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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Jul 2008
    Location
    Sydney NSW
    Age
    79
    Posts
    3

    Default Introduction for Johngi

    Happy New Year for 2010.

    I really can not remember not having something to do with woodworking. Even as a youngster, six seven years or so, there was an undertakers workshop just up the road from where I was brought up and I would go watch the men at work (not digging holes, making the boxes). This must have inspired me to try my hand and a small workshop was established where I tried to develop the required skills, in what had been a laundry. Naturally this included essentials like how to cut fingers with the correct size chisel, the different pain induced on fingers by a Warrington as opposed to a claw hammer and all the patterns that could be made on your hands with a tenon saw; if you don't hold the wood tight. That was the handy thing about being in an old laundry, running water to wash wounds. I must have made a top job of teaching myself because at sixty four I'm still really good at all three and I have added many more to the list like using pliers to make blisters and manicuring finger nails with a belt sander (for too long). There were even some periods when I didn't have Band Aids and I manage to make 50 or so string puppets and a portable theatre, used to put shows on at the local kids Christmas parties and the like, even got invited back to some.

    This came to an end when at 15 I joined the RAF Boy Entrants as a Radar Mechanic. The RAF must have been told about my woodwork experience, within the first week I was set to work polishing red ceder wooden floors, this being a special privilege allowed to be undertaken in addition to learning electronics. During my 25 years RAF service there was always something to do with wood that needed doing. The boss wants a shelf putting up/taking down, office door will not shut/open/lock/unlock, new equipment will not fit on existing benches/shelves. Living in tents in Malaya had to make up your own duckboards or get wet when the rain washed under the tent during monsoons.

    Then I married, she who must be obeyed had me making furniture. This is when I really found my old interest in wood, also enjoyed renovating older furniture.

    I now have a double length garage and have built two benches, a general purpose/metal workbench and a machine bench for a drill press and bench grinder. An existing bench built in the UK to fit into a bike shed has been doubled in width and a cupboard added for power tools on the new side. It has an additional end wood vice. My current project is a mobile bench/stand for a cut off saw.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Oct 2006
    Location
    Melbourne
    Posts
    0

    Default

    Welcome johngi! Those red cedar floors must have taken a beating!
    .
    I know you believe you understand what you think I wrote, but I'm not sure you realize that what you just read is not what I meant.


    Regards, Woodwould.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Nov 2007
    Location
    Albury Well Just Outside
    Posts
    2,966

    Default

    Welcome to the forum. Very interesting life. Thank you for the read.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Mar 2006
    Location
    Mildura, Victoria
    Posts
    379

    Default

    Well done, Johngi, and welcome to the site. Did you serve at Butterworth? Penang was a favourite rest area back in the 50's when I was also in Malaya (KK).

    soth

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Jul 2008
    Location
    Sydney NSW
    Age
    79
    Posts
    3

    Default Red cedar floors

    Quote Originally Posted by Woodwould View Post
    Welcome johngi! Those red cedar floors must have taken a beating!
    Thanks for the welcome Woodwould.

    Those ceder floors were in the airman’s accommodation at RAF Cosford, Staffordshire, where I did my basic and trade training, 1961/62. Many years later I was sent back as an instructor. To keep people entertained it was mandated by our leaders that in addition to teaching electronics you were given a Secondary Duty. I was put in charge of an accommodation block and was looking forward to giving out instruction on polishing ceder. It was distressing to discover that advances in airman comfort had covered the highly polished floors with carpet.

    Johngi

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Jul 2008
    Location
    Sydney NSW
    Age
    79
    Posts
    3

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Christos View Post
    Welcome to the forum. Very interesting life. Thank you for the read.

    Thanks for the welcome Christos.

    It's interesting that I have a clear memory of polishing ceder floors fourty plus years a go but please do not ask me what I did yesterday.

    Johngi

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Mar 2007
    Location
    Munruben, Qld
    Age
    83
    Posts
    0

    Default

    Welcome to the forum
    Reality is no background music.
    Cheers John

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Jul 2008
    Location
    Sydney NSW
    Age
    79
    Posts
    3

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by masoth View Post
    Well done, Johngi, and welcome to the site. Did you serve at Butterworth? Penang was a favourite rest area back in the 50's when I was also in Malaya (KK).

    soth
    G'Day, Soth, thanks for the welcome.

    I was never posted to Butterworth but I was detached there for about six weeks August/September 1963. I was ground crew with the Inspectorate of Radio Services (IRS), Hastings. We were calibrating an upgrade to the Instrument Landing System (ILS). I also staged through on the way to Kuantan (Pahang) 1965/66 for a six month detachment from Germany with 16 Squadron.

    Regards

    Johngi

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Jul 2008
    Location
    Sydney NSW
    Age
    79
    Posts
    3

    Default Welcome

    Quote Originally Posted by munruben View Post
    Welcome to the forum
    Thanks for the welcome Munruben.

    Johngi

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