I love how you do things differently. Not everything is the "right" way and yet you put out amazing work. Just shows that with practice and work we can do anything, and don't need expensive tools.
I don't think a lot of people get what it feels like when a tool is just right, it's working well and things are just going along great. I have planed some wood down to nothing just because the curls were coming off right, it just felt too good to quit. Of course there is a difference in the tools you require for your art work than the workaday tools I generally used. You don't buy high dollar chisels to mortise a hinge, but by the same token you don't want one so cheap that it fights you all the way.
For Japanese saws, I would recommend going with Gyokucho. The blades are replaceable and they cut really well for being inexpensive. Don’t bother with the really expensive handmade Japanese saws though since sharpening isn’t like on Western saws; it’s an art that requires special files and years of practice. If you prefer a Western saw, buy a good one. They’re worth it. P.S., use the old blades from your Japanese to make other tools. It’s good steel.
i dont mean to be off topic but does anybody know a method to log back into an Instagram account..? I was stupid forgot my login password. I would appreciate any assistance you can offer me.
With a Gyokucho saw you can take the blade out, and clamp it on a flat piece of wood, long enough to also be the handle, and that way have a back saw as well. That is three saws in one!
Thank You ..and Way to Go. I inherited my late Dad's Carpenter tools and after a lifetime of work they now work for me. Stanley Planes, Nicholson Files, Ekilstuna Chisels. 4 stars. OK..Good Luck !
I totally agree with the diamond stone, I learned to sharpen with indian stones and oil and then graduated to the water stones which you have so much control over and get a lot of feed back on how the blade is sharpening.
I’d like to point out Uri’s drill guide that can be seen on the left hand side in front of the wooden box at 6:25 - it’s from a company called Big Gator Tools and it’s a very handy little helper for drilling 90º holes. It’s made in the USA, but the quality is excellent and it comes in metric sizes as well. Worth every penny.
Thank you so much for sharing your time in the shop with us, Uri. Just found your channel and you're already an inspiration for making cool (and weird) stuff!
Hi Uri, nice information about your tools. High speed steel doesn’t need hardening. It’s quality is that it doesn’t lose its hardness when heated ( within reason) so can be sharpened on a grinder without dipping into water. I’m not 100% sure but I think that for a graver the cheaper HSS would be adequate
Awesome video as always.Thank you very much for your videos and artistic touch.You are an amazing craftsman .I enjoy watching .My daughter and i have made our own tools with your videos.Thanks again.
For a good cheap saw I recommend a frame saw. And I personally use and love the normal "modern" steel frame that any department store has. Get a good one though. The blade tension is key with saws, and a steel frame is much stronger than any wooden one. The user needs to make an adapter to fit the blade.
Uri, to do the thing with the links to Amazon where you get a percentage of the sales made through your links is called an Amazon Affiliate Account. If that's what youre interested in doing, just open one of those, and then you can put link in the show notes to the items you want. They do not even need to be the items youre using in that particular video and you only have to make the list of links once bc you just copy and paste it to future videos, and edit as needed. Love your channel! tx
Thanks for the tool video! As I said before, you inspired me to make a graver and etc. For my first attempt at a graver I used a long Allen wrench, annealed the bend, cut it off and shaped it first with a good file etc. Before I hardened it I tried it on plastic and it formed perfect lines. I then quenched it and tempered it and when I was putting the final edge on it I must have messed up the geometry and lost its ability to make the perfect line. I am redoing it, but I see what you mean in that a guide when edging the graver is almost a must. I had made my own jig but the one you used in a video looked like it would have prevented my goof that has me starting over again. Best wishes for your channel!
"Soul-food"! I can't wait to celebrate the 1,000,000th subscriber, which I calculated to be on 18 September, 2020 (+/- 27 days!). Cheers from the Land Down Under, Rolf
I really enjoy your tool making, and the pretty, pretty engraving, so much so, that you've inspired me to want to make hand tools myself. It's all too easy to simply buy quality tools, but it's a different things all together to build and use something you've made, esp. hand tools. I think it adds a whole different perspective to hand made. Not sure if I'll do video's of my process, but I definately want to make a heap of tools.
