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http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-43251669
'Robot Carpenter to Make Bespoke Furniture'
If I cared enough, I might despair. So instead I'll raise it here. Apparently, carpentry is a dangerous occupation, especially sawing. The robot will save the loss of digits and allow carpenters to design rather than make.
FFS. Really? One of my great passions is working with wood and making something unique and to sometimes, leave a legacy, from wooden boats to oak framed buildings, I'm qualified in the former and time served in both and one of the greatest pleasures of creating or repairing is knowing that care, attention and love has been entwined within the end result. I call it giving it soul, because they are bespoke, unique, personal. The nature of the material allows and encourages it to live again.
Try machining soul into something made from wood, ain't never gonna happen! Walk round an oak frame with cnc mortice and tenon joints and then one where the joints were hand scribed and cut, there's a different feel.
a) There'll always be a market for stuff that's hand made because there are lots of people like you
b) Basic stuff has been made by machines for ages. You could say the same thing about people making stuff with CNC machines or even power tools when they could be using hand tools only.
I think you miss the point - this is just a flexible way to create custom furniture, it's not going to replace artists any more than cameras did. It'll be like in 2023, if you want an Ikea bedside table that's slightly smaller, you'll be able to go on their website, enter in some new dimensions and it'll be delivered a week later.
Yep, I see where you're coming from Molgrips and you make the point well. Apart from suggesting I'm missing the point! 😃
Utilitarian items of furniture to fit the space available and delivered to your door will certainly be convenient and have a market, despite being soulless
BBC4
now
japanese approach to carpentry
well, a few minutes ago… slow forum!
iplayer it
Utilitarian items of furniture to fit the space available and delivered to your door will certainly be convenient and have a market, despite being soulless
Would adding a picture and unique story in the box make you feel better?
It's how they have been part of my life that puts soul into my inanimate objects
Utilitarian items of furniture to fit the space available and delivered to your door will certainly be convenient and have a market, despite being soulless
Yep. As much soul as the rest of the flatpack furniture in my house, but the right size 🙂
The real test is if it turns out to be cheaper than bespoke furniture. I could pay a small premium over Ikea prices, but I can't afford bespoke furniture. So I'm interested. The scenario I described would be bloody brilliant, thinking about it. I just had to lop 6" off my kids' bunk bed to fit it in an alcove in their room. Wish I could have specced it the right size to begin with.
Slack Alice - do you ever uses power tools?
I think you might be disappointed to find how many of your potential customers really couldn’t give a toss whether the joint was cut by a machine or is impregnated with your sweat and tears.
Cost may well be a driver, but for me not having to talk to people who believe they add soul to inanimate objects would be a selling point!
This sort of tooling will allow creative, artistic people to build well made, functional objects. Of course in an ideal world all artists will be skilled craftsmen too but the reality is many people can only do one or the other well. I think its great that we now have tools to turn ideas into objects. You can still take care and you can still make things bespoke and personal, its just that it is now far more accessible.
Double post, obviously this bespoke forum undermines the argument of bespoke being good
despite being soulless
They should come up with a gritty local historical angle, and save Furniture Town.
That might work
I get the op, (although maybe not as far as the soul bit;) ) it's similar to why I have more attachment to my custom made steel road bike than to the carbon job, which is lighter and cheaper, hanging next to it. Custom / bespoke be that furniture, bikes or shoes for example ain't stuff churned out by a robot
What if the robot is hand made?
I don't care if it's hand made or not. I'm a technophile.
I think you miss the point
Yep. As much soul as the rest of the flatpack furniture in my house, but the right size
I get the op, (although maybe not as far as the soul bit;)
For some people working with wood is way different to metal or composites.
At school I was way better with metal... but the last 10 yrs or so I've come to really appreciate working with wood and products that are "created" from it.
Cost may well be a driver, but for me not having to talk to people who believe they add soul to inanimate objects would be a selling point!
Call it what you will but working with wood is a lot like working with some animate object. At least for me and the OP.
