To start comparing quotes and simplify insurance-buying, check out Policygenius: Policygenius.com/spencleydesign. Thanks to Policygenius for sponsoring this video! GRAB THE PLANS AND SKETCHUP FILE: www.spencleydesignco.com/products/eleanor-dining-table-plans
Mix your pigment with your epoxy catalyst before you mix the resin and catalyst together. The Catalyst is of thinner viscosity and give you a streak free color mix as will as give you a visual so you know that your catalyst and resin are fully mixed.
Domino tip - it appears youre using the tight setting all the time. For a project like this... as id suggest do one board all tight setting and on the mating board one do one domino MAYBE two on the tight setting and the rest on the loose setting. Makes closing the gap SUPER easy. Youre using dominos for vertical alignment so slop horizontally is no issue. Hope that helps and speeds someone up.
Pro tip: Hot melt glue releases with denatured alcohol. No putty knife necessary. Pro tip #2: When routing an edge profile on a table top, cut the end grain first. Any tearout from the cross grain cut will be removed when routing the profile on the long-grain edges.
I follow a ton of different work working channels. All have their strengths and weaknesses. I'm a new subscriber but I appreciate how thorough you are showing every step. At first I was like "a 45 minute video?"...and here I am 35 minutes in and learning new things.
I struggled with snipe for quite awhile then basically built your flattening table permanently into the planer with about 20” out on both ends. This has almost cured a lot of those annoying issues with that cheap centre plate moving and getting caught up on boards. Now I have a 100% even surface and I don’t have to constantly adjust those stupid end panels. I’m sure most people know about this but figured I’d share.
You only need to raise the grain by water popping after your final grit. Also, after the water pop, I recommend you sand by hand in the grain direction LIGHTLY. Only sand enough to get back to a smooth surface. If you sand too deep, you will go through the raised grain and have to water pop the grain again. This step doesn't take too much sanding, usually a few passes by hand with a sanding block and 180 or 220 grit (whatever your final grit is) is plenty to knock back the grain. Further, this water popping and raising the grain is ONLY NECESSARY WITH A WATER BORNE FINISH. If you are using an oil/hard wax finish, or other oil based finish, raising the grain (water pop) is NOT needed.
Claw hammer and a rubber mallet. Framer and cabinet maker. I use the rubber mallet in cabinet and furniture making to persuade a tight joint to close up completely.
Man it was so nice to see a video that wasn’t a clickbait title. I had changed my subscription to only subscribing instead of ringing the bell to get notifications, but I am gonna give you the benefit of the doubt that you’re going to stay away from the clickbait nonsense. Lol. Also, you also only need to water pop before the final grit sanding. Multiple times water popping is multiple times of wasting your time. Just do it before final sand then hand sand, mainly with the grain
When someone "over-explains" steps, and you think; "yeah, yeah, we get it, move on, move on", remember that when you later try to do the things yourself! Please record (with audio!) your first attempts to copy the SO EASY tasks, and let's hear the apology!! It's not embarrassing to be wrong or make mistakes, it's all about what you do afterward; and if you are "man enough" to admit it, correct your wrongdoings, and apologize!
That's a beautiful table! Thank you for taking the time to make the video. The quality of the audio and video are superb. I love the soft music in the background, it definitely adds that little touch to the video experience. This design is in my top 3 for my dining table replacement. :)
Hi Eric, I needed 3 days to watch your video, because I have little time. But it was worth every second. incredible job. It's a pleasure to watch your work. Congratulations
Boy, even the smallest glue-ups (a strip of 4” wide coasters, for instance) are SO hard to line up straight and flat! I can’t even imagine such a huge tabletop glue-up. Thanks for the thorough description, Eric.
If you know anyone with a resin printer, you can print a cap out of clear really easily to cover the other side of the router. You just need the OD and ID for the base and the height and width of the hole.
