woodshop nerdery
woodshop nerdery
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Welcome to the Woodshop Nerdery for the Last Time
Thanks to all who have supported the channel with view, thumbs ups/downs, comments, and shares. This will be the final video of a channel that I am very proud of. All videos will remain public for future reference and to allow new viewers to discover this content.
Переглядів: 6 077

Відео

1 Month Recap of the "Shopsmith Haters" video: Crickets . . .
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It's been a month, let's see how the Shopsmith Haters answered my challenges. #shopsmith
Project Build; Final Hans Wegner JH5612 Folding Chair Build
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With all the woodworking complete for these pair of chairs, this will bne the final video in this build series. #woodworking #furniture
My Shopsmith Mark 7 Saved Me $2,605 Over Stand Alone Tools
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In this video I challenge the myth that a new Shopsmith is over priced. #shopsmith
Shopsmith Challenge: 21 Operations, 9 Tool Changes, High Quality Results, No Safety Short-cuts.
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Shopsmith machines require tool change-overs, which takes time compared to standalone tools. But, what no one talks about is all the ways Shopsmith is much faster and more efficient than individual tools. #shopsmith #woodworking #challenge The Challenge - 1 camera shot, not edits - 1 x 3 x 36 inch Read Oak - Using dust collection - Using all guards - Following manufacture's instructions My Step...
Project "Life-Saver" - Shopsmith's Horizontal Boring Function
Переглядів 2,6 тис.Рік тому
Part 5 of the Hans Wegner JH512 project build continues. Shopsmith's horizontal boring function saved my bacon on this one, allowing me to drill accurate dowel joinery in oddly shaped components.
Uh Oh, We Upset the Shopsmith Haters: Calling Out Your List!
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Hater - "You can get mispriced bench top tools that do a way better job than a Shopsmith AND for less money!" Woodshop Nerdery - "Okay, what tools are those?" Electric Motor Speed / Poles - twcontrols.com/lessons/motor-poles-amp-rpm Induction vs Universal Electric Motors - www.emcourse.com/news-blog/advantages-and-disadvantages-universal-motors
Shopsmith Mark 7: 1 Year Review & PowerPro 2.0 Should I Upgrade?
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My Shopsmith Mark 7 arrived in my shop a little over a year ago. I give a 1 year update review and investigate a possible upgrade to the PowerPro 2.0 More Mark 7 Videos Shopsmith Mark 7 Unboxing: Replacing My Trusty Mark V - ua-cam.com/video/Hi8m2YtT4Co/v-deo.html Shopsmith Mark 7 Answers and Updates: There's More to the Quality Story - ua-cam.com/video/8iOr7MHP06A/v-deo.html Zero Runout & Othe...
Woodworking: Sometime Fast and Easy Just Aren't in the Cards
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I battle with another new low point on the Hans Wegner Chair. It's time to step back and inventory my blessings. DIY Scroll Saw Sander - proxy.imagearchive.com/0cb/0cb34a909b999c095281319fe3653f87.jpg Olson Scroll Saw Sander - www.amazon.com/SC91262BL-Scroll-Sander-4-Inch-Assorted/dp/B00CTGMOT8
I Bought Woodworking's LEAST Dangerous Tool (or as safe as anything else)
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Video response to John Malecki's recent critique of a 1993 Shopsmith Mark V model 510 he purchase on the used market. This video will only make sense if you watch John's video first. "I Bought Woodworkings Most Dangerous Tool" - ua-cam.com/video/yVNMNJw-srQ/v-deo.html Also, see Scott Markwood's video response on his My Growth Rings channel. ua-cam.com/video/A5iQcoY3CYI/v-deo.html #woodworking #...
Woodworking when the right way doesn't work
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This Hans Wegner chair project build is kicking my butt and I am becoming a better woodworker for it.
