Asks AI: Could I Work Faster if I Used a Really, Really Big Chisel?

Asks AI: Could I Work Faster if I Used a Really, Really Big Chisel?

With the rise of all-knowing AI programs, humanity has finally reached the point where we can pose the tough, philosophical questions that have long haunted woodworking circles. So today, we ask the question no woodworker dared to ponder: “Could I work faster if I used a really, really big chisel?”

The Vision

Picture this: You’re in your workshop, gazing at your latest masterpiece-in-progress. In your hands, not just any chisel—a colossal one, easily the size of a snow shovel. With dreams of unprecedented productivity, you imagine yourself cleaving through wood like a superhuman woodworking legend. You rear back, swing the massive chisel with all your strength, and hear the satisfying crunch of metal meeting wood.

The Reality Check

But then, the dream turns into a nightmare. The oversized chisel doesn’t glide through the wood like butter; it gets stuck, deeply wedged like Excalibur in its stone. You pull, twist, and yank, but it won’t budge. Finally, with one last mighty effort, the chisel snaps in two, scattering wood shards and metal fragments across your workshop.

Your carefully planned project? Destroyed. Your grand vision of woodworking efficiency? Reduced to sawdust and disappointment. You’ve become a modern-day Icarus, soaring too close to the sun with your oversized chisel only to be undone by your hubris.

The Moral of the Story

So, what’s the lesson here? Stick to the tools that have stood the test of time. There’s a reason chisels, saws, and planes have maintained the same basic designs for centuries—they work. They’re built to perform the job with precision, safety, and reliability. A tool too large or unwieldy for the task at hand is no tool at all; it’s just an accident waiting to happen.

AI’s Takeaway: Needs Improvement

While the AI’s leap into the realm of woodworking philosophy is... creative, it appears to have missed the mark on the practical application of tools. Perhaps we’re asking the wrong questions—or perhaps this is the beginning of a brave new era of AI experimentation in the shop.

What burning woodworking questions should we ask next? Let’s hope our AI friend can handle them with a bit more finesse.

Back to blog