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1836 Craftsman
United States
Приєднався 5 тра 2022
Welcome to the 1836 Craftsman, a Texas based woodworking channel that is dedicated to documenting my journey in woodworking. As a hobbyist woodworker, my humble wood shop occupies what others would call "a two car garage" and is largely filled with second-hand hand tools. It is my hope that it is also where craftsmanship and creativity intersect in the creation of beautiful and functional pieces. Thanks for being part of the journey. Come and make it.
Simple French Cleat Wrench Holder
A few months ago I made turned an empty wall above my workbench into an empty wall with French cleats. I'm going to show you the first tool holder I made, some simple and sleek wrench holders. I was tired of digging through the bottom of my toolbox in the dark to find the wrench I needed, so I made these awesome wrench holders, and now they are up on the wall.
You can purchase the plans to make these from my Etsy store using the below link. The plans include step-by-step instructions and templates.
1836craftsman.etsy.com/listing/1790483213/french-cleat-wrench-organizer-plans
0:00 Introduction
0:20 Making the Backplate
1:11 Making the Support Arms
2:25 Glue-up
3:24 Applying Finish & Cleat
3:46 Review of Finished Product
You can purchase the plans to make these from my Etsy store using the below link. The plans include step-by-step instructions and templates.
1836craftsman.etsy.com/listing/1790483213/french-cleat-wrench-organizer-plans
0:00 Introduction
0:20 Making the Backplate
1:11 Making the Support Arms
2:25 Glue-up
3:24 Applying Finish & Cleat
3:46 Review of Finished Product
Переглядів: 1 316
Відео
Tool Restoration: Vintage Delta Tenoning Jig
Переглядів 1,2 тис.5 місяців тому
Follow along to see the complete transformation of this delta tenoning jig, model no. 34-183 from disassembly, painting to reassembly. Check out my channel for other videos of vintage tool restorations and woodworking projects.
Tool Restoration: Vintage Hollow-Chisel Mortiser: Delta Model No. 14-650
Переглядів 9546 місяців тому
Dive into the restoration of a classic Delta benchtop hollow chisel mortiser, model no. 14-650. This video condenses the entire process, from disassembly, rust treatment, and reassembly into a captivating transformation. 0:00 Introduction 1:06 Disassembly 3:00 Rust Removal and Painting 7:37 Reassembly 9:27 Making a New Table Base 10:19 The Final Result
Woodworking: An Antique Inspired Toy Dump Truck
Переглядів 7348 місяців тому
Join me in a heartwarming woodworking journey as I complete a special project started by my grandfather years ago - building six heirloom-quality wooden toy dump trucks. This video not only shows the woodworking techniques involved in crafting these charming trucks but also weaves a touching story of family legacy and the art of woodworking passed down through generations. 0:00 Intro & Monologu...
Making a Custom Sign | Scroll Saw
Переглядів 316Рік тому
Learn how to make a custom sign with a scroll saw! I made this binford tools wall sign from the hit 1990's TV show, Home Improvement with Tim Allen (which is held in very high esteem in our household) for my garage as one of my first scroll saw projects. It's made out of 1/2" baltic birch plywood and was completed on my souped-up scroll saw which has a 250cc gas lawn mower engine because you ca...
Preserving the Past: Heartwarming Restoration of a Pie Safe / Cabinet | Furniture Restoration
Переглядів 701Рік тому
Preserving the Past: Heartwarming Restoration of a Pie Safe / Cabinet | Furniture Restoration
Making a Woodworking Mallet || Easy DIY Mallet
Переглядів 739Рік тому
Making a Woodworking Mallet || Easy DIY Mallet
Vintage 4" Jointer Restoration Delta 37-290
Переглядів 10 тис.2 роки тому
Vintage 4" Jointer Restoration Delta 37-290
They look great, will be doing something similar with my sets of spanners as well. Nice video.
Thanks, I’m glad you liked it!
I would love to see the long version. I find these restoration videos, at normal speed, very relaxing.
Thanks for the feedback. I usually speed them up a little bit so the video is shorter. I’ve got a vintage delta 12 inch disc sander that I will be restoring next, so maybe I’ll try more normal speed in that video.
I see you have your little helper there!!
Oooohhh yes. Can’t work outside without a helper.
I need a sawdust diverted any ideas
I would probably remove the dust chute altogether and build a something that mounts directly underneath that I could attach a dust collector to. The chute doesn’t really seal well and has a very large opening at the bottom. I don’t actually have this jointer anymore, since I got a larger one so this is mostly from memory. I hope this helps.
What did you use to clean the rust off of the small parts? Are you using a high grit sandpaper to clean the cast iron surfaces with WD-40? I have the same mortiser and I'm trying to figure out how to clean it. The main thing I need to do is clean the grease from the tracks that the head rides on. It sticks when moving the head up and down.Thanks for posting this video!