It’s not my business, but what I have often seen happen when a UA-cam creator begins to amass a certain amount of a following is that the commercial aspects of the business world will try and insinuate themselves into the content with the hopes of carrying themselves upon your shirttails and rewarding you with gifts if you mention them and it’s a very tempting idea, especially if you have so little tools that you started with. Often they present themselves as saying that you can increase your viewers if you had such and such tool and if you mention them, even better and the next thing you know, you are swimming in tools and what ends up happening is, the average viewer like me begins to see this and some will indeed buy these tools to mimic you, but others who either do not want to spend the money or, who started following you because you initially used common everyday tools or made your own and that’s what initially attracted them will begin to lose interest and the views will drop and there goes the audience. I have seen it so many times that in some way, I hope that people that I like do not gain success because it ruins the love we had in the beginning and we have to start over again. I only say this to share my experience. Take it or leave it for what it’s worth. 😊
Good insight.Its not the Delta table saw or the dewalt chop saw that gets My attention its Uri his personality sense of humor the projects an the old school tools he uses an makes. Gives his channel this down to earth good feeling.Hes genuine personable.Like a good Tool/ friend.
For small saws, Zona are great. Very inexpensive and cut well. For larger, I reccomend to just get good frame saws. Ulmia or E.C. Emmerich. You can either buy a whole saw or just get the blades and make your own. They cut well, resharpenable, you can get thinner blades for cutting curves. If you like the japanese style teeth, they are available too.
Been considering buying a Japanese saw and the info on them was just bang on for me as in about disposable blades and being able to sharpen again thanks for all your videos and information. BRILLIANT
It was just as I imagined it would be, so funny to hear you apologize for not being a good worker and a professional worker. And here we are all 100 000 just looking forward to every video you make, because we find your work just fantastic. Keep it up, you are doing a great job.
Thanks for the Video. Love your channel. I also didn't like the idea of disposable japanese saw blades. Well they work so well and make me a better sawyer that I just gave in and bought more Japanese saws and I don't regret it at all. They work very well.
I really enjoy your videos and the creative things that you make. This video was great because it was explaining all the different kind of tools that help you to be creative for the things that you’re passionate about.
When I was in cabinetmaking school I sold a piece for a decent amount of money and bought a set of Robert Sorby chisels from England. Eventually I learned how to sharpen them properly, and they have been a delight. I also have a few really good carving chisels made by Ashley Iles in England.
Hi, Uri! I really enjoyed your talk about your handtools. I wished I have found this channel earlier. Really cool stuff you are doing there! One word about your chisels: Buy one swiss (Pfeil) or austrian (Stubai) Chisel out of HSS. They aren't that expensive, stay a really long time sharp and will last you a lifetime. But I am glad to see, that you didn't fell for Kirschen. Everyone seems to love them in Germany. But most of the times you only get the polished ones. They look nice on the shelve, but due to the polishing, all the corners are messed up. Regards, Etna. P.S.: If you like to, you can write me an E-Mail and I'll gladly donate a chisel to you.
Hand Tool Rescue is interesting. Maybe for your 200k benchmark, you make a Tuchman No. 610 hand cranked, pistol grip drill, out of brass...with Japanning. At the end of the video, shoot your logo onto a piece of wood!
Great, informative video. It was quite enlightening and enjoyable, even though this was possibly the closest you will ever come to "boring". It was not boring, and I enjoyed it quite a lot. Congratulations on 100,000 subscribers, and it will be interesting to see the shop tour for a quarter million subs. What unusual and specially tools will you have created by then? A filemaker's hammer (those are simply unmistakable once you know what they are)? Custom made rasps? A file with a pigeon cut into the teeth (I saw a photo of a file that had a n entire scene cut in it). Whatever it will be, I expect it will be awesome.