A pass through your thicknesser makes the wood 'perfectly flat'? That is amazing! Getting even within a nanometre in engineering is regarded as very precise- and you have beaten that in your garage! And put biscuits in that are PERFECTLY aligned! And in a garage, not a thermally controlled laboratory, using precise machinery! Or are you just using words without care? Nothing is perfect. Everything has tolerances. Understanding that is important if you care about accuracy.
Dust extractors on routers are pretty much useless - I've tried everything on my end and no mater what I did, I always ended up with a ton of sawdust everywhere. Beautiful table! Well done.
Thank you for reassuring those of us who are Not perfect that we too can make furniture that is awesome by learning and by practice can be proud of our efforts! One question: how are you able to use the circular saw slowly and not get a burn mark on such a hard wood? Sharp blade and all. Nice job
Woodworking for over 35 years and an oil finish and stains on rags do catch fire in the right conditions. We simply put them in a bucket of water. Nice project,cheers
Just a note: a 3/4" melamine "carrier sled" is not necessarily a "jointing sled" as it can distort in reaction to pressure from feed rollers under plank especially on short bed portable planer. A jointing sled should be a torsion box that is rigid along length/ width. I have a '' fancy" one that I made which has integral screw shims( Italian piston cabinet levelers) activated from side in conjunction with high friction support cross bars at a number of locations. If you ever use a wide belt sander one can use it to flatten large slabs with extremely robust torsion box sled.
Fabulous video and craftsmanship. In the video, you mentioned drawing/plan for the angle glue up clamping jig. I looked and looked and could not find it. Where can I find the plan for that jug?
I once painted my finish on the under side of my table top, and not the other side, and left it for 2 days. The top bowed upwards towards the unfinished side due to the absorption of moisture. It would be a good idea to keep the other side closed to prevent moisture absorption or finish both sides one after the other to prevent it.
I will have to personally disagree with wearing Crocs (or any soft shoe) in the workshop. I recently fractured a toe due to dropping a sheet of plywood on my toe when it slipped off the table where I was going to cut it down into the needed sizes for a project. As soon as I can wear normal shoes, I plan to invest in a comfortable pair of steel toed footwear. On the bright side, I'm thankful I didn't injure myself while using a spinning saw. Edit: Love the video too. I appreciate you making videos of making your projects, not just being a sponsored tool reviewer.
THANK YOU SO MUCH FOR THE TIPS!!!!!! whenever i wondered about finishing i could not figure out what the squeegee was. also thx for responding to my email!
Perhaps there is some kind of UA-cam adjectivegorythm which, if you don't 100% meet flawlessly, one might miss out on some super important monetization.
That is a great looking table. Walnut never fails to deliver and your design is makes great use of the wood. I am in the middle of a large, 8/4 walnut desk project. No dominos, but I did use dowels and had great success with them. I am curious if you considered adding c channel to prevent warping or cupping.
It has always cracked me up how much seemingly perverse pleasure in not having a jointer, yet you have a domino and festool track saw :) Not sure it’s your smartest money, given how often you seem to lament not having a jointer. FWIW, I have the 8” Wen with like a 38” table and it rocks, even for longer stuff. Food for thought. :) Enjoy the vids; don’t take this as criticism.’
Nice job. I made a farm table a couple of years ago, so I know how much goes into this. Thanks again good work with the video as well. Much time had to go into this; we all appreciate the effort.
You have your sled backwards. The edge board should be in the front of the sled. If in doubt try this. Put a sheet of wax paper between the board and the sled. Run through planer and you will see the board move from the sled, pushing towards the front. The rollers are what keeps the board from moving while the blades cut but the rollers are pushing forward. I didn't believe it until I tried the wax paper trick.
12:06 Perhaps try scoring the exit side of the crosscut in order to cut the fibers to prevent the tearout? (maybe?) And/or put backing material on before cutting? I'm thowing hail Marys here... 😄
Great video. One suggestion, get the dust shroud for you plunge base on your router. Most plunge bases have a top dust collection adapter. For free hand round over bits, collection on top and the bottom will always be a problem.
great job, man, as always! just curious, how big is your workshop/garage in sq ft? from the look of it i think i have about the same space and wondering how i can organize it to be able to do similar projects (scale-wise) with only having must-have tools not to clog up the entire space. thanks!
