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Making Things
United States
Приєднався 3 чер 2022
Cutting Box Handles with Dado Blade Set
Raise the dado set into the wood I a fixed position on your table saw.
//Amazon Links//
8” Freud Dado Set amzn.to/3OE5lM5
Great bluegrass music by beanpotmedia
Making Things is a participant in the Amazon Services Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to Amazon.com. I get commissions (but not at extra expense to the buyer) for purchases made through links in this post.
//Amazon Links//
8” Freud Dado Set amzn.to/3OE5lM5
Great bluegrass music by beanpotmedia
Making Things is a participant in the Amazon Services Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to Amazon.com. I get commissions (but not at extra expense to the buyer) for purchases made through links in this post.
Переглядів: 616
Відео
How to install a full mortise box lock, Router jig
Переглядів 260Місяць тому
Mortise a small box lock using a quick jig, router bushing, and straight cut router bits. //Amazon Links// Router Bushing Set. amzn.to/3V6W7LX Full Mortise Small Box Lock amzn.to/4eMeNaQ Great bluegrass music by beanpotmedia Making Things is a participant in the Amazon Services Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by...
Separate / cut the lid from a box using a tenoning jig and spacers
Переглядів 647Місяць тому
Getting 4 precisely lined up cuts sounds easier than it is if you are just sliding a box against the fence. This jig helped to hold the box in a fixed position from the blade and spacers on the Final Cut help to hold the lid in place. Blue grass by beanpotmedea
Ugly but Accurate Spline Cutting Jig for Strong Mitered Box Joints
Переглядів 1,2 тис.Місяць тому
A scrap plywood jig for accurately holding a box at 45 degrees to the table saw top for cutting repeatable spline joints in box corners.
How to use the Whiteside Inlay Router Kit Step by Step Revisited
Переглядів 4 тис.2 місяці тому
I make another wooden letter inlay step by step with the Whiteside Inlay set. Step 1 create the template. This step is using the kit without the 1/8" spacer Be sure to maintain pressure against the letter pattern Step 2 create the inlay. This also uses the kit without the spacer, you will be duplicating the pattern shape only out of your inlay material. Here it is important to maintain pressure...
Make and level a Natural Birch end grain cutting board with shop made jig
Переглядів 8192 місяці тому
Natural Birch is really just a color designation for birch which is a native hardwood. Natural Birch will contain both the sap wood (white birch) and the heart wood (red birch). This board is made up of end-grain natural birch which gives it the good looking pattern and variation on the surface. The leveling jig was my attempt to avoid the time it would have taken to sand the board smooth. // A...
Ugly but Accurate Circle Cutting Router Jig Made from Corian
Переглядів 1843 місяці тому
This jig adds great stability to the router for whatever use but also works great as a radius cutting jig. Simply locate a pin at the radius dimension and rotate the jig around the pin. Made from a scrap Corian sink cutout. Great bluegrass music by beanpotmedia
Super quick 3 cutting boards in less than an hour.
Переглядів 9093 місяці тому
Super quick 3 cutting boards in less than an hour.
How to make a Food Safe Beeswax Cutting Board Balm with Beeswax and Mineral Oil
Переглядів 9394 місяці тому
How to make a Food Safe Beeswax Cutting Board Balm with Beeswax and Mineral Oil
Simply Make an Art Deco Table Clock with Walnut and Beech and Quartz Movement
Переглядів 2674 місяці тому
Simply Make an Art Deco Table Clock with Walnut and Beech and Quartz Movement
Making Beeswax Finish with Turpentine, Linseed Oil & Beeswax in a Home made Double Boiler
Переглядів 6084 місяці тому
Making Beeswax Finish with Turpentine, Linseed Oil & Beeswax in a Home made Double Boiler
Easy Steps to Design, Draw, and Print Your Own Custom Clock Face
Переглядів 4534 місяці тому
Easy Steps to Design, Draw, and Print Your Own Custom Clock Face
Build a Small Clock and Your Own Clock Face from Scratch
Переглядів 8765 місяців тому
Build a Small Clock and Your Own Clock Face from Scratch
Quickly Make 5 Sets of Hickory Wood Coasters and Stands in an Afternoon
Переглядів 7125 місяців тому
Quickly Make 5 Sets of Hickory Wood Coasters and Stands in an Afternoon
Quickly Turn a Pair of Wood Carving Mallets from a Holly Branch