For files, ski files are usually pretty good quality for the price. Kwik and Swix both make good files and all of my current files are my old ski files. I cannot say whether they are better than a more expensive file, but for the money, they are pretty damn good.
Already 6K more. I guess the balls rolling and people are passing the word around. I hope things don't change. Anyhow congrats mate. It was an interesting video and not a bad way to celebrate the 100K.
A good source for high carbon steel to make small punches, chisels, and knives is concrete nails (non-fluted), 16d or 8d for different length and diameter.
On heat treating, there's an iOS app (possibly android too) from ASM International called Heat Treat. It has a lot of different steels and how to anneal, normalise, harden and temper them. Steels vary a lot in the way you heat treat them and so this resource is very handy. NB: not all simple carbon steels are water quenching, some require oil.
Thank you so much for this suggestion. I've been researching heat treatment and trying to learn as much as I can about the process and never found such a thorough and convenient resource for it
The blue belgian stone is excellent, and tmo precious. You are supposed to make a slurry with a little bit of the same stone. The more slurry, the more aggressive it is. Like, it replaces a large variety of stones. It makes razor sharp knifes. I swear!
I have been catching up for some time as a new subscriber. I suppose I should comment more. Anyway, excellent video, very useful. Had to stop often and place Amazon orders. 😊 love your channel and work. Well done. 😊 -Mark
I bought a cheap set of spoke shaves on amazon and they work great! I never tried one so gave them a shot 👌. Great video, you're very talented brother! Love your content.
Sägen sind die japanischen Blätter für Gestellsägen bzw. Kataba für längs und Querschnitte zu empfehlen. Längsschnitte längs zur Faser sind oft das Problem. Ich säge fast nur noch mit kataba die Blätter halte eigentlich ewig. Ohne kataba kann ich eigentlich nicht mehr leben.
It’s true that as tool prices get higher and higher, the improvements in quality get smaller. The quality difference between a $50 plane and a $10 plane is much more than the difference between a $200 plane and a $50 plane.
The great thing about Japanese saws is that they cut on the pull stroke instead of the push stroke. That works so much better that I wonder why all saws aren’t “pull saws.”
You could use the material of an old file to make gravers or chisels, they tend to be made from quality tool steel Congratulations on your 100000 subscriber mark!!
i think i have the same belgian stone - it needs a second (same) one to make a slurry with. rub both together with some water to create a purplish paste. after which it works beautifully.
High speed steel can’t be heat treated. That’s the point of high speed steel. It’s designed to handle extremely high temps. P.S., oil is a better quencher liquid. Peanut oil works best since it has a high flash temp. In addition, “annealing” refers to non-ferrous metals. With ferrous metals, it’s called “normalizing”.
High speed steel can be heat treated, though it depends on the alloy and the equipment required is somewhat specialised. The quenching liquid depends on the alloy, hence the O designation for some tool steels and W for others - guess what the recommended quenching liquids are. Annealing can be applied to any type of metal and removes hardness. Normalising is a form of annealing that prevents distortions that can occur when metal is removed and uneven stresses pull the remaining metal out of shape - of particular application to castings, though thin rolled sections can be equally affected. Worked glass is generally put through an annealing oven, though the process has more in common with normalisation in that it evens out stresses rather than softening the material - regardless, it is known in the trade as annealing.
I love this feeling. Hearing an artist talk about his tools.
I hope you are around forever. I always enjoy your work. Love the cat.
Uri. You are a lovely guy. Genuine, witty, humble and ego-less. You make me feel happy and warm. Thank you 💕
44 minutes of Uri
Ahhh perfect video to enjoy while drinking a nice hot tea during a rainy day
a year later i was thinking the same thing , just found Uri
@@dodgydiggler And a year after that...I'm gonna go get some tea now I think, also just found Uri through Rex Krueger.
I love how you do things differently. Not everything is the "right" way and yet you put out amazing work. Just shows that with practice and work we can do anything, and don't need expensive tools.
I love when makers I follow do gear/tool videos, thanks for this one!
