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I do have to say those ancient carpenters even kept secret the fact they had electricity to use with their routers. They are truly amazing! And they kept the secret so well hidden all these years only to be exposed. Oh and I guess they also were able to make the electric motors for the routers and much more. Those guys were the best! We should all follow the example of these 'ancient' carpenters. Good thing for the internet to expose all the dirty secrets they hid from us.
This one was subtle. For those that missed it, the ancient secret was that with enough clickbait you can get a C&C machine and not worry about making a jig.
I literally grew up watching my father create pendelum granfather clock cabinets (and all sorts of other intricate furniture) with mother of pearl inlays and moulded doors with glass panel inserts finishing up with traditional French Polish and stains, all mostly done with hand tools and devices he designed and made himself. Even the glue he used was prepared in his workshop. I can still recall the peculiar aroma. I wish I had been able to visually record the progress of his work for YT but this was all sixty+ years ago and he had done his apprenticeship in Edinburgh in the early 1900s.
"Dad, have you seen Benji?" "Who the heII is Benji?" "You know, Benji my little puppy?" "Look son, can't you see I'm busy making glue. Benji's probably run away to a farm in the countryside." "You think Benji's run away?" "Stop crying. And close that door! You know how your mom hates the smell of boiling dog."
@@fluchterschoenLOL! I can tell even worse stories.concerning a favourite old aunt, her legendary soup pot and a missing kitten from her cat's recent litter....suffice to say I went off soup at a young age.
there's an excellent point being made here, that a clever person with a career in carpentry was perfectly capable of inventing a tool when he had a problem. as an apprentice he'd learn the core skills as well as how to think, but he'd build on that in later years into a complex knowledge. and most of that knowledge was probably lost, except for what he thought were the "basics" to pass along to an apprentice, and maybe a genius idea or two copied by other carpenters. and it didn't matter that these ideas were lost, because later generations were too creative to be reliant on books and youtube when they needed something. it might be underappreciated that historically, geniuses didn't go to college and leave their class to become surgeons and mathematicians. moving to a higher class was largely impossible. geniuses just became exceptional examples of their craft
The only point is that a carpenter of unknown ability can kludge together a flimsy jig that probably cost more in time than it was worth - unless you are paid pennies an hour for your work. @@5naxalotl
This craftsman has beautifully demonstrated that with a well stocked workshop and infinite time on your hands you can make a flimsy wooden thing that does the same as a metal jig you can buy for 10s of pounds. Ideal if you don't have a queue of real project to work on.
The way I look at it, the beauty of UA-cam and such is that in the old days, if you weren't lucky enough to have a neighbor or family member to teach you, you never got any exposure to the tips and shortcuts that were used by people who actually put food on the table with their skills. Now anyone with a curious mind can just learn and learn even if you don't know a single woodworker in real life. I'm not surprised it's old tech, but I had never seen one before. The right idea in front of the right eyes at exactly the right time are how we get great new innovation.
@@neilnelson2933 I partly agree, though having lived and worked for a bunch of years without UA-cam... I feel that, at times, all the info (including bad info) stifles a person's ability to hone their critical thinking skill set. I'd figured out the basics of a lever my first time on a see-saw (are they even still "kid-approved"?).
@@neilnelson2933 "The way I look at it, the beauty of UA-cam and such..." - Unfortunately, the dark side of UA-cam and other social media is that a lot of the videos people watch are filled with misinformation or actively dangerously methods of doing things which can get people seriously injured or killed, and amateurs and novices may not have the knowledge or insight to differentiate between the good and the bad.