Planning for Woodworking Projects: Hans Wegner Folding Chair Reproduction Part 2
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Yes, power tool action tossing ample amounts of saw dust everywhere is way more exciting to watch. But the boring steps leading up to the moment we can power up the tools is critically important.
Free Design Software for Woodworking Plans: 6 Tips for DIY drawings
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Inkscape is used to create DIY Drawings of Hans Wegner's JH512 folding rope chair. Links Inkscape - inkscape.org/ Thomas Johnson's Video - ua-cam.com/video/FiCf9irlr00/v-deo.html Metalocus Page - www.metalocus.es/en/news/hans-j-wegner-designing-danish-modern-vitra-design-museum Caleb James's PW Article - www.popularwoodworking.com/projects/modern-lounge-chair/ PP Mobler Page - www.scandinavia-d...
Woodworking Book Review: "Woodworking: The Right Technique"
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Woodworking Book Review: "Woodworking: The Right Technique"
HELP! Into the Bevel or Away From the Bevel When Grinding on a Belt Sander?
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HELP! Into the Bevel or Away From the Bevel When Grinding on a Belt Sander?
Tool Grinding Fixture for Shopsmith Belt Sander
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Tool Grinding Fixture for Shopsmith Belt Sander
Myth: The Ruler Trick Negates Flattening and Works on a Strop
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Myth: The Ruler Trick Negates Flattening and Works on a Strop
Plane Iron Review: Veritas PM-V11 Tool Steel
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Plane Iron Review: Veritas PM-V11 Tool Steel
Best and Worst of the Woodshop Nerdery in 2022. Happy New Year!
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Best and Worst of the Woodshop Nerdery in 2022. Happy New Year!
Christmas Craft Woodworking Project: Nativity and Garden of Eden Broom Holders
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Christmas Craft Woodworking Project: Nativity and Garden of Eden Broom Holders
Shopsmith Jigsaw 610 Major Oil Leak Repair: Installing a Rotary Shaft Oil Seal
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Shopsmith Jigsaw 610 Major Oil Leak Repair: Installing a Rotary Shaft Oil Seal
Shopsmith Push Block Repair - Take 2: Lee Valley High-Friction Sheets
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Shopsmith Push Block Repair - Take 2: Lee Valley High-Friction Sheets
Stickley Highlands Bookshelf: Finally Finished (& Stained 😂)
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Stickley Highlands Bookshelf: Finally Finished (& Stained 😂)
More Joinery on the Stickley Highlands Bookshelf Build.
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More Joinery on the Stickley Highlands Bookshelf Build.
Stickley Highlands Bookshelf: Shelves and Dry Fit
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Stickley Highlands Bookshelf: Shelves and Dry Fit
Harbor Freight & Shopsmith: DIY Edge Banding For Plywood
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Harbor Freight & Shopsmith: DIY Edge Banding For Plywood
Stickley Highlands Bookshelf: Fine Tuning Tenons to Fit Mortises
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Stickley Highlands Bookshelf: Fine Tuning Tenons to Fit Mortises
Stickley Highlands Bookshelf: Accurate Dado Setup for Tenons on Shopsmith
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Stickley Highlands Bookshelf: Accurate Dado Setup for Tenons on Shopsmith
Triple Square Holes: Upper Slats Stickley Highlands Bookshelf
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Triple Square Holes: Upper Slats Stickley Highlands Bookshelf
Only With a Shopsmith: Technique for Mortises in Large Work Pieces
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Only With a Shopsmith: Technique for Mortises in Large Work Pieces