Very well done. I always want to build more stuff after I watch your videos. BTW, not all of North America uses imperial measurements. Only America does, the rest of North America uses Metric.
Very smexy. One pro tip, you only need to water pop before your final sanding grit. I’ve tried multiple pops like this vs the single and the result is the exact same. Jennie and Davis also have a great vid about it as well.
Hi I watched the entire video. The work is very, very wonderful, and it is worth watching and commenting I wish you a good day, success in your work, safety and security Greetings to you Abdullah from the State of Kuwait
I absolutely love your videos. I’d watch an hour long video just about sanding if you posted. You have many great tips I appreciate. I hate your video titles. I skip most of your videos due to the title. I love the tip with the maroon sanding pad. I hope your titles make money for you.
As always Eric, awesome video and I respect how you show different options to make cuts and join pieces. However only negative point, burn that Blue Jackets shirt. Haha. Well done brother.
Great video thanks. I have the top of my similarly-sized table nearly built (in Queensland Walnut - I am in Australia), and I had been wondering how to do better than just some bolt-on steel legs. Question: How strong are the legs please? They seem a tad slim. How will they stand up to vertical load but more-particularly to sideways load if dragged across the floor? Many thanks! Love your channel! Bought the plans!
Enjoyed the video. Thanks for sharing. I like the melamine board trick. I own the DeWalt 735. I don't want to spend the money on a jointer and will likely also use the melamine board as a planer sled. Any suggestions on what makes a good size melamine board to use? I've heard of folk using a melamine board (with a perpendicular block on the back end) on the DeWalt 735 to be able to plane to 1/8' thickness. I've found anything thinner than 1/4" (if not 3/8") is highly prone to the board breaking apart.
"I don't understand why people think this is difficult." Proceeds to make a 45 minute video of how to do it... LOL. Great video, sir. I watched it all the way through.
I love everything about this table, except, I'm really partial to the 'Queen Anne' leg. I wonder if there's a practical way to manufacture that leg in the home shop. I'd think there has to be, it's not like I'm wanting a ball and claw leg. LOL
Safety Note: If you are concerned about your track moving while sawing, I would recommend using the track saw clamps to hold it down vs your right hand. If the saw kicks back, your hand is in the line of fire.
Hi, I just found your videos. I have a question about your table saw. Did you purchase the router table separately or make it with the outfeed table? PS- MDF IS CARCINOGENIC IF YOU INHALED THE DUST! BESIDES MAKING IT FILL YOU LUNGS
Question: Were your figure eight attachments set up to accommodate width movement over length movement? It looks to me they should have been on the side rails to protect from lengthwise (with the grain) expansion over width wise (against the grain) expansion. Please explain the rationale. Thanks!
I use and ad blocker. Google now wants me to pay $13 a month to avoid the ads. I *HATE* ads. So... If I pay for premium do you receive a kickback? I am willing to pay the fee as long as you see something from it. If not I am off to Rumble to see what is there.
To start comparing quotes and simplify insurance-buying, check out Policygenius: Policygenius.com/spencleydesign. Thanks to Policygenius for sponsoring this video!
GRAB THE PLANS AND SKETCHUP FILE: www.spencleydesignco.com/products/eleanor-dining-table-plans
Mix your pigment with your epoxy catalyst before you mix the resin and catalyst together. The Catalyst is of thinner viscosity and give you a streak free color mix as will as give you a visual so you know that your catalyst and resin are fully mixed.
Thanks for the tip. Don’t know how much I’ll use epoxy but wanted to let you know that your comment was appreciated by someone.
Domino tip - it appears youre using the tight setting all the time. For a project like this... as id suggest do one board all tight setting and on the mating board one do one domino MAYBE two on the tight setting and the rest on the loose setting. Makes closing the gap SUPER easy. Youre using dominos for vertical alignment so slop horizontally is no issue. Hope that helps and speeds someone up.
