The Big Book of Maker Skills: Tools & Techniques for Building Great Tech Projects
J**.
A must have book for any DIY enthusiasts or the professional handyman
it's just a well written and creative formatting of actual useful information. It's not a huge book but it's contents will take you well past beginning hobbyist to serious lifestyle changes and even survival...
K**D
great beginner book with lots of pictures
Lots of pictures ! Thats great . Absolute a good beginner book for aspiring tinkerer , fixers, hobbyists and gadgetpeople .
L**S
Covers far more skills I didn't know, than I knew.
This was a good book for me. I've dabbled in electronics, electrical, woodworking, and more, a typical handyman and DIYer, and I have several books on home “DIY” and maintenance, so I was familiar with many of the skills covered by this book. So while the skills covered by this book have some overlap with those, overall it supplements them very nicely. I found this book covered far more skills I didn't know, than I knew. My first thought upon looking through the book was 'this is what I needed back in school for my science projects."In particular the skills in this book on working with metal (forming and welding) and plastic will be valuable to me. I was also impressed with the coverage of the tools required for the skills covered. I also like the clarity of the articles and pictures.I'm impressed with it enough, that I'm going to get a copy of this for my adult son.
A**R
Good, broad coverage for beginners and experienced DIYers and makers.
I bought this as a gift for a women who is branching out from traditional artwork to explore various creative opportunities. She is not afraid of tools but is not well experienced. I feared this would insult her intelligence (she has some class and professional training with tools) but changed my mind after seeing the practical advice from the author, Chris Hackett. This is a book that even many experienced DIYers, tinkers, and makers will find useful for its advice about some tools one might be hesitant to blindly purchase (like welders). Nice art layout, well organized (including practical advice on first aid -- like when to get stitches), broad in its coverage. I have a ton of DIY books, from basic carpentry to computer hacking. This book will serve many folks looking for early insight about methods and tools while beginning a project.
D**N
Beginner-Level Intro
Pros: Great photos, graphics and page layout (except for the word art pages with busy backgrounds)Cons: This book covers 200 skills, tools, or techniques. If you have made things before, or do any DIY work around the house, you may not learn much of anything. It's not helpful as an encyclopedia as once you read it, you won't need to look it up again. For example, one of the 200 topics: there are steel, wood, and masonry chisels (with a photo of each). But the projects tend to swing the other way, most just skim the surface and show a diagram and 5 steps. Just a bit odd to cover soldering your first wire splice and building an AC generator (with an electric motor and oil filled capacitors) in the same section.What I wished this book to be: Interviews with crusty old shop guys sorted by skill or tool. Show me their personal hacks or 5 ways to do the same thing with different tools. Some of this is there (how to remove a stripped screw a few different ways), but most of it is the equivalent of what you would find when looking at the Home Depot website and clicking "About Saws".Since the cost to return this is half the cost of the book, I guess I will just keep it for my kids.
G**H
DIY greatness
I remember watching the author on a tv show and was really inspired by him. He has great ideas for projects and show you how to get the material to build them. Dont need to be a engineer to make these projects; just a little know how and little elbow grease.
E**N
Exceeds Expectations
When I bought this book, I was expecting a slim book with a few skills that would facilitate working in a workshop. When the book arrived, I was pleased to discover that it was thicker than I had anticipated (about 1/2 to 3/4 of an inch) and contained fairly detailed instructions on different workshop processes, from hammering to oxyacetylene welding to microprocessors. My one issue is that the final section (electronics and robotics) was a bit underdeveloped and could benefit from the addition of more information and tricks. Other than that, this book was fantastic.
G**2
Awesome, if you like the workshop in Fallout, this is that for real life
The style and prose and information in this book are amazing. It’s got the resourcefulness of a post apocalyptic scavver and the know how of your trusted mechanic who dabbles in every other trade. Really good stuff, the book has these four metal corner protectors that give it a built tough aesthetic. I just got into Chris Hackett, can’t even find where to buy Stuck with Hackett s1/2. Anyway this is the book I wish I’d found in high school, but I probably would have just used to roll cigarettes on.
R**N
Opinión
Es un libro muy claro y fácil de entender. Tiene lo necesario para poder trabajar y tiene ideas muy interesantes para iniciar con proyectos.
I**Y
Great tips with a philosophical twist
Great resource for makers
G**.
?
OK
A**A
Great book for DIY nerds
Clear diagrams, explanations, and photos. Written with humour too. A great present for DIY nerds like me.Warning: it makes you want to buy half the tools described in the book. Could get expensive! :-)
M**S
Für Neulinge Ok, als weiterführende Lektüre zu flach
Bin über eine Make Zeitschrift auf dieses Buch gestoßen und war durch die Beschreibung sehr angetan. Leider musste ich nach Erhalt aber schnell feststellen das der Autor jener Bewertung scheinbar recht neu auf dem Gebiet war, und damit von dem Buch entsprechend begeistert. Ich hatte es mir als "weiterführende Lektüre" erhofft, empfinde es dafür aber inhaltlich einfach viel zu flach. Für Blutige Anfänger kann ich es jedoch bedenkenlos empfehlen.
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