I tend to skip over videos or stories whose titles or descriptions convey the idea of recovering some lost ancient secret or wisdom. Most often, the idea is nothing more than a bad idea that deserves to remain in the garbage bin of history. But the still-frame picture was compelling enough to trigger my imagination, and I saw a potential application for my low-budget woodworking "shop". That still-frame was sufficient to motivate me to put the description aside and at least commit to watching the first 30-45 seconds of the video. Since I appreciated how you walked us through the process, I realised this could be a fun project to work on and watched the video to the end. I read two pages of comments, even using Google Translate to see if anyone had a useful suggestion to improve or modify the project. I left the peanut gallery and watched the video to the end a second time to make notes of how I could make use of some of the hardwood I have sitting on my wood rack. Thank you for walking us through your process. You have motivated me to get off my duff to build something useful for my shop.
Not only did those "ancient carpenters have electricity, they also had plywood, routers, table saws and a whole heap of precision secret equipment to help them. This is actually a rather elegant version of steadily available router jig. Shame about the title!
Wait. You have a router, bit decided to take an extra hour to cut those grooves with the edges of the boards, then glue that pressed wood to it and then cut the pressed boards? Why not just use the router bits and be done in like 2 minutes? Plus, you have a drill press, yet chose to use the hand drill and added another 20 minutes to the job? Look, I understand you wanted to take as long as the "ancients", but that's just silly.
A. I thing the ancient carpenters still keep their secrets from the author concerning safety: 1) not to stand inline with piece being cut as in case of blocking and kick-back it will be fired directly in their gut; 2) not to blow the dust as it will get into the eyes, which would be dangerous in workshop full of machinery. B. I made the same jig using 4 pieces of aluminium curtains rail, 4 L-joints and 8 bolts M6 with wing nuts. It took me 1 hour with coffee break.
Please use push sticks. Not only will you protect your hands but you're making videos "for beginners." Teach them the correct method before copying you costs someone a finger.
UA-cam should have a functionality whereby headlines that are lies cause the account to be banned. First for a week. Then a month. Then a year. Then a decade. Then a century.
Every time I see someone using a table saw with their bare hands, I always wince and remember the professional carpenter I know with 4 missing fingers on his right hand.
*_"Why did ancient carpenters keep these secrets? "_* Well, for the same reason one could expect the Spanish Inquisition. Maintaining the status quo. Keeping it in the family. Keeping it within the blessed.
Regarding those arguing about hand-powered tools vs electric-powered tools..... The same sense of fast, fine, broad and acute dynamics get applied to the hewing of wood with electric powered tools, as does with hand powered tools. I teach a class that addresses the common denominators here and guarantees to make a better "craftsman" of you, when you apply what's being taught. That to also say, it is/was far quicker for well experienced crafter, artisans, Carpenters, builders etc, to hew wood with hand powered tools, than it is for 21st century people of the same vocation, to do it with electric tools. There are good and valid reasons for this. However...!, those using electric tools, (... and doing so with the optimum cognition possible), are wielding far more skill(s), in many different areas than those using the hand powered tools. And while the 2 different approaches are quite polar in nature, they are congruent in reason.
Почему бы не сделать длинную шпильку на всю длину деревяшки? Удобно ведь закручивать снаружи гайкой-барашкой, а не корячиться ключом в небольшом отверстии
But now you've put a lot of time into making something that you'll actually only use once or twice, and it'll take up space in your shop for the next thirty years, rusting and warping. Just tack one up on the spot from scraps. Use it. Burn it. What, you have no scraps?
As an ancient carpenter I can confirm we did not have any of the machinery in this video. Myself and other ancient carpenters feel grossly misrepresented. We ask that you please don't judge us based solely on the actions of the one man who made this video.
It's a really good jig but, as plenty of comments have already expressed surprise at the video header, I do agree the word "ancient" is not just a strange choice, it's a really stupid one.
The reason ancient, and medieval, carpenters kept secrets was job protection, same as all other crafts and trades. That is also why the name of the profession has legal protection. You are a Carpenter if you went through formal apprenticeship and are a Jounreyman or Craft Master. Otherwise, you are legally not allowed to call yourself Carpenter, you are only a Woodworker. This is to protect the craft and the customers.
