Machining Components For Dovetail Drawer Construction
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- Опубліковано 21 чер 2024
- An in-depth look at the preparation / machining of dovetail drawers and the attention required to get the best results. In this video i am cutting the components to length, machining the dovetails, grooving for the drawer bottoms and adding a small detail bevel. The components are ready for glueing next.
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#Joinery #Woodworking - Навчання та стиль
Attention to detail makes for very grateful and happy customers. Nice work.
So much thought and attention to detail. Quite simply: brilliant 🌞
Thanks Ray hope you are well
Compliments! Always a lot of attention to the smallest details. Greetings from Italy
Great to see how much care and attention you apply to your work. I can feel your pain over being sent the wrong boards.
Brilliant as always 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻🇬🇧
Cheers mate, bit boring work at the minute but hopefully help a someone out!
Sales of Leigh dovetail jigs will probably go up now people understand all about them! Great videos thanks
Haha, I'm sure I just tip the iceberg in what it'll do, but it's all I bought it for haha
Thanks for introducing the Leigh-jigs to us, I want one now! Sidenote; my wife thanks you not so much...
😂, put it on finance over 12 months it's basically an unnoticeable amount then 😜
Could you do a tutorial on the Leigh jig because I have one but never use it please
Spot on Oliver .. I would love to learn this to learn this with a standard set up of a dove tail jig. Future content please ? Happy to help film .. ! Simmo
How'd you mean Ben? Not the leigh?
Not the Leigh I have a more ‘standard’ trend dovetail jig. Unless they are all the same principle ?
Got one Had it for twenty years
Another excellent video, I appreciate all of the details you are presenting.
When beveling stock on the shaper, I prefer to tilt the spindle and use a straight cutter. The geometry of the tool path is different than using a bevel cutter. The cutter on a tilted spindle rises and falls relative to the table, I think it is less likely to cause any tear out.
Agricultor💪
Great info! I'm interested in that roller you have on your spindle moulder, Can I get a link? Very annoying about the beech veneer! >
It's a Felder item and very pricey (obviously) www.felder-group.com/en-gb/shop/pressure-devices~sc123884
@@BradshawJoinery Hmmm. Might make my own! 😅 Cheers.
Hi,do you not use the cuttable plastic inserts to go between the fingers to stop the router falling in,as I see you have slightly fallen in time the tail,I understand that you don't see them, perhaps you have run out of inserts,it surprised me slightly with your attention to detail that you omitted this detail.
I found it a bit unnecessary and actually slightly advantageous with the PU glue to have a small cavity there, it reduces the glue squeeze as any glue in that socket has to go somewhere when clamped up. Yeah i have the inserts, but it doesn't need it for strength and its quicker not to use them, just have to be careful you router the right bit and you clear all the material hence a dip. Well spotted though it's one of them unknowns i mull over while working, should i/ shouldn't i and the advantages of both..... haha.
It looks like you cut your pins and tails separately, I do both at once on my jig. Is there a reason for that?
When tearout is critical I use a scrap underneath my timber and just keep pushing it along with the work, just 3mn mdf or ply.
Because they are uneven spacing dovetails. I keep the pins as small as they go but the tailed spaced wider for aesthetic reasons so you have to machine each part separately. It also looks more bespoke than even spaced dovetails👍
Abrupt ending....
Haha 😆 just filming as I go at the minute bud, I'm so frikkin busy but trying to pass the info on as my h as possible