Makes a crate with insulation for padding to ensure the sign isn’t damaged in transit. Puts “weathered” and “distressed” sign in. Sounds about right..... ;)
The first saw he used is a Miter Saw. This is used to cut boards or long strips of wood into chopped smaller pieces. You can do it on a Table Saw as well but this makes it easier. A miter saw comes with many features. At its most basic, it just comes down and chops the wood. A sliding saw has an arm that slides to cut wider boards. A bevel or dual bevel is when you can angle the miter saw to right or left side so the wood is sliced at an angle. If you want all the features you can have, get a compound, sliding, dual bevel 12"miter saw. The blade size comes in 10" or 12". The second saw at 0:52 is a corded circular saw. This is easy to cut large plywood sheets on the ground when they don't fit a table saw. 2:00 - This is a table saw. You can buy a smaller portable one from Dewalt or invest in a large heavy accurate cabinet saw. This is an all purpose saw mostly for large boards or trimming off ends. If you had to buy only one saw, this is the one to get.
@@mjremy2605 thank you so much!!! I need to start building shipping crates to ship furniture for my online furniture store. And I think I will get a table saw.
It's called a split edit. More specifically, if the audio comes in before the video, it's called a J-cut. If the audio bleeds over into the next shot, it's called an L-cut.
@@WesleyTreat Occasionally your J-cuts scare me. Like you are manually changing the blade on a table saw, then the audio of the saw starting up precedes the video change. Please be aware of this when editing. I like build videos, not horror videos. :)
As I mentioned in the description, the neon was shipped separately. I've only tried twice to ship a sign with the neon installed and it was broken both times.
Even the crate building is a compelling watch.
Love your build videos.
Thanks! More to come!
It’s a pleasure to watch you work, Wesley. #ShopsmithSighting at 1:50
Dobrá práce, kvalitní a bezpečné zabalení neonů.Vaše video doporučím přátelům.
Martin Vašek
neonář česká republika (CZ)
Makes a crate with insulation for padding to ensure the sign isn’t damaged in transit.
Puts “weathered” and “distressed” sign in.
Sounds about right..... ;)
Can you share with us the name of the table saw and other saws used? Thanks!
The first saw he used is a Miter Saw. This is used to cut boards or long strips of wood into chopped smaller pieces. You can do it on a Table Saw as well but this makes it easier. A miter saw comes with many features. At its most basic, it just comes down and chops the wood. A sliding saw has an arm that slides to cut wider boards. A bevel or dual bevel is when you can angle the miter saw to right or left side so the wood is sliced at an angle. If you want all the features you can have, get a compound, sliding, dual bevel 12"miter saw. The blade size comes in 10" or 12".
The second saw at 0:52 is a corded circular saw. This is easy to cut large plywood sheets on the ground when they don't fit a table saw.
2:00 - This is a table saw. You can buy a smaller portable one from Dewalt or invest in a large heavy accurate cabinet saw. This is an all purpose saw mostly for large boards or trimming off ends. If you had to buy only one saw, this is the one to get.
@@mjremy2605 thank you so much!!! I need to start building shipping crates to ship furniture for my online furniture store. And I think I will get a table saw.
Is there a name for the technique you use in your editing where you drag the audio of one clip over the video of the next?
It's called a split edit. More specifically, if the audio comes in before the video, it's called a J-cut. If the audio bleeds over into the next shot, it's called an L-cut.
@@WesleyTreat Occasionally your J-cuts scare me. Like you are manually changing the blade on a table saw, then the audio of the saw starting up precedes the video change. Please be aware of this when editing. I like build videos, not horror videos. :)
@@NeilFraser 😆😆
Um, so where's the actual neon?? No tubes, therefore, very little likelihood of breakage?? How would you ship something with actual tubes involved???
As I mentioned in the description, the neon was shipped separately. I've only tried twice to ship a sign with the neon installed and it was broken both times.
Wouldn't it make more sense to glue/screw the frames together before gluing the panels on?
Size?? Does it fit on a 40x48 pallet??
It was about 5' x 5' x 1'.
Is posible do you can send me dimensions of the crate , front and back panels , top ,botton
Misleading title.
I built a wooden shipping crate for a neon sign and titled the video "Building a Wooden Shipping Crate for a Neon Sign." 🤷♂️
@@WesleyTreat With no neon included.
@@dch.projects Correct. The neon is almost always crated separately and packed differently. This crate was for the sign. 🙄