The fast and easy half-half-half drawer construction method
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- Опубліковано 1 гру 2024
- Why don't more people do this? You can batch out a pile of drawers in minutes!
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3 years later and still a excellent video.
Quick reminder of fraction math. To divide a fraction by 2, double the bottom number (denominator). For example to calculate one-half of 1/2, multiply the 2 at the bottom to get 1/4. One half of 9/16, multiply the 16 at the bottom to get 9/32.
Ah fractions the bane of my wife!
I always find your videos to be very useful, articulate and professional.
I came across this video some time ago. I just made three drawers using this method. Holy crap is this the best. Once the setup is done, you can mass produce drawers. I desperately need more clamps!
Stumpy - I seldom comment, however this video deserves a thumbs up. That is by far the best explanation / tutorial I've ever seen regarding this process!
WELL DONE!!
agree
*Every* video of Stumpy Nubs deserves a thumbs up.
Stumpy, every time I ned to make drawers and can't quite put my finger on how to do it, this is the video I come looking for. EVERY TIME.
Brilliant - gonna use this design to build my next drawer boxes. Thanks for the instructional, very easy to understand.
I've found that if you do multiple drawers of similar width and depth, you can run larger pieces of wood through the saw to cut the dado and rabbet for multiple drawers at once. Then, you can just cut off the heights you need and run the groove in for the bottom in the individual drawer faces after. This allows you to manipulate larger pieces on the table saw for better support. This is also useful when the bottom has to be set at a specific distance, i.e. for undermount slides that might not respect the 1/2 x 1/2 x 1/2 of this method.
dang great tip!
I’m embarking installing kitchen cabinet pullout drawers/shelves with under mount slides. This will definitely be a time saver.
I know I'm really late to the party here, but I just made my first set of this style of drawer this weekend. One thing I ran into that may help other people (and that I have not seen on any of the explanation videos) is... You really need to be precise when cutting your pieces to length before cutting the rabbets and dados, especially your bottom panels. If you can use all the same stops on a cross cut sled or something like that, you will probably get the best results. I don't have a cross cut setup, so I cut my sides to length on the miter saw, and bottom panels on the table saw. My drawers would not go together, because the bottom panels were almost an 1/8th too long. So I had to reset my table saw up to rip them down, reset the the dado blade up, and recut 1 dado on each of my 4 drawer bottoms. Not the end of the world, but it was enough to make me walk away from the project for the day!
Thanks for demonstrating this. I’ll never do it differently after how easy I found this to do. One critique that threw me for a second: your animation show the assembly finishing by sliding down a front/back piece, which had me questioning the dimensions of the drawer bottom for clearance. In reality, I figured out that you put a side on last and it presses into place.
I have watched this a couple of times. I will undoubtedly watch it again. Thanks.
Best 1/4-1/4-1/4 video I've seen. If using other than nominal wood for sides and bottom, installing bottom with rabbet up will give a recessed bottom. Install with rabbet down and bottom will be flush.
James you're MORE AMAZING than the Ridge Carbide blades!!!! This video BEATS ALL THE OTHERS BY FAR on lock joint drawers!!!! But that is the way ALL your videos are!!! You are an INVALUABLE resource for intermediate woodworkers like me!!! I wish I culd pay you for all the woodworking ways you've taught me!! Guess I can just say THANK YOU JAMES!!!!
Excellent video and explanation showing how anyone can make first class drawers with this logical method.
I've heard tell of this one-setup method but hadn't seen it demonstrated so crystal clearly. Your timing is perfect since I'm planning to make drawers using this method very soon. 👍🏼
Yeah, what @Featherboards said.
You are the best teacher in the world ! bless you & your family
The best part of this video is when you explain the dangers of using the tablesaw with vertical boards. Showing options for how to get the job done while minimizing the dangers is key. Thanks for this!
WOW!!!
How many vids & PBS shows have I seen this process shown but never retained the knowledge? OK, maybe part is the failing memory of an old man but your explanation of half-half-half will be embedded in my brain now
Thanks, James!!!
Exactly! 1/2-1/2-1/2 makes much more sense to my mind as well. I mean, who always works with 1/2 inch material? That's a lot of extra thickness-planing and wasted wood if you're using real wood, and a better chance of warping if you're using modern poorly made plywood products.
