Yes, I do. So far I've traced one line back to the 17th century. My best advice (and it might sound obvious) is start with what you know and work back slowly, triple-checking everything with different sources as you go.Be wary of family tales that tell of long-lost rich relatives or family that were on the Titanic etc, a lot of people end up chasing the wrong family line and ignoring facts to make their family history fit the story and end up with a work of pure fiction.
Don't rely on stuff that has already been posted on the likes of genesreunited.co.uk etc as being gospel either- once an error is in the system it ends to get repeated over and over again until it becomes "fact"- the same error can be posted on numerous different sites and ends up being used to verify itself.
To give you an example, everyone I contacted that was researching one particular line in my family was stuck on a couple called John Kennedy and Margaret Campbell, everything was there, from the marriage certificate through to the first child's birth certificate and everything looked correct,
except that the dates of birth etc were
slightly out, not by much, maybe a few days or months in most cases, but close enough where it could be put down to transcription error.
Everybody else assumed this
was just a transcription error, including one woman in Australia who had been stuck at that point for 7 years, however when I requested a copy of the marriage cert it tuned out to be a different couple - same names, same children's names, originally from the same town in Fife as my family (so probably related) and married in the same church in Edinburgh,
but a different occupation for the husband. Only once I had done a bit of checking and uncovered both families in different towns in the same later census was I able to trace the correct line any further back.
It can be great fun uncovering all the family's dark secrets (I've found a few skeletons in the closet

) so if you need any assistance drop me a pm