КОМЕНТАРІ

  • @Rocky-xx2zg
    @Rocky-xx2zg 3 дні тому

    $5295 is a relatively high price . JMO

  • @DHClapp
    @DHClapp 5 днів тому

    Just a suggestion: any cheap "touchscreen stylus" will let you use a capacitive touchscreen without relying on your fingers. Buy one and hang it from the machine on a little leash and you'll never have to worry about it (or need to take your gloves off).

  • @elktrip2000
    @elktrip2000 7 днів тому

    Sorry to hear you shut the channel down.

  • @elktrip2000
    @elktrip2000 7 днів тому

    I liked your video a lot. I recently got a shopsmith model 510 from my father in law. I learned some more watching your video. I do have some questions though. When setting up the shopsmith for a 45degree bevel cut I can get the blade centered in the area on the table. I found if I remove the rubber on the tube I can but I’m not sure I’m supposed to do it that way.

  • @MRrwmac
    @MRrwmac 21 день тому

    I’m gonna miss you! I just came across your channel and as a Shopsmith owner, I really enjoyed what I have seen so far. Thank You.

    • @pwaul
      @pwaul 9 днів тому

      Me too!

  • @MRrwmac
    @MRrwmac 21 день тому

    Excellent demonstration of “some” of the advantages of the movable motor and quill. Thank You!

  • @MRrwmac
    @MRrwmac 21 день тому

    How can I clamp anything to the old Mark 5 aluminum drill press table (TS table)? It has no hoes nor T slots.

  • @dedewill5258
    @dedewill5258 21 день тому

    Switch driver never seen that before.

  • @StephenADraper
    @StephenADraper 23 дні тому

    If you get the locking key it should work. There is a notch in the red plastic that the key will engage when pushed and rotated. Part #513411 $6.95 available from Shopsmith now.

  • @bobmiller5883
    @bobmiller5883 27 днів тому

    I am a fan of Shopsmith but the weight and set up for their planer is more than I want to deal with. I like their bandsaw, jointer, drill press & sanding tools. The planer & table saw are not on my love it list.

  • @travisp32
    @travisp32 27 днів тому

    Your patience is so much better than mine. Lol. I’m not a complete nut, but you know. I am a red head. Ha! Anyway, glad they took care of the problem for you. I feel they should’ve offered free shipping both ways for you though. Fake drama….that ain’t no joke either. Good on ya. Nice video.

  • @travisp32
    @travisp32 27 днів тому

    It’s being picky when you pay for made in America quality but get Chinese blemishes. They would be sending me replacement parts not to mention the long allen key. Hopefully they have implemented some quality control since your video. Love your videos and Scott’s from MGR.

  • @robertmunguia250
    @robertmunguia250 28 днів тому

    Now the shopsmith has a jig for that. Nice but pricey.

  • @StephenADraper
    @StephenADraper 28 днів тому

    Using the knuckles of your hand instead of your finger pads solves Zombie fingers!

  • @StephenADraper
    @StephenADraper 28 днів тому

    Price is never a consideration for me when buying something I will have for 40 years.

  • @camaro6810
    @camaro6810 29 днів тому

    Shame you are signing off, COME BACK...your analysis of woodworking content on youtube is spot on, its all commercials and sponsors, homogenized garbage, its not relatable or fun to watch, I prefer avg joe doing projects to top of the line equipment full of sponsors etc etc

  • @jimmy_jamesjams_a_lot4171
    @jimmy_jamesjams_a_lot4171 29 днів тому

    My Zyliss Z-vise just arrived a week ago! I got one that came with the carry case. Expensive- but no, it’s worth every penny and after seeing how you’re using yours, I’m considering keeping on the lookout for another since they are so very versatile. You can even use them as a pipe clamp if you have a 3/4 inch pipe, I think! Thanks for sharing!

  • @user-io9ln1or7c
    @user-io9ln1or7c Місяць тому

    Thank you Sir.🎉

  • @michaelmarino2886
    @michaelmarino2886 Місяць тому

    What brand/type riving knife did you replace the shopsmith one with?

  • @DarrellWefel-ts2kr
    @DarrellWefel-ts2kr Місяць тому

    PS I forgot the Arrow Cart along with the Wagon wheels attachment 😃😃😃

  • @DarrellWefel-ts2kr
    @DarrellWefel-ts2kr Місяць тому

    I have bought WORX tools since 2010 ! I have never been so happy with the outstanding products that this company makes !!! My weed trimmer finally gave up after 13 1⁄2 years ! I have 0 complaints !!! Thank you for producing such a great product !!!

  • @garycase1602
    @garycase1602 Місяць тому

    Comprehensive, logical explanations along with video demonstration

  • @clal2kyl3oi
    @clal2kyl3oi Місяць тому

    Wow I was testing a 2HP shopfox single stage at my work and I was so confused when I measured the actual cfm at the flex duct end. I was measuring a little more than 1/3 of the rated cfm rating at the flex duct end. When I measured directly at the dust collector inlet, I measured 1/2 of the rated cfm rating which was much higher but still not the rated cfm rating. The dust collector probably had not ever been cleaned and they used it for around 7 years. Your graph ratings are very similar to what I measured for my shopfox at work.