I don't think a lot of people get what it feels like when a tool is just right, it's working well and things are just going along great. I have planed some wood down to nothing just because the curls were coming off right, it just felt too good to quit. Of course there is a difference in the tools you require for your art work than the workaday tools I generally used. You don't buy high dollar chisels to mortise a hinge, but by the same token you don't want one so cheap that it fights you all the way.
For Japanese saws, I would recommend going with Gyokucho. The blades are replaceable and they cut really well for being inexpensive. Don’t bother with the really expensive handmade Japanese saws though since sharpening isn’t like on Western saws; it’s an art that requires special files and years of practice.
If you prefer a Western saw, buy a good one. They’re worth it.
P.S., use the old blades from your Japanese to make other tools. It’s good steel.
Thats actually a really good idea. I'm thinking of getting a Japanese saw and then using the old blades to make knives
i dont mean to be off topic but does anybody know a method to log back into an Instagram account..?
I was stupid forgot my login password. I would appreciate any assistance you can offer me.
@George Logan instablaster :)
With a Gyokucho saw you can take the blade out, and clamp it on a flat piece of wood, long enough to also be the handle, and that way have a back saw as well. That is three saws in one!
Thank you for sharing, Uri... you, sir, are an inspiration.
When it's this blurry you know you are early. Love your work Uri, and congrats on the 100K!
Thank You ..and Way to Go. I inherited my late Dad's Carpenter tools and after a lifetime of work they now work for me. Stanley Planes, Nicholson Files, Ekilstuna Chisels. 4 stars. OK..Good Luck !
I totally agree with the diamond stone, I learned to sharpen with indian stones and oil and then graduated to the water stones which you have so much control over and get a lot of feed back on how the blade is sharpening.
Congrats on the 100k Uri! Your content always teaches me so much! Love your work!
Thank you for sharing your knowledge and experience, Uri. I like your sense of humor, btw. 😄 Keep up the good work!
Your videos are some of my favorites. Thanks for being.
I’d like to point out Uri’s drill guide that can be seen on the left hand side in front of the wooden box at 6:25 - it’s from a company called Big Gator Tools and it’s a very handy little helper for drilling 90º holes. It’s made in the USA, but the quality is excellent and it comes in metric sizes as well. Worth every penny.
I don't engrave, or woodwork but I am extremely crafty and love watching you work. Thank you for you reviews and opinions.
Thank you so much for sharing your time in the shop with us, Uri. Just found your channel and you're already an inspiration for making cool (and weird) stuff!
I always learn something from everyone of your remarkable videos. Thank you ❤️
I can listen to you talk about anything for hours!!!
Hi Uri, nice information about your tools.
High speed steel doesn’t need hardening. It’s quality is that it doesn’t lose its hardness when heated ( within reason) so can be sharpened on a grinder without dipping into water. I’m not 100% sure but I think that for a graver the cheaper HSS would be adequate
I really liked this video, it has really helped me getting into woodwork.
Thanks
Awesome video as always.Thank you very much for your videos and artistic touch.You are an amazing craftsman .I enjoy watching .My daughter and i have made our own tools with your videos.Thanks again.
For a good cheap saw I recommend a frame saw. And I personally use and love the normal "modern" steel frame that any department store has. Get a good one though. The blade tension is key with saws, and a steel frame is much stronger than any wooden one. The user needs to make an adapter to fit the blade.
Uri, to do the thing with the links to Amazon where you get a percentage of the sales made through your links is called an Amazon Affiliate Account. If that's what youre interested in doing, just open one of those, and then you can put link in the show notes to the items you want. They do not even need to be the items youre using in that particular video and you only have to make the list of links once bc you just copy and paste it to future videos, and edit as needed. Love your channel! tx
Thanks for the info! But I'm not very interested in the Amazon links as I don't want to influence purchases for my own gain.
Thanks for the tool video!
