Army Veteran says, “LOSING MY JOB WAS A BLESSING”

Bob (right) and his brother Dave get ready for some serious turkey call production with Bob's Woodmaster 725 at his shop in central Pennsylvania.

Bob (right) and his friend, Dave Dick, get ready for some serious turkey call production with Bob’s Woodmaster 725 at his shop in central Pennsylvania. Bob says, “Dave’s a great wood guy with a lot of knowledge of trees and grades of lumber.”

Here's Bob's handiwork — a classic box turkey call. All made in the USA, all made by hand by Bob on his Woodmaster Molder/Planer.

Here’s Bob’s handiwork — a classic box turkey call. All made in the USA, all made by hand by Bob on his Woodmaster Molder/Planer.

“I was in the Army full time, then in the Reserves. My wife, Karen, is in the Army, too. She got deployed to Iraq. Then I got deployed. It seems like after 9/11, one of us was always getting deployed. When I came back to civilian life, my full time job had moved to New Jersey. They told me I still had a job but I had to move. You know how that goes! I told Karen, ‘You know what? We might as well go for it and go into our own woodworking business.’

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Losing my job was a blessing, really. It was good money and everything but I was still working for somebody else. Now I’m making molding, turkey calls, and more, full time and I love it.

With kids in grade school, he wanted to work at home

Do Bob's turkey calls work? We guess they do. His customer, Jerry Corle, sent this photo of a big tom turkey he got . "Nothing hits 'em like a Helsley," he says.

Do Bob’s turkey calls work? We guess they do. His customer, Jerry Corle, sent this photo of a big tom turkey he got . “Nothing hits ’em like a Helsley,” he says.

Here's a good day's work, all ready to package and sell.

Here’s a good day’s work, all ready to package and sell.

I wanted to work at home because our kids were still in grade school. We have lots of oak and other hardwoods here in central Pennsylvania, so I bought a sawmill and started sawing and selling rough cut boards to people who were making molding and furniture. It didn’t take me long to decide to get a Woodmaster Molder/Planer so I could add value to my rough cut lumber.

There are a lot of planers out there but when I called Woodmaster at 1-800-821-6651. They were real friendly and knowledgeable about woodworking. I told them what I wanted to do. I didn’t know anything about woodworking. My earlier woodworking experience was splitting firewood! Woodmaster’s guys told me this machine is pretty simple. They said, ‘We’ll build for you, all you have to do is learn a little bit about it.’

It came in about five boxes and we put it together in a couple hours. We turned it on and it worked. I took some rough cut lumber and ran it through the Woodmaster. It came out just beautiful. All I had to do was follow the instructions.

I was thinking about getting into making hardwood flooring and molding. I bought Woodmaster’s 3-Side Router System. I hooked up the System and I ran boards through. A friend used them to put in his kitchen floor. It’s not that hard once you get everything set up.

“I don’t know what led me to make turkey calls.”

Bob's uncle helped Boy Scouts earn their Woodworking Merit Badges.

Bob held a special Boy Scout event to help a dozen Scouts get their Woodworking Merit Badges. Here’s his uncle, Rich Robinson, supervising as Scout, Spencer Dobson runs wood through Bob’s Woodmaster. All the Scouts made turkey calls start-to-finish and all received their Merit Badges. Spencer needed his to become an Eagle Scout.

I don’t know what led me to it, but I decided to make turkey calls. I just was thinking about it and said, ‘If people can make turkey calls, I know I can do it, too.’  I talked to one of Woodmaster’s tech guys and sent him drawings of pattern knives I’d need. Two days later I approved the tech’s drawing, and ten days after that I received the knives I needed to make turkey calls.

2,000% value-added

I make them for $1.50 and sell them for $30. I don’t make them one at a time. I take an eight-foot walnut, maple, cherry, or poplar board – whatever I want – and cut it to the width I want. I can plane everything at once, ¼” thick and 2” wide, with my Spiral Cutterhead. Then I take my Spiral Cutterhead out and put my Molding Head in — changeover takes about ten minutes. (Watch Changeover Video.) I put the lid on the Woodmaster, put the dust collector on, set my depth, and just go. I run 40 boards for the turkey call sides and 20 boards for tops. Then I section them into 7” pieces on my chop saw. You get a pile of pieces quick! Then we glue the pieces together using little clamps and make maybe 20 turkey calls at a time. Then I sand them and I’m done – all handmade. It’s great that a guy can run his own business and pump out hundreds of turkey calls from his garage.