Переглядів 4065 місяців тому
Quickly Turn a Pair of Wood Carving Mallets from a Holly Branch
Stanley No. 192 Rabbet Plane Explained and Road Tested
Переглядів 1,5 тис.6 місяців тому
Stanley No. 192 Rabbet Plane Explained and Road Tested
Hinged Double Deck Jewel Box with Dished Compartments
Переглядів 2226 місяців тому
Hinged Double Deck Jewel Box with Dished Compartments
Perfectly Fitting Hinge Mortise with Another Ugly by Accurate Mortising Jig
Переглядів 6696 місяців тому
Perfectly Fitting Hinge Mortise with Another Ugly by Accurate Mortising Jig
Frank Lloyd Wright Inspired Usonian Furniture Made from Plywood.Table and chairs
Переглядів 3196 місяців тому
Frank Lloyd Wright Inspired Usonian Furniture Made from Plywood.Table and chairs
Build an Outdoor Post Lamp from Off the Shelf Materials
Переглядів 2816 місяців тому
Build an Outdoor Post Lamp from Off the Shelf Materials
Build a 60" 20 Pound Draw Weight Long Bow From Hickory
Переглядів 4346 місяців тому
Build a 60" 20 Pound Draw Weight Long Bow From Hickory
Build a Garden Landscape Screen From Steel Yard Scrap and Lumber
Переглядів 666 місяців тому
Build a Garden Landscape Screen From Steel Yard Scrap and Lumber
Frank Lloyd Wright Inspired Plywood Furniture from the Seth Peterson Cottage
Переглядів 6756 місяців тому
Frank Lloyd Wright Inspired Plywood Furniture from the Seth Peterson Cottage
Home Made Arrow Fletching Jig. Designed and illlustrated in Sketchup
Переглядів 2257 місяців тому
Home Made Arrow Fletching Jig. Designed and illlustrated in Sketchup
Frank Lloyd Wright Inspired Model of Seth Peterson Cottage and Furniture in Sketchup
Переглядів 6887 місяців тому
Frank Lloyd Wright Inspired Model of Seth Peterson Cottage and Furniture in Sketchup
Build A Jewelry Box with 3 Tiers and Flocked Trays
Переглядів 1,2 тис.7 місяців тому
Build A Jewelry Box with 3 Tiers and Flocked Trays
Steps to Flocking a Wooden Jewelry Box with Donjer Flocking Kit.
Переглядів 1,2 тис.8 місяців тому
Steps to Flocking a Wooden Jewelry Box with Donjer Flocking Kit.
Build Cheap Strong Shelf Brackets from Scrap Wood
Переглядів 2,8 тис.8 місяців тому
Build Cheap Strong Shelf Brackets from Scrap Wood
Super Fast Super Easy Mason Bee House using Drinking Straws
Переглядів 6838 місяців тому
Super Fast Super Easy Mason Bee House using Drinking Straws
Put Your Thickness Planer in a Pullout Drawer for your Work Bench Easy Access
Переглядів 1,1 тис.8 місяців тому
Put Your Thickness Planer in a Pullout Drawer for your Work Bench Easy Access
WoodPrix is nice for that.
that's a T-slot not a miter slot so the title is wrong
Fixed. Thanks for the comment and thanks for watching
Can you do that with an ink jet printer, also?
I would think so. Resolutions are so high these days. Thanks for watching
Holy moly, what a presentation. I could have watched 10 videos and still been unsure of the process but you really seem to nail it here.. Thank you!!
Thank you for the comment. Here is another start to finish video. How to use the Whiteside Inlay Router Kit Step by Step Revisited ua-cam.com/video/xZZu7yN9HWI/v-deo.html
Also, why not heat the rod and melt it through the bottle, i.e. not risking the plastic to crack?
Good idea. Thanks for watching.
Love your shoes bud! 😂. At what psi do you blast?
Oh, i read comments now, 100psi. 🤭🇿🇦🇿🇦🇿🇦
The tank quickly depletes so I have to wait between blasts.
My bit is burning the wood and smoke. I wonder why?
Thanks for the comment. Probably either too deep a cut or dull bit.
@makingthings1463 brand new 1/8 in upcut, turns out it's made wrong, cutters on wrong side, POWERTEC
Ouch. Hope you can exchange or replace.
@@makingthings1463 replacing
Nice for those that can’t tilt their table. I just tilt my table.
Thanks for the comment. Even with tilting table it’s nice to have stops to register against for repeatability. Thanks again
A nice Simple Jig, that works. !
Thank you for the comment and thanks for watching
Nice
Thanks for the comment and thanks for watching
كيف لي ان احصل على البودرة
Amazon. Search for Donjer Flocking Thanks for watching
SWEET plus SIMPLE equals BEAUTIFUL
Thanks for watching
Hello from the Pacific Northwest. Thank you for your video, very educational. What tubes do you use, where do you get them, do you have links? Also, where do you get the bees at the affordable price? We couldn't find reasonably priced and because of my family member's medical care we can't justify paying that much?