@@prestonian1066 From the Ancients through medieval and deep into enlightenment and further. Countries that today still have craft and trade guilds (such as Germany) still have the law that you have to have undergone proper apprenticeship to put the craft's or trade's name on your shop window.
Не у каждого древнего плотника было электричество, а уж ручные фрезеры были у единиц, которые испокон веков, со времен, когда по земле ходили мамонты - передавались по наследству, а вместе с фрезерами и этот секрет передавался тоже. И вот, чтобы скрыть от остальных, которые были настолько древними, что в своем труде использовали двуручные пилы и топоры, все эти знания вместе с фрезерами древние плотники хранили в секрете!
@@madwilliamflint Depends on the wood.. I wouldn't try it with rock maple, but I've done it in soft maple just fine. Poplar, too, but I didn't expect it to last very long.
Привет! Вы сделали три потрясающих вещи! Собрали забавный трафарет. 2 Хорошо провели время, заработали на просмотрах. 3. Улучшили настроение людям! Подписываюсь!
@@ЮрийКатин-р3ы Хранить секреты одно из развлечений человечества. Больше того, нет никакого секрета как изготовить двигатель(любой) почему то никто не пользуется таким знанием. Возможно что этот секрет стал секретом потому что никому не нужно было.
Let's forget the Obvious and sarcastic comments about electricity. The idea is very clever and I can can see how slight variations of this could be used on a variety of products, with or without electricity. If they are the only comments some people can make, better to not bother with comments. Thanks for the video
It is just possible the ancient woodworkers didn't keep the secrets on purpose, it could have been that they didn't have writing paper to keep a record for the future. OR the records were destroyed by the fire in the library of Alexandria Egypt. 😉😊
Древним плотникам такая хреновина была не нужна, да и современным тоже. Это приспособа для столярки. Посмотри, чем столяр отличается от плотника. Не умничай с названиями, будь проще. За незнание ДИЗ.
Carpenters of the past kept secrets so they could train apprentices over many years. teaching skills as skills progressed until they became masters of the craft. In a world when books were expensive, and skilled trades were valued, this made sense. Can you think of the carpenters being called wizard and sorcerers for using electric Drill presses, routers and table saws to cut and shape wood. They'd be burned at the stake. Let alone store bought wood glue, and hard fiber board, and plywood.
Because you don't need that. That is basic carpentry at minimal. They sell the simple tools to do the simple things you are doing with simple math. Sad I watched this video now.
Junge junge, als Tischler muss ich über die Arbeitssicherheit aber mal etwas den Kopf schütteln. Hand über Kreissägeblatt führen oO Plastikzwingen? Auf glatten Oberflächen verzwingen? Finde gerade wenn man für Anfänger was macht sollte man auf Sicherheit achten. Und die arme Japansäge mit verleimten Holzplatten quälen, mein armes Tischlerherz :/
¿Por qué los antiguos carpinteros guardaban estos secretos? , seguramente porque el route manual aun no se invento, y esperaron tanto que se aburrieron con las ideas en el baúl de los recuerdos🤣🤣
most trim routers bases are not symmetrical so that's the first part you must make but if you have the skills and equipment to make this jig you don't need this video. its just to wow the unfamiliar.
✅✅ Make 16,000 Projects With Step By Step Plans ...even if you don't have a large workshop or expensive tools!
➡ Get instant access to 16,000 projects now bit.ly/16000Plans-Projects
✅✅ How to launch your own Woodworking Business for under $1000 and Make until $150,000 a yers.
➡Step-by-step guide bit.ly/woodprofits-joineryforbeginners
Our channel intends to always bring the best content about woodworking for beginners, as well as DIY and craft ideas. We do our best to have new videos weekly. So in order not to miss any news, subscribe to our channel, activate the bell to receive all notifications.