I’m making crown molding, too. And right now I’m building my grandson a playhouse. I’m making everything this planer can make. I’m making trim; oak molding; base trim; chair rail. I’m planing boards for people. I have customers who’ve built $1,500 oak tables with wood I’ve planed. You just have to stick to it and learn how to do it. The machine actually does all the work. You just have to take it nice and easy and let the machine do its job.

Everybody gets in the act -- Bob's wife handles a booth at a local fair.

The whole Helsley family gets in the act. Bob’s wife, Karen, manned the booth at a recent outdoorsman’s event.

My name is out there now. I’ve only advertised my turkey calls once. People tell their friends I make them. I took 60 turkey calls to an outdoorsman’s event and sold 30 of them the first day. A local grocery store owner ordered 30 of them with his business logo branded into them. I made them in two days. He gives them out to his customers. It’s been really profitable.

Planning in-line production

I bought the biggest Woodmaster, the 725. I wanted the best and I thought bigger was better. Later this year I’ll probably get another one, maybe two more, because I want to have different setups on each one and set them up in-line. We’ll put a rough board in one end of the line and have turkey calls come out the other end. I could do this for the rest of my life.

I’m real happy with my Woodmaster. It’s easy and very rewarding to work with. It’s pretty neat that people who’ve bought my turkey calls send me pictures of them and the turkeys they’ve gotten. There are pictures of some on my Facebook page, ‘Helsley Timberworks.’

“I don’t have to wonder where the next job’s coming from.”

I have Woodmaster’s Double Router System, the Drum Sander attachment, the Spiral Cutterhead, and the Dust Collector. I have everything. I’m totally set up; I need nothing else. But you don’t want to stay where you are, you want to keep growing.

Bob's dad and one of his brothers lend a hand running the wood to make turkey calls through the Woodmaster.

Bob’s dad (front) lends a hand running some oak molding through Bob’s Woodmaster.

The 3-Side Molding System – once you get it set you can really make some nice oak stair treads with bullnose edges. The Spiral Cutterhead is a Godsend. I have an old Grizzly® planer – I’m going to sell it. I don’t need it now that I’ve got the Woodmaster with a Spiral Cutterhead.

We’re really swamped with work. If it keeps going like this, I may have to add another person and I’m getting close to that now. It pays the bills. Once everything’s paid for we can get some luxury items but we’re pretty simple people and if we had anything extra we’d probably give it in the collection plate at church anyhow!

Alternative way to make a living

People have to think of alternative ways to make a living these days. If anybody’s thinking of getting into this kind of work, I’d advise them to get the Woodmaster Molder/Planer because there’s always a demand for millwork. Once you get ten builders who know what you’re doing, you’re OK. They won’t all want the same millwork at the same time. One might want 400 feet of molding. Another might want a little bit of hemlock trim. Then you have your home project guys who want planed wood and molding, too. That’s a blessing because it keeps you going without having to worry where the next job’s coming from.

Woodmaster people are great. Easy to work with, timely, and every time I’ve called there I talk to a real person and get an answer. I can send Woodmaster a 100-year old piece of molding and they’ll match it up and make custom molding knives so you can make it. Or you can design your own pattern and eight days later the knife is in the mail.

Bob gets a little help now and then from "the usual suspects" -- his family. That's Bob at the left, then brothers Ray and Darrel, and Bob Senior at the right.

Bob gets a little help now and then from “the usual suspects” — his family. That’s Bob at the left, then brothers Ray and Darrel, and Bob Senior at the right.

The Woodmaster takes very little maintenance. I can roll it spot-to-spot where I need it in the shop. I’m very impressed – of course, I like what I’m doing, too. I’m very happy. Extremely. You can put me at the top of the list as far as happy.

When I turn my Woodmaster on, it starts making me money. And you don’t have to be a professional woodworker, you just have to work at it. You work at it – it’s mostly trial and error. If you do it, it comes together. And it really comes together quick.”

