I get the same feeling about the machines at work, the CNC mills and lathes. I have no clue how to run one, but I can sure crash one! At the same time, the guys that run them have little success operating a Bridgeport or conventional lathe. Without close supervision, they will break tools, get themselves in a position to get hurt!
Seems it's a generational thing. Take the farmer that was uncomfortable switching from horses to tractors. He used what he knew. Felt right at home with horses, scared of tractors. I would have no clue how to raise, train, rig, or use a horse or mule! Frankly, they scare the daylights out of me! But I would not be afraid to figure out how to operate a tractor I was unfamiliar with. At least it will stop when I tell it to!
As far as the sophisticated electronics on the new equipment, us lay people are not intended to repair that stuff! It is constantly changing, intentionally designed with proprietary schematics, and requires special diagnostic equipment that is priced beyond the economic feasibility of the DIY'er. I hate that too, can't stand to have to subject myself to a shop that has the "we gotcha right where we want you" mentality!
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Today's Featured Article - Search For Spares - by Anthony West (UK). Following on from the aquisition of the old Fordson F, I was very much in need of spares. As a novice though I didn't appreciate the fact that there were so many Fordson tractors made, that all the other makes seem rare by comparison. As far as I was aware a fordson was a fordson and it was only through trial an
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