➡ Also visit our Pallet Projects channel: ua-cam.com/channels/qwbFdaNKeeLVHNUTE3aQfg.html
Teds woodworking, biggest scam on the internet
😂😂😅
I do have to say those ancient carpenters even kept secret the fact they had electricity to use with their routers. They are truly amazing! And they kept the secret so well hidden all these years only to be exposed. Oh and I guess they also were able to make the electric motors for the routers and much more. Those guys were the best! We should all follow the example of these 'ancient' carpenters. Good thing for the internet to expose all the dirty secrets they hid from us.
Lol
😂😂😂
😆😆😆
I clicked this video just for this comment
@@gelo1238 me too !
This one was subtle. For those that missed it, the ancient secret was that with enough clickbait you can get a C&C machine and not worry about making a jig.
Wow I'm amazed! I truly am. I didn't know that ancient carpenters had electric routers.
Ancient Chinese secret.
I was amazed they had wrenches lets alone nuts and bolts! But that's what I get for sleeping through all that Bronze age stuff!
Oh, they had the routers, they just had to wait for electricity till the 19th century..
how do you know they didnt?
And bench saws. Probably water driven.
Wow! who knew ancient carpenters had steel nuts and bolts and even routers!
They had routers but no place to plug them in. So the router just sat on the shelf and collected dust.
@@steveoshaughnessy3736 An excellent point and probably why this gismo never caught on.
And plywood who knew...
@@steveoshaughnessy3736
To be fair... my router has been collecting dust for probably 3 years since I last had a use for it!
And, of course, all of them knew about T-Slot !
I literally grew up watching my father create pendelum granfather clock cabinets (and all sorts of other intricate furniture) with mother of pearl inlays and moulded doors with glass panel inserts finishing up with traditional French Polish and stains, all mostly done with hand tools and devices he designed and made himself. Even the glue he used was prepared in his workshop. I can still recall the peculiar aroma.
I wish I had been able to visually record the progress of his work for YT but this was all sixty+ years ago and he had done his apprenticeship in Edinburgh in the early 1900s.
"Dad, have you seen Benji?"
"Who the heII is Benji?"
"You know, Benji my little puppy?"
"Look son, can't you see I'm busy making glue. Benji's probably run away to a farm in the countryside."
"You think Benji's run away?"
"Stop crying. And close that door! You know how your mom hates the smell of boiling dog."
@@fluchterschoenLOL! I can tell even worse stories.concerning a favourite old aunt, her legendary soup pot and a missing kitten from her cat's recent litter....suffice to say I went off soup at a young age.
there's an excellent point being made here, that a clever person with a career in carpentry was perfectly capable of inventing a tool when he had a problem. as an apprentice he'd learn the core skills as well as how to think, but he'd build on that in later years into a complex knowledge. and most of that knowledge was probably lost, except for what he thought were the "basics" to pass along to an apprentice, and maybe a genius idea or two copied by other carpenters. and it didn't matter that these ideas were lost, because later generations were too creative to be reliant on books and youtube when they needed something. it might be underappreciated that historically, geniuses didn't go to college and leave their class to become surgeons and mathematicians. moving to a higher class was largely impossible. geniuses just became exceptional examples of their craft
@@5naxalotl TLDR
The only point is that a carpenter of unknown ability can kludge together a flimsy jig that probably cost more in time than it was worth - unless you are paid pennies an hour for your work. @@5naxalotl
This craftsman has beautifully demonstrated that with a well stocked workshop and infinite time on your hands you can make a flimsy wooden thing that does the same as a metal jig you can buy for 10s of pounds. Ideal if you don't have a queue of real project to work on.
Ouch 🤣🤣🤣
May the curse of a thousand Ancient Carpenters fall upon you!
But it is beautiful.
At last, you've solved the mystery of how ancient carpenters controlled their electric routers! This should be on Discovery Channel.
Build this jig and you can make shallow rounded corner squares of any shape!
