  The next invention that they practiced really wasn't an invention but it was called "the division of labor." That was where a few guys designed their highly accurate machines to do only one process at a time. Initially, it wasn't easy to practice this new method of mass production, and many refused to accept such mechanical efficiency.  
Initially it cost many jobs. 

"Let's get the patents our there, the grants, and link ideas to industry."

You may have heard where machine tools, with accurate gauging methods were designated to make various parts, either  wood, or steel, in large batches. Then another "division" would assemble the parts. This was the idea of some advanced thinkers, some "specialty experts" who knew the functions, the requirements of the massive operations on the whole. These guys today might be called "Production Engineers." We really, really need to invent more products, and train more Production Engineers, because our workforce is now made up of more assemblers, and specialty operators, and unskilled laborers. I've written a few books, and one downloadable book about all of this. It is called "Ingenious Machines and Methods." 

The point is, a few incredible engineers stumbled upon the Industrial Revolution with ideas which to this 
very day are not completely understood. Their plans in the early 1800's were made possible by more accurate machines, and a prolific system of measuring parts with simple gauges, templates and fixtures. These were the tools of perfection which held everything into a tolerable boundary, which eliminated waste, guessing, and the urge to cut corners.

 
"An Ageless Method."
"To affect change, to create and release motion, to insure a confidence for 
making decisions we need clear information, we need facts and scientific details."


These gauging "boundaries" grew ever more scientific, and ever more controlled, which increased quality and 
insured the completion of better and better products. The "boundaries" are held by tools and gauges.  The parts would then be compared to templates and master models. Products, or parts of them were almost always improved and then duplicated in ever higher volume. To this day models and templates are followed for the completion of much of the new products made in industry. 

If you want to make a new chair, you first build a model, often with templates for each part, (this use of templates is what makes up the majority of all projects). If you need to make just some parts for someone, you need a template, a master copy of the certain part. Then you set up the appropriate machines and jigs to locate your piece intended to be machined and mass produced. 

Fewer and fewer people know these things today. Some factories are forcing the old masters to retire, and even the government has now closed down many NASA divisions, and many manufacturing facilities to save money. Knowing and mastering the methods to make things in volume might be ever more neglected, and that is the reason for this new book...

Techniques too commonly omitted....

Many people know this, but of course others stumble around fussing with machines forever with little idea of their capabilities. Take a table saw for example. An average table saw is built like a piece of jewelry compared to what was built 200 years ago. Anyone with a table saw can start small, then mass produce some things in large lots, even network with another business, and gradually sell in volume at some of the shows and various markets. It won't happen overnight, but that is the way thousands of others did it. They learned the methods and techniques of mass producing in high volumes to prosper way back in the early 1800's.  

For many people, buying a high quality, precision tool qualifies them to do high quality, precision work. 
But the skilled mechanic knows something. Being highly skilled means doing great work with the tools that are available. It isn't only the integrity, or only the high quality built into the tool that gets results. Sometimes getting the most from a tool is in the ability to work with the tools available while learning great techniques and following the best methods first.  

So, in the early 1800's, they learned these tooling and gauging methods, then along came the steam engine.  The machine tools were then more commonly powered by steam engines instead of  river water, and the Industrial Revolution was born. 
Today it is important to know how things really are made, otherwise we will be desperately short of the know-how to compete.  The Ageless Method.....it may now be what everyone needs.

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The most unfortunate thing about a down economy is that businesses can 
close, and take with them valuable scientific talents, information, 
techniques and methods. 


 Now included FREE

"The 50 Giants Of Industry"

Index Page

This is a great collection of historical events and people.  I am sure that some of these stories are not very well known even among some scholars.  This a great resource, full of great facts, whether you are a researcher, teacher, or just a history fan.  History is a vital component in progress and learning.  Previous to writing this collection, I did an extensive amount of research for the book  "Ingenious Machines and Methods.  "Ingenious" follows in detail, the politics and culture of industry.  I wanted to find a lineage of all of the known (and often unknown) greats who benefited industry.  
Read which 50 people were probably the most influential in the ascent to Greatness.

  Read who all of these Men were in "50 Giant's of Industry" 

Here are some things included: 

1.  This man wrote what is declared by many to be the greatest math 
works in history over 2,000 years ago. 
2. This man ran naked through the streets when he discovered his theory.
3. One man built a rough type of engine during the 1700's which 
had a cylinder almost 8 feet in length.
4. Read about an English scientist with an unquenchable thirst for knowledge. He spent enough on his books to have bought well over one hundred expensive homes. 

5.  Did you know that Jethro Tull invented (or re-invented) a 
planting machine hundreds of years ago.   His seed drill sowed seeds in uniform rows.   Before then, the seeds were mostly wasted because they were scattered by hand.  He attended Oxford University.  His idea was less wasteful since many seeds did not take root when tossed around by hand.  This is a good example of why machines had to be developed: They solved many of the waste problems.  
6.  How did they learn science, techniques and methods of industry 2-300 years ago?  Rare books, Universities, and travel, usually with armed escorts throughout Europe.

Read lot's more.......

REGULAR $14.95....Included FREE



Both books are are on one Windows CD
 ( Approximately 2 mb.)


Now you will be sent both 
E-books on one CD


PLUS
"The 50 Giants Of Industry"
Included FREE

Both books are are on one Windows CD
 ( Approximately 6-800 KB )

Regular price over....$40.00 for 
both books.....



Order 24/7.....Regular price, over....$40.00 for both books.....Now $19.95 for both..at.... PAYPAL

For all orders by mail...with check or 
money order, please inquire
HERE  

 

Mail order.....Arrives in 2-3 days!  
FREE SHIPPING! 48 U.S. States Only

All major credit cards ....
CD is for WINDOWS PC's

 

Now.... For woodworkers who can't afford the $200-$300 dollar table saw fences.  
Save hundreds and build your own.  If you want to turn your table saw into an accurate 
machining center, save hundreds and download this manual.  It shows you how to 
build a "Fabrication" or "Duplication" fence.  This is what is required to make your 
saw super prolific, accurate and make things in volume!  Solid gauging, no adjusting!
If you can read a micrometer, your half way there.

Want an instant downloadable box joint manual in seconds?
  ~Box Joints  and More......A gateway book to mastering your saw~

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copyrights 2008

 

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