  • @charlietuna9537
    @charlietuna9537 Місяць тому

    Thanks for the info on this, Tom. After using my jointer for the first time yesterday, I found the high speed output was very warm to the touch. I'm curious, did you replace just the bearings within the headstock, or did you buy the replacement shafts, etc. from Shopsmith? If you did replace just the bearings, do you have a source for them? Appreciate it, and have already subscribed to your new TWT channel!

  • @ThomasB-ji5sz
    @ThomasB-ji5sz Місяць тому

    Yes! I was waiting for this exact project! It'll definitely very helpful while I continue to analyze Woody Hyezmar's projects which you get in his Woodworking Bible by go’ogling it and hoping it’s still available.

  • @everydaylifewiththebensons285
    @everydaylifewiththebensons285 Місяць тому

    Well Tom, your videos live on - I just used one to explain how the Shopsmith SPT tool interchangeability works. Thanks, Charlie in Central Ohio

  • @richardg3232
    @richardg3232 Місяць тому

    I got my first Shopsmith back in the 70's from a local dealer when they still had dealers. I was in 2 bedroom 1st floor apartment and used the Shopsmith in second bedroom. There's no way I could have put in multiple tools. So, it was only solution. And, I also had the jointer, bandsaw, belt sander, etc. You didn't even mention comparing all the accessory tools that run off the Shopsmith that take advantage of good motor and easy variable speed.

  • @hoseinbebany
    @hoseinbebany Місяць тому

    Ty Sir

  • @jvmiller1995
    @jvmiller1995 Місяць тому

    The lathe and table saw could be slightly out preformed by stand alone's but the boring machine and drill press no way. How many drill press do you see with variable speed much less a two post mount that does not let the table rotate out from under it and the table can be tilted as well as the fence and miter gauge can be locked to it to drill compound angles. I made a nice little bar stool out of some old 2x4's I had lying around. the leds are 1.5 in square and they taper in from about a foot wide at the bottom to 6 inches at the top. I used the tilt on the table and my mortising set to cut the mortise for the tenons all at the same angle I needed without trying to place a wedge under my work. It is the strongest little stool to and not one nail in it anyplace. The disk sander is way better than anything you will find elsewhere. You can make a compound cut on the saw not change anything but to the disk sander and now sand that exact angle. Not a close angle but the same exact. Then the table saw other than having to bevel the table and not the blade is a really great saw. I like the height of the table saw too as I have a bad back and it kills me to lean over all day. My only complaint about the lathe is it needs to turn down a bit slower for larger object. But replacing all these machines would be very expensive at retail. Just look at SS is a victim of their own success. You can pick up a decent 510 or 520 with a jointer and bandsaw for less than $800. I love theses machines!

  • @jerbear7952
    @jerbear7952 Місяць тому

    I love how you and Scott came in like adults and use facts and helpful information as your weapon of choice. You've both still nuked that dork butnit was classy.

  • @jerbear7952
    @jerbear7952 Місяць тому

    Can you imagine picking John Malecki as a person you watch and listen to. I guess people like Logan Paul too.

  • @Qwiv
    @Qwiv Місяць тому

    You made a video that no one responded to this video, so you must be right….. well you have a few thousand followers and most are Shopsmith types, so you don’t have a sample size of anything. Second, your test is bullshit and specifically tailored part to be one woodworking challenge that caters to the Shopsmith, and do the task in a specific order that favors the Shopsmith.. First, I don’t know any wood workers that would sand the end of the board with 3 different grits right off the table saw. All those operations were unnecessary and added to pad the shopsmith advantage. You also needed to own 2 additional sanding disks which is not standard from shopsmith. You then sequence changes from a regular saw blade to a dado stack to use the advantage of the shopsmith as that can be a pain in a table saw. If you allowed someone to make the part with other tools in the order that makes sense for their tools, this would not be a challange. Typical set up would be with a table saw, router table, chop saw, drill press or dowel jig with and skip the sanding operation you tossed to pad your result. Cut to length with chop saw, chop saw has clean enough edge for joint. You could probably set up the router table to do both your dado and the corner detail with the same setup with some pre-planning and minor changes, but the table saw can be set up for a dado if you really need it that way as you cross cut with a chop saw and it’s sitting there. Boring is done with a simple hundred dollar dowel jig or you can use a different method that uses your woodworking style and not a weird feature of the Shopsmith that no one uses. I can set up a similar challenge for you with my tools that you would have a really hard time keeping up as well on that Shopsmith and be anything close to safe. I love my shopsmith, but i have had to swap out a lot of the tools to make the work 8 do fast and safe after to many close calls on the shopsmith.

