Do you miss making bows? I do not think I do. If one thinks making knives is expensive they should try making laminated reflex deflex longbows. Toward the end I went back to making all wood bows and I enjoyed that much better. I still have the first and last bow I made though.Well I'm up at work in Prudhoe bay with ambient temp right now around -30 tomorrow is supposed to be around -50 now add some wind chill and a 65 deg shop sounds balmy ! Luckily my shop at home is heated but as mentioned obove by Chris i also used to be a Bowyer and still have all my equipment in the corner of my shop. My heat box that i cured bows in has a thermastat in it and ran 4 light bulb fixtures with 100 wat bulbs,it is made from plywood and lined with the silver bubble insulation. I think a box about the size of a cooler or foot locker well insulated with a thermostat and one light bulb would work just fine for a unheated shop as long as you keep your epoxy in a heated area and also mix and apply in a warm area.
Just wasn't any profit in it,especially in Alaska were you have to ship everything in .Do you miss making bows? I do not think I do. If one thinks making knives is expensive they should try making laminated reflex deflex longbows. Toward the end I went back to making all wood bows and I enjoyed that much better. I still have the first and last bow I made though.
We have had ridiculous amounts of that tubing get scrapped in the past. When I'm going for pretty I use structural pop rivets. But it's easy to build square like this.I am actually impressed with the way you put it together in absence of a TIG rig. The square tube was smart.
Diamond plate is expensive. I can get all the .090" and .125" aluminum I want for $.48/lb., so long as it's under 30" or so in width.No diamond plate?
I had a basement shop for awhile and it stayed around 65 in the winter and I had lots of issues with epoxy until I started using a desk lamp for heat. The difference in cure rate between 65 and 70 seems to be huge. It’s weird. My experience has been, yours maybe different, that if an epoxy has has had a “cold start” and 12 hours later you try and kick it up with heat , it doesn’t work that well. In other words make sure it is warm enough from the start. I always make sure my stuff is at least 70 degrees warm.
any cheap desk lamp or reflector type lamp with a 60 watt bulb will easily heat up a knife handle for a nice warm cure overnight. I did that for every knife in that shop during the winter. Don’t overthink this. A cardboard box with a trouble light will give you room for several.
anymore if I want a little heat for a knife I turn on my knife oven until it gets to 150, turn it off and put the knife in and close the door overnight.