Pro tip: Hot melt glue releases with denatured alcohol. No putty knife necessary.
Pro tip #2: When routing an edge profile on a table top, cut the end grain first. Any tearout from the cross grain cut will be removed when routing the profile on the long-grain edges.
Damn man, it felt so good to click a title that wasn’t click bait. Great job, and I really enjoyed the build.
Check the title again 😭
Maybe he didn’t understand why people make that so complicated.
Well….. Nevermind
I follow a ton of different work working channels. All have their strengths and weaknesses. I'm a new subscriber but I appreciate how thorough you are showing every step. At first I was like "a 45 minute video?"...and here I am 35 minutes in and learning new things.
I struggled with snipe for quite awhile then basically built your flattening table permanently into the planer with about 20” out on both ends. This has almost cured a lot of those annoying issues with that cheap centre plate moving and getting caught up on boards. Now I have a 100% even surface and I don’t have to constantly adjust those stupid end panels. I’m sure most people know about this but figured I’d share.
It’s finally here! Podcast listeners were starting to think this table was like Bigfoot or Nessie!😂
Dont bring Nessie into this. She's there somewhere
Lol! I’m watching before he pulls it down lol. I love that he says he used the domino so he could get the video out faster 😅
No, it's still not here. This is just a blank video all the way through. Are you seeing visions?
You only need to raise the grain by water popping after your final grit. Also, after the water pop, I recommend you sand by hand in the grain direction LIGHTLY. Only sand enough to get back to a smooth surface. If you sand too deep, you will go through the raised grain and have to water pop the grain again. This step doesn't take too much sanding, usually a few passes by hand with a sanding block and 180 or 220 grit (whatever your final grit is) is plenty to knock back the grain. Further, this water popping and raising the grain is ONLY NECESSARY WITH A WATER BORNE FINISH. If you are using an oil/hard wax finish, or other oil based finish, raising the grain (water pop) is NOT needed.
Yes, exactly what he said. Best paragraph I've read on a video in days
@@woodworkingandepoxy643 thank you for your corroboration. I appreciate you!
Thanks for the tip about it only being necessary when using a water based finish.
Looks great brother! Glad to see you building for yourself.
Congrats on your engagement!
Beauty. Love the domino jig for the aprons, and the tip for reversing the drill bit to prevent tear out.
Table and engagement - high five, congratulations!
Claw hammer and a rubber mallet. Framer and cabinet maker. I use the rubber mallet in cabinet and furniture making to persuade a tight joint to close up completely.
Man it was so nice to see a video that wasn’t a clickbait title. I had changed my subscription to only subscribing instead of ringing the bell to get notifications, but I am gonna give you the benefit of the doubt that you’re going to stay away from the clickbait nonsense. Lol. Also, you also only need to water pop before the final grit sanding. Multiple times water popping is multiple times of wasting your time. Just do it before final sand then hand sand, mainly with the grain
When someone "over-explains" steps, and you think; "yeah, yeah, we get it, move on, move on", remember that when you later try to do the things yourself!
Please record (with audio!) your first attempts to copy the SO EASY tasks, and let's hear the apology!!
It's not embarrassing to be wrong or make mistakes, it's all about what you do afterward;
and if you are "man enough" to admit it, correct your wrongdoings, and apologize!
That's a beautiful table! Thank you for taking the time to make the video. The quality of the audio and video are superb. I love the soft music in the background, it definitely adds that little touch to the video experience. This design is in my top 3 for my dining table replacement. :)
Hi Eric,
I needed 3 days to watch your video, because I have little time.
But it was worth every second.
incredible job.
It's a pleasure to watch your work.
Congratulations
Congrats on the engagement! And great work. Thanks for the inspiration!
Timber must be cheap, where you are.
I certainly would not be allowing lumps of decent wood to fall to the floor like that!
Boy, even the smallest glue-ups (a strip of 4” wide coasters, for instance) are SO hard to line up straight and flat! I can’t even imagine such a huge tabletop glue-up. Thanks for the thorough description, Eric.
PS: Holy cow, that is one gorgeous finish!