This and your finger joint videos are the most concise and clear I've been able to find, I'll be giving both these methods a try in the next few days for making fancy boxes and a bunch of road cases, thank you!
So glad I found this video! I just watched Bob Katz demonstrate the quarter-quarter-quarter method but then got discouraged when I found out it would only work for plywood (or any material) that is actually 3/4" thick. Thank you for breaking this down so that I can still use this easy method of building drawers!
This is incredibly helpful and efficient. Thank you nubs, your stumpiness has proven resourceful yet again.
Running boards on end through the table saw can be a dangerous process...especially without a really good zero clearance plate. For the ends and bottoms (rabbets), I use a sacrificial fence right up to the blade. As long as the sacrificial fence is HALF the width of your work piece you don't even have to measure. With this method you can run pieces through on their face to create the rabbet instead of on end. That will help keep you fingers from becoming Stumpy Nubs.
Excellent work! I just butt jointed some nice walnut drawer boxes that I now have the solution to run 1/2-1/2-1/2 (or 5/16-5/16-5/16 in the case of the 5/8 walnut I milled!). No regrets, just an excellent 😁learning experience!
Thank you so much!
Great video! Being from Sweden - a country that relies heavily on international standard - I always marvel at the way you manage to keep track of inches, feet and yards! 3/4, 3/8, 3/16 and so on... The metric system is SO much easier to grasp. 😄
not😁
Your correct. Adding, subtracting, and even measuring with fractional measurements can introduce errors. I’m trying to transition to the metric system in my woodworking and find it’s easier math.
Appreciate your tutorials, your explanations are excellent, you not only take your time demonstrating you talk at a normal speed. I sometimes find others speak to fast.
Very good video and makes perfect sense. Seem’s much simpler .
I just constructed 4 drawers for an antique dresser in about 1.5 hours! AWESOME! Thanks so much!
I've watched multiple videos on draw construction, looking for one that was easy to follow. Yours was by far the best! Thanks!
To all who have watched various demonstrations of draw assembly. This is by far the best video out there.
This method is easy, it’s strong, and the most efficient method to a mechanical wood joint.
Thank You James.
Besides being a master craftsman, you are a master teacher. Well done video!
I agree : he is a born teacher .
I'm agree! Excellent
Good job. Nothing better than a video without the kids and the dog
Since plywood is never 3/4 or 1/2 this is good info. Now I can setup for the off size plywood and still get good results. Excellent info thanks!!
Thanks! I have now used this method for 3 shop cabinets and it works great.
Please note plywood, even from the same stack is not always the same thickness. So I always cut all the sides of a drawer from the same sheet of ply.
Thanks Stumpy! Makes it easy, even in metric.
Triple 1/2 is a perfect name for this method of making drawers. 👍🏻
I've probably commented this exact comment 10 times on your channel, so what's one more? I cant tell you how much I love these videos. So well put together. Unbelievably informative. Just a great way to spend spare time watching something useful. BTW.. I hardly do any wood working projects... but if I was going to, man your teachings would be GOLD. Keep up the awesome work
I use that joint almost exclusively for drawers. Strong, quick, and easy. You did an awesome job explaining the process! The same set up can be done on the router table too, but then there is the noise and mess.
Dust collection is imperative if doing this on a router table. Try a relief cut down the middle of the grooves on the table saw first, it really does save time and wear on router bits, and improves accuracy on the router table as well.
Excellent video and explanation. Best I've ever watched.
I Love the video's you do, and always give a thumbs up but never comment. This is a great video explaning this method that my dad taught me 60 years back and you explained very well. Dove tails take much longer to do and setups are a pain. Go to the big box stores and look at the cabinets and you will see most use this method, and they fail when overloaded or abused by pushing stuff tightly into them. Still a good method, not bucking it.
If building something fast way to go, if building something to last for your great grandkids, take the time and dovetail it and the wood will break before the dovetail comes apart. And yea I do use this method too, just depends on how long I need it to last me. Thanks again for all the great video's I aways learn something from them.
Good video and I like the name half-half-half. For us using the metric system it makes so much more sense than quarter-quarter-quarter.
Thanks for video for that type of joint. I’m new to woodworking, so this will be a new challenge for me. Thanks again. 👍🏻
I love this sooooo much-thank you Stumpy!!
We've just moved into a townhouse that needs some built-ins. My biggest concern has been building the drawers, which I've never done before. Thanks for providing an excellent solution that even I, The Least Handy Man in America, can handle.