"Why did ancient carpenters keep these secrets?" Watching this won't tell you. They're truly safe with Will Wood.
when I was a cabinet maker 20 years ago. we had metal jigs that did the same thing and had dust collection. They didn't exactly invent the wheel here.
The way I look at it, the beauty of UA-cam and such is that in the old days, if you weren't lucky enough to have a neighbor or family member to teach you, you never got any exposure to the tips and shortcuts that were used by people who actually put food on the table with their skills. Now anyone with a curious mind can just learn and learn even if you don't know a single woodworker in real life. I'm not surprised it's old tech, but I had never seen one before. The right idea in front of the right eyes at exactly the right time are how we get great new innovation.
@@neilnelson2933
I partly agree, though having lived and worked for a bunch of years without UA-cam... I feel that, at times, all the info (including bad info) stifles a person's ability to hone their critical thinking skill set. I'd figured out the basics of a lever my first time on a see-saw (are they even still "kid-approved"?).
@@neilnelson2933 "The way I look at it, the beauty of UA-cam and such..." - Unfortunately, the dark side of UA-cam and other social media is that a lot of the videos people watch are filled with misinformation or actively dangerously methods of doing things which can get people seriously injured or killed, and amateurs and novices may not have the knowledge or insight to differentiate between the good and the bad.
Perfect tool for installing outlet boxes in the Pyramids.
Because ancient carpenters don't have any Electric Machines.
No they didn't.
Exactly
I tend to skip over videos or stories whose titles or descriptions convey the idea of recovering some lost ancient secret or wisdom. Most often, the idea is nothing more than a bad idea that deserves to remain in the garbage bin of history.
But the still-frame picture was compelling enough to trigger my imagination, and I saw a potential application for my low-budget woodworking "shop". That still-frame was sufficient to motivate me to put the description aside and at least commit to watching the first 30-45 seconds of the video. Since I appreciated how you walked us through the process, I realised this could be a fun project to work on and watched the video to the end. I read two pages of comments, even using Google Translate to see if anyone had a useful suggestion to improve or modify the project. I left the peanut gallery and watched the video to the end a second time to make notes of how I could make use of some of the hardwood I have sitting on my wood rack.
Thank you for walking us through your process. You have motivated me to get off my duff to build something useful for my shop.
True carpenter wouldn't be putting their fingers in harms way when cutting 😂
Thank you for watching and leaving your comment 😉👍🙏
Not only did those "ancient carpenters have electricity, they also had plywood, routers, table saws and a whole heap of precision secret equipment to help them. This is actually a rather elegant version of steadily available router jig. Shame about the title!
They did have plywood. It comes from the plywood tree. It's neither a softwood nor a hardwood, it's actually sedimentary - that's why it's in layers.
I like this jig. Great for quick setup. Seems worth making. That said, if only the ancient carpenters had wingnuts, it would be perfect.
...and electric routers which would call for such a jig...
Is there to be a part 2 in which the secret is divulged ?
Those ancient carpenter secrets just robbed me of 3 minutes of my life.
Nice tool, short and to the point build, but clickbait title. Nothing about that was an ancient secret
Thank you for watching and leaving your comment 😉👍🙏
Wait. You have a router, bit decided to take an extra hour to cut those grooves with the edges of the boards, then glue that pressed wood to it and then cut the pressed boards? Why not just use the router bits and be done in like 2 minutes? Plus, you have a drill press, yet chose to use the hand drill and added another 20 minutes to the job?
Look, I understand you wanted to take as long as the "ancients", but that's just silly.
wow ! didnt know ancient carpenters had table saws, routers , drill press
Desperate for views? Secrets of the ancients, yea, ok. By ancients you mean "look what dad taught me"
Another clickbait woodworker blocked
Bro, the ancients definitely had table saws
L'antichità è sempre piena di preziosi insegnamenti, Grazie, bel video
Thanks for watching 😉👍🙏
A. I thing the ancient carpenters still keep their secrets from the author concerning safety: 1) not to stand inline with piece being cut as in case of blocking and kick-back it will be fired directly in their gut; 2) not to blow the dust as it will get into the eyes, which would be dangerous in workshop full of machinery.
