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MICROSHIP LAB TOOLS

Building a pair of Microships has called for a substantial upgrade to my battered collection of hand tools, some of which date back to the 70's. Complex fiberglass projects call for a lot of abrasives, not to mention all the other fabrication facilities that have became necessary.

The biggest "tool," of course, is the workspace itself -- a dedicated 3,000 sqft heated shop with integral benches, enclosed dust-control areas, electronics lab, fiberglass fabrication area, roll-up door, machine shop, inventory shelving, and an upstairs office and media lab. But in case you're curious about what it takes to build stuff like this, here's the tool inventory:
table saw
SHOP TOOLS

Grizzly industrial air filter (2-stage recirculating)
Foremost 1 HP 5/8" 16-speed floor-mount drill press with cross-slide vise
Rutland belt sander/grinder
Delta 4" belt and 6" disc sander
Wilton vise
Campbell-Hausfeld air compressor, portable tank, and 100' hose
Grizzly benchtop sandblaster
Foremost 10" table saw
Makita 4" angle grinder
Ryobi laminate trimmer (small router)
Makita palm finish sander
Makita cordless drill
Milwaukee Sawzall
Ryobi jigsaw
Makita 1 1/8" x 21" handheld belt sander
Bosch 5" random orbit sander
Ryobi hand drill
Dremel tool
Dayton mini disc sander
Hot glue gun
Vacuum-bagging facility (pump, table, epoxy trap, consumables)
Homebrew anodizing tank and power supply for quick jobs
5 "rolly carts" of different types for material handling
2 rolling boat workstands
Huge pile of spring clamps and other fixturing devices
The usual sprawl of miscellaneous hand tools, bits, etc.
big red
STOCK MATERIALS AND COMPOSITES SHOP

Massive inventory of stainless fasteners (but never enough)
Stock bins of aluminum, machinable plastics, stainless, etc.
Wood, foam core, plastic, and metal sheet stock
100-pound roll of 10-oz fiberglass, almost gone
Many, many gallons of epoxies and hardeners
A half-dozen flavors of filler materials
Countless paints, adhesives, lubricants, anti-sieze, and other "goo"

ELECTRONICS LAB

Tektronix 2465A 4-channel, 350 MHz oscilloscope
Amber 3501 noise and distortion analyzer
Fluke 87 digital multimeter
2 cheapie auxiliary multimeters
Hewlett-Packard LogicDart
Datastick Mycorder (Palm-based) for analog data collection
Various bench power supplies from high-precision to a 30A clunker
Prototyping facilities
Weller temperature-controlled soldering iron
Ultratorch butane heat tools
Label-printing machine
Thorough collection of hand tools, probes, and so on
Various computers and development systems
Tons of electronics inventory (again, never enough)
bench

OFFICE AND SOFTWARE DEVELOPMENT

Various computers (mostly Macs, plus a dual-Pentium linux system)
Dayna ethernet hubs
Draco Casablanca digital video editing system, with DVD writer
Video workstation (various recorders, monitors, cameras)
Publications: binding machine, laser printer, copier, etc
Photography equipment
The usual office tools

OFFSITE RESOURCES

We had to draw the line somewhere. Despite chronic techno-lust that keeps me drooling over machine tool catalogs, trips to Grizzly in Bellingham, and even the tool departments of local homeowner meccas, we elected to stop building up the lab and start building BOATS. As such, we depend on nearby resources for TIG welding aluminum and stainless, serious lathe and mill work, electric discharge machining, anodizing/sealing, panel silkscreening, deep inventory resources, and other "big stuff." Continuous shop enhancement is a dangerous and expensive obsession... the above list is a fairly minimalist collection of necessary tools for a techno-boat project of this scale.