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53 points

It’s never too late to enter carpentry. I know quite a few programmers who do carpentry as their main hobby. Something about the math and the amount of careful planning is highly transferrable, I guess.

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Whenever I try building something with wood, I get so frustrated that it’s not version controlled. In software, I can fearlessly try dumb stuff because I can just roll it back if it didn’t work.

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17 points

3D printing and CAD may be the hobby for you then!

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11 points

Creating anything physical requires a lot of practice, and practice really only works if you make mistakes and then learn from them.

Just have to accept that you will waste a lot of wood getting that practice. Heck, a lot of woodworking practice is repetition of the basics before trying to make something with those skills. Otherwise you end up with a bunch of hobbled together ugly stuff that still works like my stuff.

Not catching very slight warping in boards is my weakness.

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2 points

Engineer your design in FreeCAD and tweak it before you build.

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10 points

Assuming you can afford all the stuff to do it.

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11 points

Which most software engineers can

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8 points

Nah fuck carpentry. You’ll just end up destroying your body to make shit money.

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6 points

I mean you can do it as a hobby though.

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4 points

I mean I was referring to having a shop in your garage so you can build furniture, but you’re not wrong. Construction carpentry is one of the more intense trades I’ve seen.

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-1 points

This isn’t brick laying or plastering. Carpentry is an easy job on the body.

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12 points
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If you think carpentry is easy on the body I can tell you’ve never worked for or as a carpenter before.

In either case carpentry is a massive world. There is a lot more to being a carpenter than making furniture. If that’s all you’re doing as a carpenter than I would argue that you aren’t much of a carpenter and your experience is highly limited.

To me this is like calling yourself a computer engineer because 2 hours a week you write Visual Basic code in an excel spreadsheet.

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5 points

It can be easy on the body provided one has cash to get and wear safety gear. Too many people depend on a cheap employer for their safety.

Buy good gear. Use jigs. Protect hearing.

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2 points

Tell that to my dad’s hips, knees, and back

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3 points

What is so bad with plastering? I would have thought that one isn’t too bad.

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2 points
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lol what.

No.

I work in tech. But (long story) started with a few years of carpentry/joinery. It is not easy on the body, unless you’re just making small boxes or cabinets. And even then, it’s still not really that easy.

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2 points

US defaultism strikes again, is this carpentry as in building houses or carpentry as in building furniture?

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