— Bob Helsley, Woodmaster 725 Owner, Altoona PA

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NOVICE WOODWORKER SAVES THOUSANDS MAKING HIS OWN PRO-QUALITY FLOORING & TRIM

Mike at work on his Woodmaster 725

Mike W. didn’t let a little thing like NO PREVIOUS WOODWORKING EXPERIENCE stop him from taking on the challenge of getting a Woodmaster and running all the trim and flooring for his 11,500 new home. “I did my homework and figured if others could do this kind of work, I could, too.”

We heard recently from Woodmaster Owner, Mike W., of North Texas. He told us he’s using his Woodmaster to make all the trim and flooring for his new home.

Running all your own millwork is not all that uncommon for Woodmaster Molder/Planer Owners — most got their Woodmasters specifically to handle serious woodworking projects.

But when Mike told us, I don’t really have any woodworking credentials other than a shop class I took for a semester in 7th grade,” we thought we’d better check it out. Can a fellow with NO woodworking experience run high-end trim and flooring like a pro?

Mike tells his story…

“My wife, Wendy, and I decided to build a new house. That’s how I got started in woodworking. Besides a shop class in seventh grade, the only real woodworking I’ve done is making the flooring and trim for this house.

It’s a pretty big house, all high-end, about 11,500 square feet overall with about 9,500 square feet of living space. My wife and I are the general contractors. I have a carpenter and his crew and whenever I can help with building, I do. I’ve been involved in just about everything here. We hope to move sometime in October of this year.

Almost done, Mike’s library is a showcase of woodworking skill in red oak — raised panel doors, arched openings, crown molding, pilasters, and more.

Almost done, Mike’s library is a showcase of woodworking skill in red oak — raised panel doors, arched openings, crown molding, pilasters, and more.

Wendy and I base our building and material decisions on the numbers. Not just current costs but longterm costs, too. We knew this home would be expensive so we looked for any way we could save money. When it came down to the wood trim and floors, we started pricing everything out and discovered it would be a lot less expensive if I made the trim and flooring myself. That’s why I got my Woodmaster.

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But what if it didn’t work out?

I was certainly concerned about whether this plan would work. What if the machine didn’t work right? What if I couldn’t learn how to use it correctly? What if I didn’t have the time to do the work myself?

“Curved arches are not a beginner’s task but I’d planned on making them before I bought the Woodmaster,” says Mike. “I had someone quote what it would cost to build them. I said, ‘No, we’re not paying that.’ The Woodmaster came with a video on how to make your own curved molding. I followed the video’s instructions to the letter and it worked out well.”

“Curved arches are not a beginner’s task but I’d planned on making them before I bought the Woodmaster,” says Mike. “I had someone quote what it would cost to build them. I said, ‘No, we’re not paying that.’ The Woodmaster came with a video on how to make your own curved molding. I followed the video’s instructions to the letter and it worked out well.”

I don’t spend this kind of money lightly. These were risks we were willing to take because I did my homework. I can’t stress that enough. I researched all kinds of machines online, I looked at every possibility. I watched Woodmaster’s how-to videos, I talked to people who owned Woodmasters, I looked at Woodmaster’s company info online, and I learned how the machine works. I figured if others could do this kind of work successfully, I could probably do it, too.

The Woodmaster has a great warranty, instructions, and there are people who’ll tell and show you all about it and what to do. I was willing to take the risk and take the time to learn all about it because the cost/benefit analysis showed me that if I could learn to operate it I would save a lot of money.

Saved as much as 70% doing it himself with his Woodmaster

“This raw lumber is our flooring – it’s wide oak. Then we’ve got another several stacks of cherry, hard maple, and more red oak.”

The savings on this entire D-I-Y project, including the raw wood, including the Woodmaster and all the add-ons, including paying my carpenter and his crew, is probably about 50% savings. I cut the cost of having someone else do this work in half. That’s 50% off the cost of unfinished hardwood floors. If I compare it to buying finished flooring, ready to install, I saved 70%.