    • @woodshopnerdery
      @woodshopnerdery Місяць тому

      I think you get my point. Shopsmith haters always point out the strengths of their own tools and never acknowledge the weakness of their own tools. They never acknowledge the strengths of the Shopsmith. So yes, I pointed out Shopsmith strengths. Sanding end grain to a higher grit helps control absorption of stain and finishes where end grain is exposed. End grain absorbs more finish than face grain so will appear many times darker. One way to make the absorption and therefore the color more even is to sand the end grain to a higher grit that the face grain. A disc sander is a great way to do that since it won't round over the edges like an ROS.

    • @Qwiv
      @Qwiv Місяць тому

      @@woodshopnerdery if he end grain is a place where you will be putting finish, you will be sanding the entire piece and should leave the tenon long so it is sanded perfectly flush…. After it is assembled. Your task was made up and no one would do it that way. You are faking a result.

    • @Qwiv
      @Qwiv Місяць тому

      @@woodshopnerdery justify the operation all you want, no one does it like that on the regular and there are other ways to deal with that. Certainly didn’t need 3 sanding grits. You still gamed the challenge for the benefit of the Shopsmith. Being I have 2 shopsmith, and a bunch of other tools, I think I can very much call your challenge a sham. There is a reason you find shopsmiths in small shops and nowhere else. Great tool for a small space but I can still make a better tool inside an assemble table…. So once you go from 2x8 storage area to 4x8… game over.

    • @woodshopnerdery
      @woodshopnerdery Місяць тому

      @@Qwiv yes its a game, and the haters game the system against shopsmith in favor of their own tools. Can you come up witha sequence of steps that would fairly challenge the pros and cons of all systems? Make. Video of it I'm sure people would love to see if.

    • @Qwiv
      @Qwiv Місяць тому

      @@woodshopnerdery make a pattern plywood panel. I don’t need to prove the hypocrisy as you have 2 shopsmiths…. Proving 2 is better than one.

  • @jerbear7952
    @jerbear7952 Місяць тому

    Love it and love and your channel.

  • @jvmiller1995
    @jvmiller1995 Місяць тому

    I do not even see why this was a question. Ask yourself this. In 49 years is the wen going to be alive. Not a chance the shopsmith is a solid built to last planer and it has very little snipe. The motors are industrial duty. I myself would build or buy a stand for the shopsmith and put a industrial motor on it like the stand alones. Harbor freight 150 bucks you could get a 3hp motor that would be over twice as strong as the mark 5. This is this reason I am in favor of the free stand shopsmith. If you get the shopsmith stand you can even put shopsmith casters on it. The only way I would chose a benchtop of any kind over it is if I needed it to be portable. But I really do not like it taking up my jointers spot. I have a couple of mark 5s and my main one is always a table saw and jointer combo. I am kicking around the idea of making a sliding table on it as I prefer a sled over a chop saw. But I did just score me a stand alone ss planer today for $250. But I already know a lot about them as my old man has had one since the 80s. I hate to think how many boards went through it over the years.

  • @mps397
    @mps397 Місяць тому

    I keep buying worx tools because they seem to be descent and more affordable than other brands.

  • @Qwiv
    @Qwiv Місяць тому

    But you have a shit table saw that can’t cut angle cuts really safely and quickly….and can’t work with a proper out feed table because you adjust the table height… and it’s just way to high…. And a lathe that is mounted way to low. And the horizontal bore machine is not very useful given a dowel jig is cheap. And the separate tools will save you so much time on setups. Shopsmith is great for a 1 car garage….. And your comment on the Detailed shape routing is way off….. Shopsmith is actually better as shaping blades work better smiling slower with more torque. It’s a great Drillpress for few hundred bucks used which is the only thing I still use it for after replacing every other function on the tool with cheap replacements that work better. Contractor saw in an assembly table is better. Screw the horizontal bore. Shaper/router better in your assembly table as well. Anyone who likes a lathe will prefer a real one with indexing, a chuck that is vacuum compatible, so shopsmith is just an in case solution. Tool rest sucks. Drill press makes sense if you mount it to wall as that is the only thing it really is good at so you toss the base and loose all the other functions because the shopsmith is to big as only a drill press with the stand. You will figure this all out in time.

