Point was to not let the current arrangement of equipment drive the
selection of what new mill you can buy because for not a lot of money you
can have the current arrangement of equipment changed.      I'd guess the
labor cost in rural Indiana is less than here in So Cal.

If you are looking to get setup fast, if you buy a REALLY common knee mill
you can buy bolt-on CNC conversion kits for it and you can know the final
performance before you start the process.


> I live outside of a small town of about 1000 in rural Indiana. When I
> first moved her in the 90's, each morning about 6:30am a bunch of guys
> looking for day work would gather outside a small grocery store in
> town.   Contractors (many of them Amish) were always looking for help
> and they would swing by with their vans and pickup labor as required.
> This went on for years.  Sometimes there would be 50 guys there looking
> for work.  One morning, the INS setup a sting and arrested a number of
> illegals looking for work.    That was the end of that.  The work didn't
> go away, the labor market just went underground.    There are a lot of
> cash businesses around here.   Some have significant workforces.
>
>
>
>
>
>
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>


-- 

Chris Albertson
Redondo Beach, California

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