I also like good design... but a Thomson stem (or whatever your thing) isn't the same type of nice to me as an imperfect wooden item. I appreciate that isn't the same for everyone but think plenty of people do appreciate the process that goes into wood. Specifically part of his is making decisions due to the wood's imperfections (Even if a power tool is used)
Er, it's not carpentry though is it, there is no craft involved, it's hardly different from the CNC cut flat pack furniture now. And altering a few sizes is perfectly possible to do now with existing technology, in my book that's not truly bespoke.
I design store fixtures and furniture and often need to have different variants or sixes of different pieces, I don't redraw it every time, I just configure certain dimensions and features, the CAD model updates and then sends out a file to the CNC machine.
Now if the software took a drawing with overall sizes, worked out the construction and spit it in to panels to be cut, that would be impressive.
but a Thomson stem (or whatever your thing) isn’t the same type of nice to me as an imperfect wooden item.
Of course, but the robot in the article isn't intended to replace hand made individualistic imperfect items. It's a robot.
This machine has several problems. Two big one below
#1. Many small custom jobs don't require a model to be draw. It's quicker just to get to work.
#2. The safety requirements for a automated circular saw are extensive. You could not have it set up in a room on its own with out light curtains as a minimum.
Full automation for jobs like this doesn't work for a long time.
I currently work as a programmer in the automation industry, have programmed in other industries in science and engineering so have experience in the practical side and the raw algorithm side.
The group said the goal was not to replace human carpenters but to allow them to focus on more important tasks such as design.
Interesting idea, but this comes across as a bit arrogant. Why should "design" be more important than actually making things with your own hands?
Next thing you know, somebody will be adding electric motors to bicycles to allow mountain bikers to concentrate on more important things than pedalling 🙂
Why should “design” be more important than actually making things with your own hands?
Not sure, not sure I care but if you can't design it then you can't make it (even if you don't draw or write it down it's still been designed)
This tool, and others like it, allow things to be well designed AND well made rather than the either/or that we often get at the moment. You should be able to avoid having well designed things that are let down by the designer/artist lacking manufacturing skills.Why should “design” be more important than actually making things with your own hands?
Of course, but the robot in the article isn’t intended to replace hand made individualistic imperfect items. It’s a robot.
I agree... I appreciate both but differently.
But if i want a stem or seat post I'm happy with a Robot manufactured item.
For my fireplace I'm happier with my hand-made .. faults and all... and part of the reason I like it are the shakes in the oak and the fact it's not quite perfect. It's made from a sleeper and some agricultural grade oak... but I cheated and its bolted together with 1/2" cut off 1" oak dowels covering the hidden bolts but its twisted slightly as it's continued to season (being next to a fire).
Quite honestly it wouldn't be the same if I'd cut some MDF and put a veneer over it even though to a casual observer it would be straighter and not have shakes. In my eyes at least its "crafted"
On the other hand my Thomson dropper is beautifully "engineered".
I think there is a place for crafted and one for engineered... Robot Crafted though doesn't work for me. (Though if it works for you then all's well and good)
I understand the objection, but to my mind this sounds a bit like when films get remade. Ghostbusters with women leads? YOU'VE RUINED MY CHILDHOOD!!1! But the thing is, the new thing doesn't automatically mean that the old thing ceases to exist. It's still there for you to watch and enjoy just as you always did. Robots making furniture isn't going to prevent anyone else from making furniture if that's what they want to do.
And altering a few sizes is perfectly possible to do now with existing technology,
It's been possible for near enough 20 years, i did a CADDS 5 Parametric design course that allowed us to tweak and modify design features on the model, it'd then cascade to match all the other dimensions on the model and the drawings. So link that to a 3D pritner and you're away.
Cost you a few million though.
I mean, thats all this is really, a parametric modelling 3D flat pack "printer".
Quite honestly it wouldn’t be the same if I’d cut some MDF and put a veneer over it
No but it would have been a hell of a lot cheaper. Cost is an issue. It's all well and good waxing lyrical about bespoke and handmade, but it's out of reach for most people. Don't forget that and don't look down on cheapness because you're well off.
What if the robot is hand made?
only if its made by an artisan robot builder.
It’s how they have been part of my life that puts soul into my inanimate objects
I’d suggest that you’re talking about character. Use brings character, making provides* soul.