I put the small parts in a product called Evaporust, which works very well and is biodegradable, reusable, and doesn’t have harsh chemicals in it. For the cast iron surfaces, I used WD-40 and 220 grit sand paper - do this by hand, not with a sander. I’ve done this on other projects and never sanded to the point where I made something no longer level. For the grease, I clean it with Naphtha which is a chemical you can get from a box store or a hardware store. This is also what I use to clean the WD-40 off cast iron surfaces after sanding off the rust. I’m happy to answer any other questions you have, and good luck!
What kind of screws did you use for the router?
I think those are 3 inch deck screws, which is what I had laying around. I didn’t show in the video, but I also put glue on the block of 2x4 before screwing it down.
@@1836craftsman I know those ones, I meant the ones that secured the router itself. They looked like machine screws.
Oooooh! Those came with the router for screwing to a plate. I’d have to look in the manual to see what they actually are.
@1836craftsman ok, that's all I need to know. I have a router, and it might have some with it.
what did you use to make the curve on the handle template?
It’s a spokeshave. The one I have is a Benchsog brand, from Rockler.
@@1836craftsman Ty
Great restore! What was it that you sprayed before paint? And what kind of paint did you use? Looks really nice.
Thank you! What I sprayed before painting is a product called, Loctite Rust Neutralizer. You can spray it on lightly rusted surfaces and it prevents future rust and acts as a primer coat for painting. As far as the paint itself, it’s an oil based Sherwin Williams. I took a piece of another delta machine and they matched the color perfectly.
Certainly looks nice now! Hope you post a follow up video cutting tenons with it. Even with the closing shot on the table saw, I am having trouble picturing how exactly it works.
When I use it I will post a short video showing it in use!
What you did is by and large unnecessary. This is not some look into a better time in history when they "made them like they used to." This exact style of tenoning jig is still made today. This is late-stage Delta, when they were making crap. If you wanted to make a truly compelling video, you could've lapped down the atrocious Delta machining marks from those cast iron surfaces to reveal a more polished surface. Any of Delta's more expensive tools were machined flat and to a higher surface finish. The level of machining exhibited by this piece was on their average and lower grade tools, and reflects a dull fly cutter taking too big of a bite and/or travelling at too high of a traversal speed. As a bonus, it would've removed the surface rust at the same time.
I could buy a new one sure, but why would I when I already had one I could fix? Also, it will cut tenons just the same with or without a perfectly polished surface.
@@1836craftsman both statements are true, but miss my point.
I would recommend 3M roloc bristle discs for significant rust removal on cast iron beds and surfaces like that. Gentler than the wire wheel and faster. Kind of rubs it off instead of scratching it off.
Also Boeshield T-9 application prior to wax for much longer lasting results.
I don’t usually use the wire brush for rust removal, but it was pretty heavily on there. Seems like it turned out ok.
I used naphtha to clean off the wd-40 prior to applying wax. Not making a base layer of grease/lubricant and then applying wax on top.
Awesome job. Just got a delta 14-651 and wanted to know what you used on the ways and tracks? Blaster? Is that some kind of lubricant to make it travel smoother? Because I will say after tearing mine apart, cleaning and reassembly, I feel like the travel is kinda rough. Like you can feel too much resistance. Thoughts?
Thank you! I used white lithium grease on the dovetail ways to make it smoother. One thing you might check is that you didn’t over tighten the two large phillips screws right behind the handle. If those two screws are tightened too much it will be difficult to pull the handle to raise and lower the head. In the video I put these back on at the 8:31 mark so you can see exactly which screws I’m talking about.
Nice work but Its very unsafe to wear a watch while using a lathe.
That’s a good tip, thanks. I am usually wearing one so I often forget it’s even there.
Literally, the first thing I noticed.
Why?
Damn fine restoration. Enjoyed the format. Also appreciate the amount of work that goes into a restoration like this.
Thank you, I’m glad you liked it! Hopefully others find it helpful too.
What is the weight of this jointer?
If I had to guess, I’d say about 125-150 lbs. I don’t have it anymore and the manual doesn’t say how much it weighs.
Nice work
Thank you!
Timeless.
Excellent work, your grandfather had the feel for wood. You have inherited that feel. They look terrific.
Thank you for the kind words, that means a lot to me.
awesome Job
Thank you!
Beautiful!
You are!
Dude, seriously work on your audio!
I accept venmo and PayPal for donations to the ‘better audio equipment’ fund. 😂
How can i get one in Europe? I really want one. 😢
Oh, man! Sorry, I don’t think I can help you with that.
Beautiful work ❤❤❤
Thank you! I’m working on a video of the full build now and hope to have it up soon.
Subscribed ❤
Welcome aboard!
Pretty cool
Thank you!
Pro tip...all finishes are food safe once cured. 😉
Thanks for the tip!
Not many people know this fun fact but did you know
Wow, I didn’t know that!
Cool!
Thanks! It was a fun easy project.
What did your kid want?
A snack and something to drink, probably. He’s a bottomless pit.