If you know anyone with a resin printer, you can print a cap out of clear really easily to cover the other side of the router. You just need the OD and ID for the base and the height and width of the hole.
One thing you may want to look into using isopropanol alcohol to make the hotmelt come right off, no need for heavy scraping needed!
Regarding your curiosity aired on the podcast - 9 sets of ads. Survived!
Nice vid Eric, and nice table. Glad it finally saw the light of day!
A pass through your thicknesser makes the wood 'perfectly flat'? That is amazing! Getting even within a nanometre in engineering is regarded as very precise- and you have beaten that in your garage! And put biscuits in that are PERFECTLY aligned! And in a garage, not a thermally controlled laboratory, using precise machinery!
Or are you just using words without care? Nothing is perfect. Everything has tolerances. Understanding that is important if you care about accuracy.
It's about time you popped the question to that awesome lady. Congrats, Eric and Miranda.
I agree!! Thank you! 😀
Pro Tip #3: get some panel clamps, like from Rockler. They not only clamp the joints together but also the face is cull clamped with just one setup.
Can we have a drinking game....every time you say 'super' you have to take a shot
"Perfectly" Imperfect
Dust extractors on routers are pretty much useless - I've tried everything on my end and no mater what I did, I always ended up with a ton of sawdust everywhere. Beautiful table! Well done.
My Festool 1400 router is amazing at catching dust. It captures around 90-95%
@@AaronGeller Festool is known for dust collection so yeah no surprise there. My Bosch is so-so at best and you can forget about other brands.
Great job on the table and congratulations on the engagement.
Thank you for reassuring those of us who are Not perfect that we too can make furniture that is awesome by learning and by practice can be proud of our efforts! One question: how are you able to use the circular saw slowly and not get a burn mark on such a hard wood? Sharp blade and all. Nice job
Woodworking for over 35 years and an oil finish and stains on rags do catch fire in the right conditions. We simply put them in a bucket of water. Nice project,cheers
The trick with the domino jointer for the stretcher pieces to the legs was genius. I go a doweling jointer and will definitely have to remember that
Just a note: a 3/4" melamine "carrier sled" is not necessarily a "jointing sled" as it can distort in reaction to pressure from feed rollers under plank especially on short bed portable planer. A jointing sled should be a torsion box that is rigid along length/ width. I have a
'' fancy" one that I made which has integral screw shims( Italian piston cabinet levelers) activated from side in conjunction with high friction support cross bars at a number of locations. If you ever use a wide belt sander one can use it to flatten large slabs with extremely robust torsion box sled.
Fabulous video and craftsmanship. In the video, you mentioned drawing/plan for the angle glue up clamping jig. I looked and looked and could not find it. Where can I find the plan for that jug?
I once painted my finish on the under side of my table top, and not the other side, and left it for 2 days. The top bowed upwards towards the unfinished side due to the absorption of moisture. It would be a good idea to keep the other side closed to prevent moisture absorption or finish both sides one after the other to prevent it.
having a festool inmersion circular saw and a domino joiner instead of having a good quality jointer aint the smartest decision ever ....
My Delta radial arm saw goes thru those boards like "Buda"
I will have to personally disagree with wearing Crocs (or any soft shoe) in the workshop. I recently fractured a toe due to dropping a sheet of plywood on my toe when it slipped off the table where I was going to cut it down into the needed sizes for a project. As soon as I can wear normal shoes, I plan to invest in a comfortable pair of steel toed footwear.
On the bright side, I'm thankful I didn't injure myself while using a spinning saw.
Edit: Love the video too. I appreciate you making videos of making your projects, not just being a sponsored tool reviewer.
I agree. No Crocs. I prefer flip flops myself
@@SAUdustBuilds Well played. 🤣
Like I always say..."No project is complete until I am bleeding."
THANK YOU SO MUCH FOR THE TIPS!!!!!! whenever i wondered about finishing i could not figure out what the squeegee was. also thx for responding to my email!
