that I want to attach together should I use some kind of adhesive, use nails or ask Lumberjocks? When I find a spot on a piece of my equipment should I clean it off, read the directions for cleaning the equipment or ask Lumberjocks? When I adhere to pieces of wood that should not have been adhered should I tear them apart, cut them apart or ask Lumberjocks?
that I want to attach together should I use some kind of adhesive, use nails or ask Lumberjocks? When I find a spot on a piece of my equipment should I clean it off, read the directions for cleaning the equipment or ask Lumberjocks? When I adhere to pieces of wood that should not have been adhered should I tear them apart, cut them apart or ask Lumberjocks? When I want more attention should I do something brilliant, ask lumberjocks to help me out, just post more stupid stuff?
that I want to attach together should I use some kind of adhesive, use nails or ask Lumberjocks? When I find a spot on a piece of my equipment should I clean it off, read the directions for cleaning the equipment or ask Lumberjocks? When I adhere to pieces of wood that should not have been adhered should I tear them apart, cut them apart or ask Lumberjocks? When I want more attention should I do something brilliant, ask lumberjocks to help me out, just post more stupid stuff?
- DKV
It s easier for you to make up a new name and give yourself the answer you want to hear.
(how many pcs of wood? (to?)
I feel your pain. I am starting to think that some of the posts that I am seeing are completely made up for some odd reason. I would be willing to help anyone solve a problem, but to be a woodworker you have to have SOME common sense and figure things out on your own without attempting to get a consensus answer to the most basic of processes. And what's with all of the "lurking"? Good post!
Maybe just stop reading the posts if you're upset by them? In a few other posts, you talk about the good Christian thing to do…maybe apply that here as well. There are a lot of new people to woodworking here, maybe help them out w/ some patience and understanding.
IMHO, take each post at face value and respond or not; do not get upset with the topic of the post or the person posting it. Also, IMHO, innovation and experimentation is part of woodworking and if you can gain an insight to a successful outcome, no question is dumb or wasted.
What I do see is people find it easier to ask the question before they do a search on LJ to see if similar question were asked and answered addressing their specific concerns. It is really not a problem as sometimes reading through all the responses takes massive amount of time vs a direct almost immediate answer.
A big problem is to determine if an answer is real or tongue-in-cheek or downright rude.
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