Not bad not bad at all 🎉
Thanks! Definitely quick and dirty, but it gets the job done.
Your kid is asking for you
Yeah, he does that from time to time.
Now that I have watched two of your videos, I am hooked and subscribed. 😊 Your choice of woods for this project really complimented each other. Now, excuse me while I wander through your other videos. 💕
Thank you, and welcome aboard!
Beautiful! The color is lovely. What did you do with the piece from the back with your dad's writing? 💕
Thank you! I still haven’t figured out what to do with it. I’ve thought about maybe framing it or routing a little section of the back out and gluing it on the back. Do you have any ideas?
@1836craftsman what if you create a pie shape out of wood with a hole in the middle to insert your dad's writing? Or cut the wood with the writing into a pie piece shape, put a stand on the back, and display it on top of the pie cabinet?
@carla109 I like the idea of making a little display out of it that could sit on the top it in a shelf inside. Great idea!
I picked up a much old version of this jointer. It's on my to do list. Thanks for sharing.
There’s very little difference between this jointer from the mid 1980’s and the earlier Rockwell models back to the 1940’s. I also restored a 1980’s Unisaw where all of the internal components were pretty much identical to the early models. It’s incredible how little these Rockwell/Delta machines changed over the years.
Pickup a compressor and a sand blaster. Rust removal on reconditioning / restoration is easy. Messy, but easy!😂
Oh yeah, you’re absolutely right. I’d like to get a sand blaster one day, but I’m making it work with what what I’ve got. I’m also somewhat limited on space so I have to be judicious in my tool acquisitions. Great suggestion!
I’d use dremel or die grinder with wire wheel vs super expensive air compressor to keep up with sand blasting
Amazing work maté thoroughly enjoyed watching and am going to go into the workshop tomorrow to give it a go making my own mallet. Subscribed to you and look forward to more videos from you. God bless 🙏
Thanks, I’m glad you enjoyed the video. Mallets are super handy and fun projects. Good luck making yours!
هل انت من احفاد اليوناردو العبقري يداك يجب وضعها في ثوب الحرير
Thanks!
Great video, man. Instructions & how to's were spot on. Def deserves more views. Hoping for a successful UA-cam experience for you! All great content so far, after watching your vids. Sub'd. -Tony, Cali 😎
Thanks for the kind words and encouragement! Glad to have you aboard.
Belísima peça!👋👋👋👋👋
Thank you!
DESTINY TAPI EMAMGN SEKO AWAL KOE KUI PINTER NEK ASIA JEPANG CINO KOREA.
'this is not to homemade carpenter,your machinery are all professional ,is convenient to sperienced people !
All of the machinery I have I’ve restored or have bought second hand. Not a single power tool has been bought new.
Beautiful design 👊🏼 You got a new subscriber 🙏🏼
Thank you and welcome!
Nice project, well done. And I appreciate your dry sense of humour. Looking forward to more of your videos. A new subscriber.
Thank you and welcome aboard.
I really like your design and execution. Thanks for sharing. I'd like to reproduce this for a local fundraiser for our kids youth program. I can get the rough dimensions from your diagram in the video. Can you share three other dimensions? 1. thickness of the stock used on the end and sides 2. Height of the curve apex on both the ends and the sides? 3. Height and length of the finger opening. Finally - any concerns about wood movement from the base? I'm considering veneering a sheet of 1/4 in plywood for the base since it won't live my own home. Thoughts?
I've updated the description to include a link to a google docs file that has detailed all of the measurements. It's not to scale, but does have everything you need and should answer all your questions. As far as wood movement, I guess we'll see. I cut the panel so there's a little bit of wiggle room just in case, but the panel is about 13 1/2" wide, so there shouldn't be a lot of movement. It's also going to live inside year round, which I hope will help minimize the movement. If you're uncertain of where yours will end up, I'd say veneered plywood is probably a good choice. My panel was 3/8" thick with a rabbet cut in the bottom, so you'd just skip the rabbeting.
@@1836craftsman Perfect. That is exactly what I needed. Thanks so much!
Wow! I wonder when closet shelving is going to be made!
Definitely need to buy some more tools before tackling that project!
Great job!
Thanks!
@@1836craftsman we just bought an old 6” walker turner. Hopefully it comes out as good as this one 😅
Awesome! I hope the video helped. A lot of these old machines are very similar. Good luck!
Very Enjoyable to watch. I might tackle mine! cheers!
Thanks! Hopefully the video helps you get through yours.
Well done sir. She looks healthy again. What kind of paint did you use And what color?
Thanks! I used a Sherwin Williams oil based paint for metals. I actually restored a Unisaw from the same era last year (late 1980’s) and had some paint leftover that I used. I took a piece of the Unisaw to Sherwin Williams and had them match the color. They matched it perfectly. I still have the can if you need to know the exact color mixture. Let me know and thanks for the comment!
That’s pretty neat! I’m looking forward to more awesome content.
Thanks. I don’t have anything else planned at the moment, but it won’t be long. :)