I definitely do large glue ups all at once. I dont have a wall of Bessey clamps, so i build a frame out of 2x and wedge them together 😂
It's unsettling how often you use the words "perfect" or "perfectly." In some cases, "adequately" is more accurate.
Saw blade Perfectly straight yet binds. Hmm. Lol
Perhaps there is some kind of UA-cam adjectivegorythm which, if you don't 100% meet flawlessly, one might miss out on some super important monetization.
It’s driving me nuts now
lol
But “adequately” feels like accepting a compromise while “perfectly” feels more satisfying and dopaminergic.
Protip: get a 6" sander. It has 43% more surface area which translates to 43% faster sanding.
That is a great looking table. Walnut never fails to deliver and your design is makes great use of the wood. I am in the middle of a large, 8/4 walnut desk project. No dominos, but I did use dowels and had great success with them. I am curious if you considered adding c channel to prevent warping or cupping.
The infamous dinning room table. Great job
This table looks like a combo of The Wood Whispers Mid-Century Modern Table & his latest Criss-Cross Table. Definitely see the inspiration from both
Great job! That looks so good!!!
thanks dude! I told you I wasn't lying about having the table :)
Beautiful table and great video! Yes it was a long one but it showed all of the steps.
Beautiful!! Thanks for all you do.
Excellent work!!! What a gorgeous table!!
It has always cracked me up how much seemingly perverse pleasure in not having a jointer, yet you have a domino and festool track saw :) Not sure it’s your smartest money, given how often you seem to lament not having a jointer. FWIW, I have the 8” Wen with like a 38” table and it rocks, even for longer stuff. Food for thought. :) Enjoy the vids; don’t take this as criticism.’
Finally it’s here! Great work man!
hope you enjoy it! shes a long one!
Who needs to work. This is more important!
Butter. I love your cat... I mean your "date". That was funny. Oh, and the nightstand was nice too. 😊
Nice job. I made a farm table a couple of years ago, so I know how much goes into this. Thanks again good work with the video as well. Much time had to go into this; we all appreciate the effort.
As for the oily rags, I keep a 5 gallon bucket half full of water to put them in.
You have your sled backwards. The edge board should be in the front of the sled.
If in doubt try this.
Put a sheet of wax paper between the board and the sled. Run through planer and you will see the board move from the sled, pushing towards the front.
The rollers are what keeps the board from moving while the blades cut but the rollers are pushing forward.
I didn't believe it until I tried the wax paper trick.
Nice Job. That is a really nice table. Congrats on the engagement!
I am really enjoying your videos! I appreciate the way you show how certain steps can be done in multiple ways! Congrats on your engagement!
12:06 Perhaps try scoring the exit side of the crosscut in order to cut the fibers to prevent the tearout? (maybe?) And/or put backing material on before cutting? I'm thowing hail Marys here... 😄
You have a track saw, use that for the tapered legs, no way you can do it any faster, you may be able to do 2 at a time.
Great work 👏🏼
Bosch provides a clear plastic dust shield for that router.
Great video. One suggestion, get the dust shroud for you plunge base on your router. Most plunge bases have a top dust collection adapter. For free hand round over bits, collection on top and the bottom will always be a problem.
Awesome job and design. Well presented.
Love the video. Do you have a link for the scotchbrite pads you used? For some reason I’m having a hard time finding them
great job, man, as always! just curious, how big is your workshop/garage in sq ft? from the look of it i think i have about the same space and wondering how i can organize it to be able to do similar projects (scale-wise) with only having must-have tools not to clog up the entire space. thanks!
Turned out beautiful great work
Very well done. I always want to build more stuff after I watch your videos. BTW, not all of North America uses imperial measurements. Only America does, the rest of North America uses Metric.
Very smexy. One pro tip, you only need to water pop before your final sanding grit. I’ve tried multiple pops like this vs the single and the result is the exact same. Jennie and Davis also have a great vid about it as well.
you are 100% right. water popping every grit does literally.. nothing... except waste time lol
This is a good video. Clever ideas to work smart.
That's really nice, buddy!