As I said before, you inspired me to make a graver and etc. For my first attempt at a graver I used a long Allen wrench, annealed the bend, cut it off and shaped it first with a good file etc. Before I hardened it I tried it on plastic and it formed perfect lines. I then quenched it and tempered it and when I was putting the final edge on it I must have messed up the geometry and lost its ability to make the perfect line. I am redoing it, but I see what you mean in that a guide when edging the graver is almost a must. I had made my own jig but the one you used in a video looked like it would have prevented my goof that has me starting over again.
Best wishes for your channel!
Congratulations on 100,000 Uri :) Thank you for putting a smile in our days.
"Soul-food"! I can't wait to celebrate the 1,000,000th subscriber, which I calculated to be on 18 September, 2020 (+/- 27 days!).
Cheers from the Land Down Under, Rolf
I learned so much during this one. Thank you for sharing with us. :)
I really enjoy your tool making, and the pretty, pretty engraving, so much so, that you've inspired me to want to make hand tools myself. It's all too easy to simply buy quality tools, but it's a different things all together to build and use something you've made, esp. hand tools. I think it adds a whole different perspective to hand made. Not sure if I'll do video's of my process, but I definately want to make a heap of tools.
Oh, and congratulations on the 100k plus subs.
Thanks! Hope you have fun making some of your own tools.
Well done on getting the 100k, you totally deserve more.
It’s not my business, but what I have often seen happen when a UA-cam creator begins to amass a certain amount of a following is that the commercial aspects of the business world will try and insinuate themselves into the content with the hopes of carrying themselves upon your shirttails and rewarding you with gifts if you mention them and it’s a very tempting idea, especially if you have so little tools that you started with. Often they present themselves as saying that you can increase your viewers if you had such and such tool and if you mention them, even better and the next thing you know, you are swimming in tools and what ends up happening is, the average viewer like me begins to see this and some will indeed buy these tools to mimic you, but others who either do not want to spend the money or, who started following you because you initially used common everyday tools or made your own and that’s what initially attracted them will begin to lose interest and the views will drop and there goes the audience. I have seen it so many times that in some way, I hope that people that I like do not gain success because it ruins the love we had in the beginning and we have to start over again. I only say this to share my experience. Take it or leave it for what it’s worth. 😊
Good insight.Its not the Delta table saw or the dewalt chop saw that gets
My attention its Uri his personality sense of humor the projects an the old school tools he uses an makes.
Gives his channel this down to earth good feeling.Hes genuine
personable.Like a good
Tool/ friend.
Uri, congratulations on 100k subscribers! I love your channel. You are such a special person and talent! Good health and prosperity to you and yours!
For small saws, Zona are great. Very inexpensive and cut well. For larger, I reccomend to just get good frame saws. Ulmia or E.C. Emmerich. You can either buy a whole saw or just get the blades and make your own. They cut well, resharpenable, you can get thinner blades for cutting curves. If you like the japanese style teeth, they are available too.
Been considering buying a Japanese saw and the info on them was just bang on for me as in about disposable blades and being able to sharpen again thanks for all your videos and information. BRILLIANT
Nicholson files, I find are very high quality especially if you can get some vintage ones that have have been given a good life.
Hand planes: 00:57
. Hand saws: 06:03
Sharping stones: 09:43
Files and rasps: 15:28
Engraving chisels: 18:38
Making a chisel: 24:27
Woodworking chisels: 27:45 Hammers: 32:13
Wood Finish: 37:12
Misc: 40:20
You did it!! 👍👍👍
I sense that I'm going to enjoy this. Need to open a beer and watch this on the TV.
It was just as I imagined it would be, so funny to hear you apologize for not being a good worker and a professional worker. And here we are all 100 000 just looking forward to every video you make, because we find your work just fantastic. Keep it up, you are doing a great job.
Thanks for the Video. Love your channel. I also didn't like the idea of disposable japanese saw blades. Well they work so well and make me a better sawyer that I just gave in and bought more Japanese saws and I don't regret it at all. They work very well.
I really enjoy your videos and the creative things that you make. This video was great because it was explaining all the different kind of tools that help you to be creative for the things that you’re passionate about.