Making the flooring saved the most money. We’re making them ourselves. Some of the wood is 11” wide, all the way down to 6”. We’re going to do the entire kitchen in 11” wide white oak. To buy hardwood flooring that width is astronomical. But making it yourself with the Woodmaster, buying raw lumber and turn it into flooring, is a no brainer if you can master the process.

He got the biggest & best…plus all the bells & whistles

I had never used any kind of planer before. But I figured if I was going to do it, I wanted it to be able to handle anything I threw at it. I ordered the biggest and best, the 725, 25” Woodmaster with Extension Tables. I got the Caster Kit. Casters come in handy when you run long pieces: you can rotate the machine without having to swing long boards. The biggest board I’ve handled is the countertop for the library. It’s 18’ long and 23” wide red oak. I ran it through in one pass and stuck it on the wall.

Here’s Mike and his Woodmaster with his #1 helper, his daughter Loren, 7. “She wants me to make her a race car,” he says.

Here’s Mike and his Woodmaster with his #1 helper, his daughter Loren, 7, discussing the finer points of woodworking. “She wants me to make her a race car,” he says.

The 725 Woodmaster is wide enough to run cabinet doors. It has a Variable Speed Rate (watch video) that’s very important; I can’t stress that enough. It’s really a big deal, you have to have it. When you’re planing rough lumber, a board’s thickness can vary. By slowing the planer down in thicker spots, you can avoid having to take many shallow cuts. Sometimes I’ll have someone else run the boards through. I manage the Variable Speed Knob and speed it up or slow it down as needed on the first pass to get everything level. If you’re going to make curved molding, you have to be able to adjust the speed or you’ll never get the piece through the machine. You have to go slow.

Another extra purchase that was really great is the Reversing Kit. That really comes in handy when you’re setting molding profiles and doing test runs. It’s worth the price.

I got the ProPack that gives me four functions — planing, molding, sanding, rip sawing — and I’ve used them all very effectively. I also got the Spiral Cutterhead. It’s amazing. That Spiral Cutterhead doesn’t care what you stick in there. It just chews through wood and leaves a satin-smooth finish. I estimate the finish equivalent to 150 grit sandpaper. It has indexable carbide cutters with four faces apiece. You can turn the faces as each one dulls over time. I’ve put 100,000 board feet through that cutterhead and I’m on the third face.

Woodmaster has the dust collector with a big blower. They had everything I need in one spot so I went ahead and got it all. I got the Three Side Molding System, too. We’ll be using it to cut the tongue and groove profiles on all the flooring. Between me, my carpenter, and his crew, we’ve used the Woodmaster as much as anybody could, non-stop from morning to evening.

4-way moneymaker – “And not small money, either.”

Once the house is done, I could sell the Woodmaster – it’s already paid for itself in the savings we’ve realized by doing the work ourselves. But if I sell it, I’ll kick myself every time I want to build something. Or I could build a little shop and keep it to make the furniture I told my wife I’d make. And my carpenter could use it for other people’s trim or flooring for his clients and I could make some kind of financial arrangement with him. So potentially I’ll save more on furniture, and make some money too. And if people come to me to make them something, I’ll make it.

I enjoy making my own millwork and I could make money doing it for others. The Woodmaster is a moneymaker – and not small money. For example, a piece of 8” wide crown molding I’m making, with 5-1/2” wide bed molding below it,

Growing up around a “can-do” dad like Mike, it’s a good chance Luke, age 3, will one day be a D-I-Y woodworker, too.

Growing up around a “can-do” dad like Mike, there’s a good chance Luke, age 3, will one day be a D-I-Y woodworker, too.

the whole piece of ceiling trim is 13-1/2” wide. That’s a big piece of trim. The 8” crown molding alone could cost you $8 – $10 a lineal foot in this part of the country. You run a 10’ board through the Woodmaster, that’s an $80 board. How long does it take to make in the Woodmaster? About 5 minutes. That’s part of the savings I’m talking about here.

My advice for others who’re thinking of doing something like this? Joe at Woodmaster asked me, ‘Can you run a table saw?’ Of course I can, I’ve had one for a long time. ‘Then you can run the Woodmaster,’ he said.

If people want to know more about Woodmaster, I’d be willing to talk to them. Just call or email Woodmaster and get my number.”

— Mike W., Woodmaster Owner, North Texas

 

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