Richard, you are talking apples and oranges when you say what you can do by scrounging around for old used components and cobble together your own copy of Trent's system as a basis for deciding whether Trent's price is reasonable. That's a bit like telling a new car dealer that you can beat his price by going to "Tote the Note" on the other side of the tracks.
I talked to Trent briefly at SWAT and he showed me what his system does. I think it is really cool, but I don't have any plans to buy one. It's not because I think that it is over priced, but because it is somewhat expensive and I feel uncomfortable spending that much on something that I would seldom use. If I turned a lot of large deep hollow forms then I might give it more serious consideration.
I've never said to not buy the Visualizer, buy one of those, and one of the JT Tools systems if you like. Cobbling together? Bill, I've had three careers in my lifetime. I was a professional modelmaker, mechanical designer, and professional furniture maker. I don't cobble anything. I'm just saying there's no proprietary software or hardware in the Bosch system that can't be duplicated for next to nothing if you try a little. Don't want to try? Don't. JT Tools, not the same story. Same way I can come up with a carbide tipped tool for fraction of purchased off the shelf. Even if I buy their expensive carbide cutters. You can come up with any analogy you want, but you can still drive to work in a used car, or turn a hollow form with a used computer. Both get the job done with identical results.
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