Thanks for the comment. The bamboo was from the yard. The plastic straws from Costco.
I always use 15 degrees , just feels a bit less tippy . 👍🇨🇦
Thanks for the comment. Also depends a bit on how close to the outer edge of the seat. Thanks again
Depends on how tall the stool is... doesn't it?
Yes that’s also a factor. I know I’ve made them too straight and the stool feels unstable. The jig is just so you get them all the same. I’m working on a full video to show my thought process. Thanks again
I have a Lie Nielson 4 copy of the Bedrock. I also have a regular Bailey #4. I prefer the Bailey as it is lighter and easier to sharpen. The tote also fits my hand better.
Thank you for the comment and thanks for watching.
Yes it will '' 👏👏 very slick'' very nice
Thank you for the comment and thanks for watching.
Very nice. For the sake of the audience, greater detail as to build considerations would probably be beneficial, but an achievement none the less.
Thank you. In a short I only have 60 seconds. Will further explain in a full length video of the stool project. Thanks for watching
Thank you, this is excellent. Very helpful. :)
You’re welcome Thanks for watching
Thank you for sharing! If you have to choose between your pine table and this fir one, which wood would you pick again?
I think the fir is better looking and a little harder wood than the pine. But I was using Home Depot 1x12 back then and none of it was very clear or free from cupping. The fir needed to be a bit dryer but it was a first time try. Thanks for watching
I’m absolutely loving these videos you have created I really appreciate it 3D models and everything ! Seasons greetings from Manchester UK
Thank you your comment is greatly appreciated.
Thanks for taking the time to show us your jig making device. I just made one and it is great!! I have tried another version and it wasn't quite as successful. It is easy to make and easy to set up on a plane blade jig for repeatable success! BTW I also cut a piece of scrap walnut and a piece of 1/2 baltic birch plywood. I cut the 1/8 inch groove into both of them and found the plywood to have more flex, probably enough to forgo the additional side kerfs. Thanks again for this gem of an idea!
You’re very welcome, thank you for the comment and thank you for watching.
wow - exceptionally well made - easy to follow with those renders
Thank you for the comment and thanks for watching
What a freaking video. Awesome work
Thank you for the comment and thanks for watching
Dude you literally made this whole video and, animated things, and just... Decided to not actually show you cutting the piece out? Also, the music at the front was obnoxious and loud while you were talking.
Check this one out ua-cam.com/video/xZZu7yN9HWI/v-deo.html Thanks for watching.
Hi, great video, thank you! It was very helpful to me. You see, I finally got my 1st Bedrock (605), and it just arrived today unassembled. And I wasn’t too sure about how to attach the frog until you explained it so well! So thank you very much for your assistance!
Thanks for watching! Glad you found it helpful!
So they made useless gimics A 100 years ago. A simple Sharp chisel wins .
Thank you for watching.
excellent ♥️ thank you
Glad it was helpful You’re right Thanks for watching
I purchased a newer English Stanley 12-960 and it had all kind of defects. The bed of the plane body was not parallel to the sole of the plane which allowed the iron to protrude from the mouth at an angle. The lateral adjuster had to be kicked over to one side to get the blade anywhere near parallel to the sole. I had to file the interior of the bed of the plane to get the iron parallel to the sole. I could have purchased a cheap Stanley knock-off and maybe done less rework to end up with a better plane. You would be better off buying an old Stanley plane and reworking it than to buy a new Stanley plane. Maybe even buy a knock-off and putting some effort in cleaning it up - my two cents worth.
Thanks for the comment. Sorry that plane was such a pain. Mine must have been an older example or I just got lucky. Thanks for watching
Thanks so much for this video. Excellent timing because I have a very similar project. Mine is a 4/0 but the one rod had broken off at the rivet. I can add a piece where the threaded rod beneath the handle is missing, and I can make a new handle. But anyone have any ideas about how to come up with a ferrule? Maybe some creativity and magic with a piece of copper tubing? Or conduit? Or something better? Thanks again...
Thanks for the comment and thank Amazon sells some brass ferrules. Also some hardware stores Good luck with the project
i just left a comment on a different video of yours, asking about this chair. I have the same issue of not being able to read the blueprints.
Thanks for the comment. I think actually building this chair would be very difficult. Lots of compound angles. There doesn’t seem to be any way to get all of the dimensions as originally built.
I also wanted to ask about the origami chair. My daughter wants to build something with me, and Im pretty sure she will get bored and bail on the project early on. (she's 8) so I thought I would build something that I have wanted for awhile and that we can use. Also it is criminal that I am just finding your channel
Thanks for the comments and thanks for watching. These videos were intended to show how I would go about building some of this furniture. I think dimensions would be up to you as far as length, width, height of tables, width of chairs etc. It would be a fun plywood project and would not be too terribly expensive. Thanks again
I don’t understand how the brass bushing attaches to the router?