B. I made the same jig using 4 pieces of aluminium curtains rail, 4 L-joints and 8 bolts M6 with wing nuts. It took me 1 hour with coffee break.
not gonna say anything about push sticks?
ad A. The ancient carpenters died out because of it before they could share those secrets
Please use push sticks. Not only will you protect your hands but you're making videos "for beginners." Teach them the correct method before copying you costs someone a finger.
❤❤❤ nice video
my god, he's invented .... the square.
Ancient carpenters discovering IKEA furniture.
Bravo!! 👏 🧙♂🧚🧚♂🧚♀🎶
Absolutely perfect way to lose some fingers at the table saw!
I don't care about grammar: That is CRAZY good! :O
UA-cam should have a functionality whereby headlines that are lies cause the account to be banned. First for a week. Then a month. Then a year. Then a decade. Then a century.
The History channel might have to follow up Ancient Aliens with Ancient Carpenters.
Every time I see someone using a table saw with their bare hands, I always wince and remember the professional carpenter I know with 4 missing fingers on his right hand.
I dont think the ancients had power tools bro
Thank you for watching and leaving your comment 😉👍🙏
Everybody knows the router jig was invented way before the router itself.
I came here to say this.
Those secretive ancient ones with there table saws and router's 😂
Ah, they had…routers with power cords. And they even had a cutter that made t-slots in one go, before titebond and Irwin clamps were invented. 😉
I don't get it. What is the final use of this? - Maybe you should have shown this additionally at the end of the video.
Thx❤ for sharing😂😊
In ancient times, carpenters couldn't just order a jig for their compact routers.
*_"Why did ancient carpenters keep these secrets? "_*
Well, for the same reason one could expect the Spanish Inquisition.
Maintaining the status quo.
Keeping it in the family. Keeping it within the blessed.
Una gran idea, saludos.
Excelente trabalho, Will! Fantástico jig!!! 😃
Abraços e se mantenha seguro aí com sua família! 🖖😊
Thanks meu amigo! Obrigado por assistir e deixar seu comentário. 😉👍🙏
Regarding those arguing about hand-powered tools vs electric-powered tools.....
The same sense of fast, fine, broad and acute dynamics get applied to the hewing of wood with electric powered tools, as does with hand powered tools. I teach a class that addresses the common denominators here and guarantees to make a better "craftsman" of you, when you apply what's being taught.
That to also say, it is/was far quicker for well experienced crafter, artisans, Carpenters, builders etc, to hew wood with hand powered tools, than it is for 21st century people of the same vocation, to do it with electric tools. There are good and valid reasons for this. However...!, those using electric tools, (... and doing so with the optimum cognition possible), are wielding far more skill(s), in many different areas than those using the hand powered tools. And while the 2 different approaches are quite polar in nature, they are congruent in reason.
Thank you for watching and leaving your comment 😉👍🙏
Wow. You are building Ikea furniture. Great job.
Brilllllliant!!!
древние плотники очень хорошо умели хранить секреты.... особенно те, о которых еще не знали!
И инструмент у них такой-же был!!!😂😂😂
@@КонстантинГалимов-д5ы это и есть главный секрет, что и фрезеры и циркулярные пилы у них были, но очень хорошо хранили этот секрет.
Fair enough. Genius!
Почему бы не сделать длинную шпильку на всю длину деревяшки? Удобно ведь закручивать снаружи гайкой-барашкой, а не корячиться ключом в небольшом отверстии
amazing
Надо же! А я и не знал ,что у древних плотников были циркулярные пилы, фрезы, болты и сверлильные станки
Не знали потому ,что древние плотники хранили эти секреты.