When I was in cabinetmaking school I sold a piece for a decent amount of money and bought a set of Robert Sorby chisels from England. Eventually I learned how to sharpen them properly, and they have been a delight.
I also have a few really good carving chisels made by Ashley Iles in England.
Congrats on the 100k!!Great vid! Thank You for showing the chiselmaking!
Hi, Uri!
I really enjoyed your talk about your handtools. I wished I have found this channel earlier. Really cool stuff you are doing there!
One word about your chisels: Buy one swiss (Pfeil) or austrian (Stubai) Chisel out of HSS. They aren't that expensive, stay a really long time sharp and will last you a lifetime. But I am glad to see, that you didn't fell for Kirschen. Everyone seems to love them in Germany. But most of the times you only get the polished ones. They look nice on the shelve, but due to the polishing, all the corners are messed up.
Regards,
Etna.
P.S.: If you like to, you can write me an E-Mail and I'll gladly donate a chisel to you.
Как всё здорово ,,всё по местам ,и все радует душу мастера
Thank you for sharing Uri. It was great getting to know the tools behind the man 💙
Hand Tool Rescue is interesting. Maybe for your 200k benchmark, you make a Tuchman No. 610 hand cranked, pistol grip drill, out of brass...with Japanning. At the end of the video, shoot your logo onto a piece of wood!
Great, informative video. It was quite enlightening and enjoyable, even though this was possibly the closest you will ever come to "boring". It was not boring, and I enjoyed it quite a lot.
Congratulations on 100,000 subscribers, and it will be interesting to see the shop tour for a quarter million subs. What unusual and specially tools will you have created by then? A filemaker's hammer (those are simply unmistakable once you know what they are)? Custom made rasps? A file with a pigeon cut into the teeth (I saw a photo of a file that had a n entire scene cut in it).
Whatever it will be, I expect it will be awesome.
super, as usual... thank for sharing your work, on that great way.
Huzzah - the vid i've been waiting for! Congrats on 100k Uri. Pax.
Congratulations on your 100,000 subs, Uri. Onward to the million - there is a gold play button with your name on it, I'm sure!!
For files, ski files are usually pretty good quality for the price. Kwik and Swix both make good files and all of my current files are my old ski files. I cannot say whether they are better than a more expensive file, but for the money, they are pretty damn good.
Already 6K more. I guess the balls rolling and people are passing the word around. I hope things don't change. Anyhow congrats mate. It was an interesting video and not a bad way to celebrate the 100K.
A good source for high carbon steel to make small punches, chisels, and knives is concrete nails (non-fluted), 16d or 8d for different length and diameter.
Great video! Veritas saws are excellent quality for the price. You can sharpen them yourself too.
Skip through the video? NEVER!
On heat treating, there's an iOS app (possibly android too) from ASM International called Heat Treat. It has a lot of different steels and how to anneal, normalise, harden and temper them.
Steels vary a lot in the way you heat treat them and so this resource is very handy. NB: not all simple carbon steels are water quenching, some require oil.
Thank you so much for this suggestion. I've been researching heat treatment and trying to learn as much as I can about the process and never found such a thorough and convenient resource for it
Those tiny brass callipers are one of my favourite tools. No more guess work on my wood dimensions, so handy.
The blue belgian stone is excellent, and tmo precious. You are supposed to make a slurry with a little bit of the same stone. The more slurry, the more aggressive it is. Like, it replaces a large variety of stones. It makes razor sharp knifes. I swear!
Congrats on 100k! Love your videos, always get super inspired by your unique projects
for carving chisels, you should also try Stubai from Austria.
I have been catching up for some time as a new subscriber. I suppose I should comment more. Anyway, excellent video, very useful. Had to stop often and place Amazon orders. 😊 love your channel and work. Well done. 😊 -Mark
I bought a cheap set of spoke shaves on amazon and they work great! I never tried one so gave them a shot 👌. Great video, you're very talented brother! Love your content.
Well done Uri keep the videos coming - ATB
Congratulations ok 100K! You definitely deserve it, and so much more. You are among my favorite youtubers. Thank you for your videos!