I use my radial arm saw for this other than the grooved bottom, I don't rip with it. I use a spacer against the stop to cut the drawer front. You don't have to stand these up on edge even on a table saw using a removable spacer! Great video all the same.
I agree with Bob Holt I seldom comment as well but your videos are the best tutorials on woodworking...please keep up the awesome job!!!!
Watched several videos explaining this, but this has been the best one explaining the concept. Others did well adding the glue-up process though so I'd take a look at a few others as well.
Pro at his best. Thank you.
Timing couldn't be better. Just getting ready to batch out a bunch of 1/2 inch and 3/4 drawers. Can't wait to try it.
This may be the coolest thing I've seen when it comes to making drawers! Thank you!
Haven't made a drawer, other than dovetail joints before because they are typically complicated. And dovetails for me?....well they are time consuming and complicated too! Your video helps a great deal with understanding a simpler way of construction for typical drawers. I have watched your video twice, but still need to build one in my shop to get it under my belt. Thanks.
Hi Stumpy, I enjoyed the video. Your explanations are always clear and concise. I couldn't get comfortable with running my end boards on edge so I took the time to set up my router as well to cut the rabbets with the boards flat. Extra work, I know but it didn't take long to do the extra setup and it make me feel safer.
Watched this video many times over , learn something each time
Yup, what they ↕️ all said, well, the positive ones that is. Excellent as usual James, thank you for sharing your wisdom and your excellent craftsmanship, 11 out of 10 😎👍
Very well explained. Back in the days when the epoxy slide was the state of the art we used to build drawers using this method but we would attach the bottoms without recessing them at all. The slides would totally cover and support the bottoms. I don’t miss the 3/4 extension, but I sure do miss that easy construction method. Great vid, James. Scott
Very nice explanation. Simple and easy to remember. I find that I am visiting your page more and more often because of these simple sensible videos. You are a good resource for the average woodworker with a home shop. I will continue to consider your sponsors when making a purchase.
Thanks! Here is full list of brands: www.stumpynubs.com/support-us/
stumpy your presentation is really clear and concise, it shows you are a REAL PRO thank You .
I always love these videos where I learn a quick and easy way to make a great joint that speeds up production!!
You have impeccable timing sir! The day you posted this video, I just measured for a project that is just 2 units of drawers for a desk. When I came home I saw the notification for your video and watched it.
Got my wood planed down to 5/8” (for blumotion glides). Now to review half and half drawers. I don’t want to be here all day. Ah, very nice explanation. Thanks! Back to the shop.
Finally. I understand this concept.
Jim, thank you for another amazing clear and safety driven approach. Thank you!
Nicely done video. Clear simple explanation. Thank You.
Very well explained with diagrams too. Good job
What a great explanation of half-half-half. I HAVE to try this with my new dado set. Thank you.
Thanks for the in depth video.
One of your best videos imo
Hey Stumpy 😀 !!
I love your clearly explained, analytical and practical approach to things !!!
Once again, an outstanding video ✌️!!!
Thank you for this. I used this method to build 40 (yes, forty!) drawers from 15mm (5/8) baltic birch ply and they came out beautifully.
Thank you. I use metric measurements and most if not all what I watched in woodwork talk imperial.
Good Morning James, thank you for this video, the value added is huge and will save me tons of time going forward, I appreciate your tutorials.
I learn so much from your channel. I used your "simple box joint method" to make a batch of birdhouses, and it worked perfectly. I plan to use this locking rabbet joint method for another project. I'm confident this tutorial will make all the difference in the outcome. Thank you for helping me make sense of the worldwide web of woodworking! You're an exceptional educator, and I'm much obliged 🤠
Enjoyed this video. Simplifying what many would deem complicated. Thanks
You're the best teacher on youtube. I've been putting off making cabinetry for my house for a long time and this is a brilliant explanation on drawers and makes it so easy to understand.
Great explanation. When you do your videos I feel like you are speaking directly to me. I will totally watch them three or four times to absorb your instructions. Not that it isn't thoroughly explained but more I can't believe it is as easy as you make it look. lol
Thanks for this video
I have seen this done for drawers but you are the first I have seen explaining it
Your half half half half to me is a better explanation
You have got to be the cleverest guy out there in the shop. This is very well done indeed, outstanding. Thank you for the training.