But now you've put a lot of time into making something that you'll actually only use once or twice, and it'll take up space in your shop for the next thirty years, rusting and warping.
Just tack one up on the spot from scraps. Use it. Burn it. What, you have no scraps?
As an ancient carpenter I can confirm we did not have any of the machinery in this video. Myself and other ancient carpenters feel grossly misrepresented. We ask that you please don't judge us based solely on the actions of the one man who made this video.
It's a really good jig but, as plenty of comments have already expressed surprise at the video header, I do agree the word "ancient" is not just a strange choice, it's a really stupid one.
The title didn't match the video. Yet you have 224K subscribers? Glad I'm not one.
That was awesome. And to think I almost bought one. Thanks for showing me how to make my own!
It's a cool jig, but I see nothing here that an ancient carpenter would even recognize. Not the tools or the glue or the materials. Nothing.
The reason ancient, and medieval, carpenters kept secrets was job protection, same as all other crafts and trades. That is also why the name of the profession has legal protection. You are a Carpenter if you went through formal apprenticeship and are a Jounreyman or Craft Master. Otherwise, you are legally not allowed to call yourself Carpenter, you are only a Woodworker. This is to protect the craft and the customers.
@@prestonian1066 From the Ancients through medieval and deep into enlightenment and further. Countries that today still have craft and trade guilds (such as Germany) still have the law that you have to have undergone proper apprenticeship to put the craft's or trade's name on your shop window.
The title doesn't match the video. Its just a jig.
Thank you for watching and leaving your comment 😉👍🙏
Не у каждого древнего плотника было электричество, а уж ручные фрезеры были у единиц, которые испокон веков, со времен, когда по земле ходили мамонты - передавались по наследству, а вместе с фрезерами и этот секрет передавался тоже. И вот, чтобы скрыть от остальных, которые были настолько древними, что в своем труде использовали двуручные пилы и топоры, все эти знания вместе с фрезерами древние плотники хранили в секрете!
ancient carpenters didn't have routers!
😅 für 10€/$ bei Amazon die 2m schienen kaufen!. Und als Verbindung gehen am besten Arbeitsplattenverbinder!!👍👍👍
There's this thing called a T-slot router bit. Much faster than making your own.
Surely that's too much material to take out in a single pass, no?
@@madwilliamflint Depends on the wood.. I wouldn't try it with rock maple, but I've done it in soft maple just fine. Poplar, too, but I didn't expect it to last very long.
Привет! Вы сделали три потрясающих вещи! Собрали забавный трафарет. 2 Хорошо провели время, заработали на просмотрах. 3. Улучшили настроение людям! Подписываюсь!
Но вопрос повис-почему древние плотники хранили эти секреты?
@@ЮрийКатин-р3ы Хранить секреты одно из развлечений человечества. Больше того, нет никакого секрета как изготовить двигатель(любой) почему то никто не пользуется таким знанием. Возможно что этот секрет стал секретом потому что никому не нужно было.
@@ЮрийКатин-р3ы у древних плотников не было метизов, и болтовые соединения им были недоступны. наерное это и есть самый главный секрет 👺
You got a wooden willy. For your clickbait title... Nice with some wood working though. Very theraputic :)
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This style of jig has never been a secret. 😂
They died hundreds of years ago, you would NEVER KNOW WHAT SECRETS they had. Go get a job washing dishes.
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WOW - suuuuper genial 👍👍👍👍👍
Не знал, что у древних плотников были электофрезеры, удивительное рядом...😊
Let's forget the Obvious and sarcastic comments about electricity. The idea is very clever and I can can see how slight variations of this could be used on a variety of products, with or without electricity. If they are the only comments some people can make, better to not bother with comments. Thanks for the video
I shouldn't have bothered watching this.