100k subs! just goes to show you have engaging content and presentation style. Artistic content is totally original too. Keep the pigeons coming!
I use Japanese pull saws. I have the double sided Ryoba, a couple Dozuki and a couple kataba. They are all Gyokucho brand and they serve me very well.
I REALLY like my Woodriver spokeshave. It's built similar to the old wood style, but is made from metal. Also has a nice fine adjustment on the cut.
I just checked my Silverline plane and was banana shaped too. An hour with some emery sheet and a square of glass plate fixed it.
Very informative thank you !
And congratulations on the 100k
Sägen sind die japanischen Blätter für Gestellsägen bzw. Kataba für längs und Querschnitte zu empfehlen. Längsschnitte längs zur Faser sind oft das Problem. Ich säge fast nur noch mit kataba die Blätter halte eigentlich ewig. Ohne kataba kann ich eigentlich nicht mehr leben.
Thank you for your teachings, your works are amazing and inspire me. Congratulations on the 100k subs, now go for 1M, I love your channel
Congratulations on 100,000 sub. Well deserved!
It’s true that as tool prices get higher and higher, the improvements in quality get smaller. The quality difference between a $50 plane and a $10 plane is much more than the difference between a $200 plane and a $50 plane.
The great thing about Japanese saws is that they cut on the pull stroke instead of the push stroke. That works so much better that I wonder why all saws aren’t “pull saws.”
Such an interesting man, soft and funny.
You could use the material of an old file to make gravers or chisels, they tend to be made from quality tool steel
Congratulations on your 100000 subscriber mark!!
You are an inspiration. Congrats on 100k
Congratulations uri, you definitely deserve more subscribers
Thank you very much!!
Very good information. Thank you for sharing 👍👍😊.
Keep us updated about your saw shoping. I would really like to have your opinion on what to get.
Suizan makes a great little japanese saw with a non replaceable blade, it's pretty small but it's wonderful for fine work.
Unique and facinating !!!
Aaagh! I was hoping to see how you made your scroll saw. :-) Ah, well.No problem. I'm a patient man. Congrats on the 100K. You are worth it. :-)
Mikael Roupé me too! I hope he makes a video about it sometime soon.
I thought he made one on video a while back.
thank you so much for these tips
Congrats on 100k subscribers! Really enjoy your videos and projects.
שנה טובה לך אורי ולמשפחתך
Congratulations Uri!
i think i have the same belgian stone - it needs a second (same) one to make a slurry with. rub both together with some water to create a purplish paste. after which it works beautifully.
Awesome video! Thanks. As you have already 200k maybe new special episode?
Thank you URI for sharing and congratulations on 100 K Subscribers
awesome thanks mate
Just cut the saw teeth off with an angle grinder and file new ones. I did on a cheap back saw. Works great!
Thanks Uri!
Congratulations on 100K
مبروك 100k ، انشاء الله 1M ، معاك يوسف من المغرب 🇲🇦
High speed steel can’t be heat treated. That’s the point of high speed steel. It’s designed to handle extremely high temps.
P.S., oil is a better quencher liquid. Peanut oil works best since it has a high flash temp. In addition, “annealing” refers to non-ferrous metals. With ferrous metals, it’s called “normalizing”.
High speed steel can be heat treated, though it depends on the alloy and the equipment required is somewhat specialised.
The quenching liquid depends on the alloy, hence the O designation for some tool steels and W for others - guess what the recommended quenching liquids are.
Annealing can be applied to any type of metal and removes hardness. Normalising is a form of annealing that prevents distortions that can occur when metal is removed and uneven stresses pull the remaining metal out of shape - of particular application to castings, though thin rolled sections can be equally affected. Worked glass is generally put through an annealing oven, though the process has more in common with normalisation in that it evens out stresses rather than softening the material - regardless, it is known in the trade as annealing.
Fastest 100k av seen eney one get to really talented
awesome tools!
Flachwinkel von Veritas bzw.der einhand flachwinkel von Stanley kann ich empfehlen.