Thanks for the comment. Go to Amazon and search for router base plate or bushing guide set and you’ll see images. My small router had the proper diameter center for the bushing set. my plunge router I made my own base to fit the bushings.
I have the same Bosch router, but the base doesn't accept the Whiteside template guide. Did you make a custom base plate?
Thank you for the comment. Yes, I made my own base plate.
I’d like to see your version of his origami chair. It took me 2 months to figure it out using Inventor CAD (even using his original sketch). Also, you show grain lines on the plywood sheet opposite what they are in your model. If you keep the grain lines congruent with your model, you couldn’t make it from a single sheet of 4x8 plywood (a myth).
Thanks for the comment. I agree about the 1 sheet of plywood idea, the grain direction would be wrong. I found the sketches available online were either hard to read or more often not similarly scaled. Did this mostly for fun. Thanks again.
Really cleaver stuff, just what im planning to do. Especially in Art Deco. You did not show the part in which you printed off the clack face and mounted it on a board. Was this hard, or are there some easy hacks?👍
Thanks for the comments. I printed them on a high end color laser printer. Used a light mist of spray adhesive and a roller. Thanks again.
Together with your first one, these are the perfect pair - the first shows the tech details of HOW it works, this demos it end-to-end with a real (very nice) product. Thanks for such thorough videos! (have you considered adding a link from this one to the first?)
Good idea thanks for watching
Thanks for the extended explanation - coming at it several ways, including the demo cuts and micrometer made it much clearer.
Thanks for the comment and thanks for watching
White socks… just NO!!
Thanks for watching
Great idea and clever use of available tools.
Thank you for the comment and thanks for watching.
Hello, I need all parts dimensions. because I have a project in college and I can't find any dimensions
Thanks for watching, go to this website for the details Wrightchat.savewright.org
Your arms and upper back panel are incorrect. They actually join at two different angles. Tricky to finally figure this one out.
Never thought of this idea. I like it.
Thanks for the comment. I saw it somewhere and tried it out. Works great but you do need a sharp and level dado set. Thanks for watching.
Great idea, thanks for the tip.
Thank you for the comment and thank you for watching.
Great video with very helpful advice. I bought a vintage 78 for dirt cheap, but it came without a fence (of course). I was stuck between buying one for 5 times the price of the plane itself or making one from wood, which seemed impractical. The clamped wood tip is simple and very practical. Thanks.
Glad it was helpful You’re right it seems the parts for these old planes are several times more expensive than the whole
Good day, Thanks for this video. I have a 4-way 3 switch setup here where if the two switches downstairs are a certain way the upstairs switch cannot turn on the light. I have metered it and there is never any voltage on the red traveller to it. This switch common (black) is not hot when light is off. The 3 way switch at the other end has black to common and its hot regardless of light status so I believe this one has the line coming to it from the 4way box (4way has four sets of cables plus one for a different switch, to it where the 3-ways have only one cable with red,white,black). Both three ways connect to the 4-way but its not as I expected. The 3-way with 120 on common has white and red travellers and they are both connected to the copper colored screws in the 4-way. The 3-way with 120 on common only when light is on red traveler connects to a black screw on 4-way but the black common cable connects to the other black screw and the white traveller is tied to another white wire going to the load I presume. When I meter the 4way black screws the black cable is always hot and red never goes hot. I am thinking either its wired wrong or the 4 way switch is defective. Any thoughts? I feel like the black wire is supposed to be tied to white and the white wire should be connected to the other black screw on the 4-way.
Thank you for watching. I'm afraid I'll have to pass on this. Turn the breakers off and get a tone wire tracer tool and trace the whole thing out.
Well, that was the absolute best instruction I’ve heard!! Thank you so much.
Thank you for the comment and thank you for watching. Here is another video using the same router kit if you’re interested. How to use the Whiteside Inlay Router Kit Step by Step Revisited ua-cam.com/video/xZZu7yN9HWI/v-deo.html
👍
Thanks for watching
Very nice. Perfect for that box.
Thank you for the comment and thanks for watching
Best video and explanation I've found. Thanks for taking the time to explain and illustrate this.
You’re welcome Thanks for watching
I am just getting started with small woodworking projects and I was looking to make some coasters. This was the perfect video to stumble across. Your explanation of each step and thought process is so appreciated! Great Video
Thanks for the comment. The hardest part was already done for me in that I had all of these 1/2" thick glue ups that were already flat. Enjoy making coasters, they make great gifts.
Great video! Not a big thing, but Separate is misspelled in the title. You might want to correct it.
Thank you, and thanks for watching