I appreciate the kind words. I want everyone to know that I have great respect for this forum and its many wonderful contributors over the years. Perhaps my mind is too different, but I saw tremendous value in this forum as a kind of living history of the Shopsmith community. I only came to learn of this forum a few short years ago even though I have been a woodworker on Shopsmith tools for over 3 decades having started as a teen. Often I would stumble on a past thread or one of you would link to one of them and I was amazed at the care and thought that went into the responses. There is a wealth of information embedded in these past threads. Just one example is the thread discussing different hacks/mods many have made on the Mark V lower saw guard. There were many great trial and error perturbations that led to some really interesting "fixes" for the poor dust collection capability of the lower saw guard. It was really helpful for me to address a nagging issue of my own 520 in my shop. This is just one example and there are more, but I see value in the entire forum over all time. So, it greatly disheartened me recently when Shopsmith, in their infinite wisdom, chose to a) break links between past forum threads and the main website and b) change how new members can link to the Shopsmith forum from the main website. Maybe a third of the reason that I chose to self-exile from the forum recently was due to the collective recent Shopsmith changes and these negatives as they impact this forum and the ability for new forum members to derive use out of past threads. I wonder have all of the older threads become pointless now??? Some of you may be on newer social media like FB, IG, YT, TikTok, etc. and have grown accustomed to the short attention span mindset and limited timeline available on these platforms. It can be really hard to search old posts, for example, on the FB Shopsmith groups and the format tends to be short form, unlike my common long form answers here. Everything is geared towards being in the present moment and it is like there is no past on these types of media. It has its place for some people for certain communications, but it is not adept at fully helping people as I perceive the forum has done for decades. So, when a new owner doesn't understand the company, its products or its community and breaks what has been built it causes a visceral response. Those of you who get all of the above, I applaud you. Those who don't, there aren't enough words for me to eloquate this to you.
Now, I must apologize again because I didn't attempt to fully explain before the how and why of my departure. In doing so, I may have caused offense to some of you that I have great respect for. I truly apologize for this. I too love Shopsmith, not just my tools, but the company. I try to be balanced in my responses and sometimes I come off as too negative. I like to point out where my Shopsmith tools excel for me in my shop and I readily admit we all have different projects, shops and workstyles so what annoys me about the tool may not annoy others. Some of you love Shopsmith as well and you see some of the same faults that I do in the tools and acknowledge them. In sometimes raising these faults, I hope that one day the company might address them on new tool versions. Perfect example is we now have a Gen 2 PP. Who thought that would ever happen, right?



P.S. IF the general consensus is that the forum wants me to continue to contribute, I will do my best to try to contribute in a meaningful way while I am still here. The technology and machinery on this planet have been an interesting distraction for me while I have been sharing this planet with you. Many here like to joke about Shopsmith being the "mothership" and this particular humor is apropos. My ride back home will be here shortly, so I will continue to participate on the forum while I am here, but one day soon it will stop as I need to return to my home planet.