James, I have used the 1/4 1/4 1/4 method for many years with great success. thank you so much for explaining it so well. Love your videos. Keep them coming. John in Missouri Valley Iowa.
Thank you so much for the descriptions and visuals to the half-half-half. You just made things so much easier for me. :-)
Nicely explained. I'm just learning and I didn't really understand the concept because I didn't know it was relative to the material stock thickness. Now it makes sense. Thx.
Perfect timing, I was just going start a project needing a bunch of drawers.
Conversely, I just struggled with a few drawers LAST week...
I have just used rabbet joints on most of my drawers but now I really want to give this a try. Really broke it down and made it simple
Love the way you explain the things. Simple, straight forward
I am in agreement with many others. This is a helpful and well taught video. It comes just at the right time for a new project. Your teaching style is organized and easy-going. Credibility and understanding is the result. Thank you.
Hey James, thank you so much for taking the time and effort to produce this excellent tutorial on making drawers with a dado blade and the one-step setup. Also, many thanks for including SAFETY issues regarding this setup.
I'm glad I found this video, very good explanation for various thicknesses of ply wood. As soon as I get my dado blades back from the sharpening shop I am going to give it a try. Here in northern, Ontario, Canada it is difficult to get true 1/2" Baltic birch but the Aspen ply that is available comes out to 15/32" (0.46875") thick - I'm just going to call it half inch. Hopefully it works.
Thank you for sharing!
Thank you Stumpy for this video, I was looking for a method to make drawers that had some joinery for added strength. This is the method I will adapt! Keep up the great videos!
This is easy and pretty quick. Like many shop projects, the actual work may only take minutes, but it's all in the setup.
Once you have your saw and fence dialed in perfectly, it all goes rather smooth.
There's two things I found I don't like about this method.
First, there's the empty square holes on the outside, then there's those other little squares on the corners that are just so happy to snap off if you look at them wrong.
I was gluing one of these up tonight. The dry fit was one of my best boxes yet. During assembly, one of those corner squares snapped off and ended up in a joint. As I was giving the box the tappy tap tap before the clamping, I saw that a side wasn't seating right.
You know how it goes when you start disassembling a glue up.
That one little corner ended up messing up the whole project as the others snapped off while I was looking for the one that got jammed.
Argh.
Then there's that whole standing a board up vertically against the fence over a dado blade thing.
I think I'll keep looking for a better, safer drawer method, but I at least gave it a try,
This is a great tip. If you don't have a dado set, you can also do a similar setup on a router table.
I was thinking about using a router table as well. The issue I may face would be that the min size of a router bit is 1/4, i.e. 6.35 mm, whilst the plywood is 12 mm (Russia) - would make a gap of 0.35 mm. Should try to see if it is noticeable.
So patient and well demonstrated! Thanks for putting your knowledge on the internet
As always you are clear, concise and complete. Keep up the great work!
thank you buddy, you just solved my problem of keeping production affordable with the cost of lumber right now!!!!!!!! Your Freaking great
This has to be the absolute most useful cabinet video I have ever seen. One to save to later and to share now.
Outstanding video, sir! And your collection of planers? WOW!
Well done!
Thank you for making them drawer building process an easier concept. Prior to watching your video presentation; I have build one drawer successfully when I built a Mitre Saw Stand for my brand new Mitre Saw. Upon building my second, much smaller drawer; I found it more intimidating and it came out "only kind of okay." Upon reflection, I believe that my drawer assembly came out not so great because of the drawer box not being anywhere close to being perfectly "square." I am going to remedy my situation by rebuilding my drawer box, and remaking my drawer assembly using your process.
Again, well done.
New subscriber here. Thanks for the video. I am about to make some heavy duty drawers in the shop. Thanks again for the video. Noob here on making drawers.
As always, Stumpy, you articulate the task so well, be it complicated or simple, or a combination of the two. Well done! Also, love the description, works for any thickness of stock.
Truly one of the best explanations and illustrations of a process that I have seen. Agreed! WELL DONE!!
Thank you! you just saved me so much time! :)
You are the best, thanks for the very useful info.
My first watch. I'm a hobbyist woodworker and have made quite a few drawers. Your half-half-half method was very well explained and I'm looking forward to trying it. I love the idea of one set-up and your idea for the odd-thickness drawer bottom created when using 3/4 material was excellent. New subsriber!