It is just possible the ancient woodworkers didn't keep the secrets on purpose, it could have been that they didn't have writing paper to keep a record for the future. OR the records were destroyed by the fire in the library of Alexandria Egypt. 😉😊
Goofy clickbait title notwithstanding, that's a clever little jig.
What ANCIENT CARPENTER SECRETS? The ancient carpenters had power tools, T-tracks, etc. Click bait?
I suppose they could only have learnt it from the ancient aliens.
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Древним плотникам такая хреновина была не нужна, да и современным тоже. Это приспособа для столярки. Посмотри, чем столяр отличается от плотника. Не умничай с названиями, будь проще. За незнание ДИЗ.
Thanks meu amigo! Obrigado por assistir e deixar seu comentário. 😉👍🙏
Didn t realise threaded bolts were about in ancient times.
c'est vrai j'avais oublié les anciens charpentiers avaient des dégauchisseuse, des raboteuse, des défonceuses, des scie trépans
Наверное потому, что у древних плотников не было ручного электрофрезера.
Sip,,,👍👍👍
Thanks for watching 😉👍🙏
Lots of dunning-krugers needlessly dunking on this guy because he happened to use some electric tools, but that thing really does look useful.
Didn't learn a thing. Thanks ancestors
MAGISTRAL, GRACIAS POR COMPARTIRLO.
Interesting and thanks. Towards the end, you might try wing nuts?
Carpenters of the past kept secrets so they could train apprentices over many years. teaching skills as skills progressed until they became masters of the craft. In a world when books were expensive, and skilled trades were valued, this made sense.
Can you think of the carpenters being called wizard and sorcerers for using electric Drill presses, routers and table saws to cut and shape wood. They'd be burned at the stake. Let alone store bought wood glue, and hard fiber board, and plywood.
They would not have been burned at the stake for the simple reason it was they who made the stakes. You don't cut your nose off because you sneezed!
Why did you feel you needed a click-bait title?
Thank you for watching and leaving your comment 😉👍🙏
Where did the ancient carpenters get 1/4 - 20 hardware and what would and ancient carpenter do with and adjustable router template?
Because you don't need that. That is basic carpentry at minimal. They sell the simple tools to do the simple things you are doing with simple math. Sad I watched this video now.
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Junge junge, als Tischler muss ich über die Arbeitssicherheit aber mal etwas den Kopf schütteln. Hand über Kreissägeblatt führen oO Plastikzwingen? Auf glatten Oberflächen verzwingen? Finde gerade wenn man für Anfänger was macht sollte man auf Sicherheit achten. Und die arme Japansäge mit verleimten Holzplatten quälen, mein armes Tischlerherz :/
Trabalho maravilhoso, parabéns pelo excelente trabalho. Forte abraço 🪚🇧🇷
Valeu amigo. Obrigado por assistir e deixar seu comentário 😉👍🙏
Ah yes...
Those ancient carpenters that used nuts and bolts and router trimmers...
I've heard about those ...
¿Por qué los antiguos carpinteros guardaban estos secretos? , seguramente porque el route manual aun no se invento, y esperaron tanto que se aburrieron con las ideas en el baúl de los recuerdos🤣🤣
Ancient carpentry at it's finest!! Who knew?!?!!?
You have a router and you spent hours glueing the bits together ?
Hardly an "ancient" secret 😅 more like click bait!
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Why was the ancient youtuber full of clickbait?
Same old same old click bait. Nothing to do with the description. UA-cams fault.
Древние плотники хранили в секрете потому что знали,,, что их потомки ютуберы и всякие блогеры расскажут все секреты
Why the hell is he *blowing* the saw dust all around his environment?
Looks like he’s on the implant list for lung replacements.
most trim routers bases are not symmetrical so that's the first part you must make but if you have the skills and equipment to make this jig you don't need this video. its just to wow the unfamiliar.
I was kinda skeptical at the beginning.
I think I will give it a try.
Cool jig.
😉👍🙏
would you call this clickbait?