    • @woodshopnerdery
      @woodshopnerdery Місяць тому

      Sorry to hear you're having so much trouble with your Shopsmith. In my experience, I've not encountered those particular problems. I used a husky adjustable height workbench. It the perfect indeed and outfeed table for the table saw and all of the attachments.

    • @Qwiv
      @Qwiv Місяць тому

      @@woodshopnerdery maybe if you only cut plywood and panels. If you drop your table saw to actually use your 10 inch blade, you will hit the out feed table. Set up for that height, now it is a few inches too low for sheet goods. Now cut a 45 or 22 for a nice table top edge without killing your self. Try making pattern plywood blanks on a shopsmith without being murdered by it. It works if you don’t do anything outside of what it can do.

  • @Qwiv
    @Qwiv Місяць тому

    Changes everything 60 years ago……

    • @woodshopnerdery
      @woodshopnerdery Місяць тому

      Approximately 77 years ago and still relevant since tree grow the same way.

  • @jonstadman6051
    @jonstadman6051 Місяць тому

    I have bought my shop smith in the 70th and it is still working and I am still happy with it

  • @xavierfarremanzorro3847
    @xavierfarremanzorro3847 2 місяці тому

    Nice video, impecable reasoning. Cosman does indeed flatten the iron, or at least the tip, before polishing with the ruler trick. I do the same both for plane irons and spokeshave irons: first flattening, the tip or more, and then the ruler trick on the tip. It's indeed pointless to go directly to the ruler trick before at least examining the iron flatness near the tip.

  • @Crashawsome
    @Crashawsome 2 місяці тому

    4:00 'étagère' is French for bookcase

  • @tontyrutinel7680
    @tontyrutinel7680 2 місяці тому

    Came to this channel 9 months too late. Thanks for all the info!

  • @YiHogyun
    @YiHogyun 2 місяці тому

    that AirNow ppm meter detector is the weak point in your analysis. It is an inaccurate and unreliable device to base your assumptions and conclusions on.

  • @johnevans7389
    @johnevans7389 2 місяці тому

    Which way does the blade fit, is it edge down or up? Thanks

  • @robtafolla7867
    @robtafolla7867 2 місяці тому

    I have an old vii, I just got it running today and it works great.

  • @davewest6788
    @davewest6788 2 місяці тому

    You could reach out to taylor tools to see if that is a normal iron. I would not expect a new iron to be that bad. Taylor tools is a relatively small company that is family owned and has a good reputation for selling good quality tools at affordable prices. I have personally bought many items from them and have been very happy with most of them. Nice job on staying with the flattening process.

  • @0SQUARESINMYO
    @0SQUARESINMYO 2 місяці тому

    what's that on the table you're working on with the drill press??

    • @Sal-oi1db
      @Sal-oi1db 2 місяці тому

      It looks like a push stick?

  • @josedomingosteixeira1379
    @josedomingosteixeira1379 2 місяці тому

    I can't figure out the measurements for the upright part, can you help me? I think it's 140mm long but can´t figure out the rest of the measurements from the plans.

  • @leemorrow4368
    @leemorrow4368 2 місяці тому

    Yep he is an ADHD clown......I seen him do the same thing with a radial arm saw...tool knowledge and reading the manual...= safety

  • @markharris5190
    @markharris5190 2 місяці тому

    Dunno about adding bracing to that bench, bro. Silk purse from a sow's ear and all that. I get the space limitations, but maybe you should look at building a Moravian or something similar. Way more stability and you can easily break it down and pile it against a wall when it gets in the way. About all I'd use that bench for is piling crap on. Nice job on getting the vise up and running tho. A suggestion - instead of using the plastic straw for a chain tensioner, se if you can snag an idler wheel from a bicycle rear derailleur and screw that in there instead.

  • @randybecker7339
    @randybecker7339 3 місяці тому

    I recently just learned Harbor Freight sold these clamps and am very grateful you did this comparison. I only wish someone nearby sold the US made clamps so I could do this comparison myself. So thank you for doing it for me! Very well done.