Love the Scottish anthem with the sponsor bit.👍
Hi
I watched the entire video. The work is very, very wonderful, and it is worth watching and commenting
I wish you a good day, success in your work, safety and security
Greetings to you
Abdullah from the State of Kuwait
Congratulations on getting engaged. Use the table in good health to share meals with each other and family and friends.
I absolutely love your videos. I’d watch an hour long video just about sanding if you posted. You have many great tips I appreciate. I hate your video titles. I skip most of your videos due to the title. I love the tip with the maroon sanding pad. I hope your titles make money for you.
Very nice table! Great video
As always Eric, awesome video and I respect how you show different options to make cuts and join pieces. However only negative point, burn that Blue Jackets shirt. Haha. Well done brother.
Great video thanks. I have the top of my similarly-sized table nearly built (in Queensland Walnut - I am in Australia), and I had been wondering how to do better than just some bolt-on steel legs.
Question: How strong are the legs please? They seem a tad slim. How will they stand up to vertical load but more-particularly to sideways load if dragged across the floor?
Many thanks! Love your channel! Bought the plans!
We use metric in Canada which is also in North America.. lol
OK! Great! Now you need some chairs to make a set!
Great project!!
I was counting the times you said “super” but quit when you went over 364. 😂 Super!
Enjoyed the video. Thanks for sharing. I like the melamine board trick. I own the DeWalt 735. I don't want to spend the money on a jointer and will likely also use the melamine board as a planer sled. Any suggestions on what makes a good size melamine board to use? I've heard of folk using a melamine board (with a perpendicular block on the back end) on the DeWalt 735 to be able to plane to 1/8' thickness. I've found anything thinner than 1/4" (if not 3/8") is highly prone to the board breaking apart.
"I don't understand why people think this is difficult." Proceeds to make a 45 minute video of how to do it... LOL. Great video, sir. I watched it all the way through.
Dude EPIC table build! Also like the rhinegeist shirt 😀 🍺
Should have glued two and two. Then on the final gluing, put the one in the middle and glue it all together. Would have been easier IMO.
I love everything about this table, except, I'm really partial to the 'Queen Anne' leg. I wonder if there's a practical way to manufacture that leg in the home shop. I'd think there has to be, it's not like I'm wanting a ball and claw leg. LOL
great video,thanks is there any reason why you cant put the boards on there sides through the thicknesser rather than using a planer
Almendinger saw will is the best!
Reversing the drill on wood or steel will also centre the drill more accurately.
Bruh I was watching this before bed and that jump scare is keeping me awake 😭😭😂
Sharp looking table! It looks a little delicate though. How strong is it? Strong enough to stand on? It looks great though.
How were you able to finish the underside only and not have the table top warp?
Safety Note: If you are concerned about your track moving while sawing, I would recommend using the track saw clamps to hold it down vs your right hand. If the saw kicks back, your hand is in the line of fire.
Hi, I just found your videos. I have a question about your table saw. Did you purchase the router table separately or make it with the outfeed table?
PS- MDF IS CARCINOGENIC IF YOU INHALED THE DUST! BESIDES MAKING IT FILL YOU LUNGS
Question: Were your figure eight attachments set up to accommodate width movement over length movement? It looks to me they should have been on the side rails to protect from lengthwise (with the grain) expansion over width wise (against the grain) expansion. Please explain the rationale. Thanks!
I came here to say the same thing. I'd love to know if my instinct (same as yours) should be corrected. I hope he answers.
☮️❤️🌈
I use and ad blocker. Google now wants me to pay $13 a month to avoid the ads. I *HATE* ads. So... If I pay for premium do you receive a kickback? I am willing to pay the fee as long as you see something from it. If not I am off to Rumble to see what is there.
“I used the domino to make it quicker, so I can get the video out” yeah sure Eric… queue SpongeBob “1 eternity later”
I wore crocks in the shop last weekend and stepped on a nail💀
But u know that the second I’m back in there I’ll still be wearing them😂
The jump scare got me
Nice! I like your video's. Keep going!