CharlesHouse
Active Member
Hello. I'm new to the forum, I have built props for years but few that are perfectly screen accurate. I do have a few that I am working on, and some decent costumes. I am also a filmmaker and like making props and costumes for my own films.
My dad passed away last year, and I recently left the job I was doing and came home to look for work without cost. I have been cleaning my dad's garage. He was a mechanic, and we're a family of packrats, so we don't throw much away. He has a three port garage full of stuff, and I've been going through and seeing what is half-fixed, what is usable, what is in parts, what can be tossed, and what is worth learning. He has a fair number of tools, though a lot of them are auto-specific. He didn't do a lot with wood, though he did rebuild our previous and current house, so he has a fair amount of tools. I'm wondering what will be worthwhile to learn. As an example, my uncle was going through and helping me figure out what certain parts and tools were. I asked about one, and he told me it was a lathe, then realized, "it's a brake lathe, so sort of different." I'm wondering if I can use it for the projects people here use lathes for, particularly creating metal parts. I'm wondering what other auto-specific things I should look for that would be useful for working on wood, plastic, resin, and metal. I want to build a TARDIS, as well as some replica Star Wars blasters, and drill the Graflex flash I have had sitting around waiting to get grip rivets drilled.
I apologize for the rambling message, but basically, I have a lot of tools and want to know what is worth keeping and what I can pack away. I want to keep myself busy because depression sets in quick. His garage is packed, but I would say a lot of it I will never need, or learn, to use because it is auto repair tools and won't be useful for anything related to props, sets, and costumes.
My dad passed away last year, and I recently left the job I was doing and came home to look for work without cost. I have been cleaning my dad's garage. He was a mechanic, and we're a family of packrats, so we don't throw much away. He has a three port garage full of stuff, and I've been going through and seeing what is half-fixed, what is usable, what is in parts, what can be tossed, and what is worth learning. He has a fair number of tools, though a lot of them are auto-specific. He didn't do a lot with wood, though he did rebuild our previous and current house, so he has a fair amount of tools. I'm wondering what will be worthwhile to learn. As an example, my uncle was going through and helping me figure out what certain parts and tools were. I asked about one, and he told me it was a lathe, then realized, "it's a brake lathe, so sort of different." I'm wondering if I can use it for the projects people here use lathes for, particularly creating metal parts. I'm wondering what other auto-specific things I should look for that would be useful for working on wood, plastic, resin, and metal. I want to build a TARDIS, as well as some replica Star Wars blasters, and drill the Graflex flash I have had sitting around waiting to get grip rivets drilled.
I apologize for the rambling message, but basically, I have a lot of tools and want to know what is worth keeping and what I can pack away. I want to keep myself busy because depression sets in quick. His garage is packed, but I would say a lot of it I will never need, or learn, to use because it is auto repair tools and won't be useful for anything related to props, sets, and costumes.