*or doesn’t
I’d suggest that
It's all bollocks and what you make of it.... unless you like to tell the tale of how your table was made from unicorn horns and finished with fairy tears.
Personally this is one where in my opinion the OP has missed the point
Try machining soul into something made from wood, ain’t never gonna happen!

It’s all bollocks
Calm down dear. And what’s all this talk of unicorns? Do you own any handmade or bespoke furniture? Do you own anything made by a highly skilled, sympathetic maker or artist?
Yes I do, some exceptional one off pottery pieces and some other things, however you don't know the emotion and feelings the maker put into these things, he could have been thinking how much they are coining it in from mugs or how much they hate their lives and would rather be in IT.
If I presented 2 objects to you and told you one was made by hand by a loving maker who was free range and able to roam free would it be worth more than the identical one next to it that just had a price label? What if you picked up the wrong one and had been telling people your table was free range but was in fact only designed by a nice person who owned a robot rather than some power tools?
Never argue with a fool. They’ll only drag you down to their level and beat you with experience every time...
No but it would have been a hell of a lot cheaper. Cost is an issue. It’s all well and good waxing lyrical about bespoke and handmade, but it’s out of reach for most people. Don’t forget that and don’t look down on cheapness because you’re well off.
Not that much cheaper.... £35 for the sleeper (more or less cut in half) and £17 for the timber I used for the mantle (though half of that was reused for shelves in the kitchen) and I think £2 for the dowel I cut up... and maybe £5 worth of coach screws and £10 for the fixing bolts (hardly want a 50kg surround falling on the kid) ... Add a tenner for wearing through plane, sandpaper and another tenner for the Danish oil.
All in well less than £100 for something that will last longer than I do!
or at local rates that's less than 20 pints....
thanks.... I leave you trying to shove sole into inanimate objects 😉
All in well less than £100 for something that will last longer than I do!
Right, but you did it yourself. In general, paying a carpenter for bespoke furniture (what this thread is about) is expensive.
Well I do a lot of timber manufacture. It's all CNC'd and it's pretty bespoke. This includes oak framed buildings. I agree, you can see the difference in hand cut vs's my machines. Mine fit. You don't get the bodge marks from site adjustments, they also don't leak (and most oak building do). So, maybe less soul, but they are better in every other way.
So, this technology thing (and lets be clear, the stupid robot in the clip is at the very basic end of machines that I've had for over 10 years, so it isn't new!) can be a good thing.
Lets look at cars next - I reckon CNC and automation has improved the product. I know the old Jags they they'd forgotten to put a gearbox in had character but lets be honest, they were also shit!
Here's the sort of thing....
and in another company that makes this type of product (not me)
All in well less than £100 for something that will last longer than I do!
or at local rates that’s less than 20 pints….
I don't know much about furniture, but I know I'd be finding somewhere else to drink.
I don’t know much about furniture, but I know I’d be finding somewhere else to drink.
COL "down souff" mate.... or south of London
With what I drink now that's about my yearly cost.
#2. The safety requirements for a automated circular saw are extensive. You could not have it set up in a room on its own with out light curtains as a minimum.
Surely that’s one of its advantages? You’d have it in a room (or controlled zone) with no people and interlocked access so if someone comes in it cuts off. That is fairly trivial to implement.
Calm down dear. And what’s all this talk of unicorns? Do you own any handmade or bespoke furniture? Do you own anything made by a highly skilled, sympathetic maker or artist?
I certainly do, some ceramics, and a lovely little wooden box that I keep personal items like my watches in, all of which I treasure for the craftsmanship that went into them.
However, I wouldn’t decry the use of machines like that, particularly in situations like tinybits describes, where custom-designed and built wood-framed buildings can be created with the minimum of waste, and a guarantee that joints will fit.
Of course, with the proviso that whoever did the math in the first place got it right.
🙃
I was with you until marh......
Tinybits - do you actually make the stuff out of wood? Or just the components that someone else assembles?
I make the components, roofs, framework, doors, windows etc then assemble on site. I do quite a lot - a building a day on average. All done with no ‘soul’ on CNC machines.