The old recycled timber look with the paint still on there looks amazing a good friend of mine had a complete kitchen unit made out from the recycled timber that came out of the grandstand from athletic park in Wellington and the bench top had the seat numbers still on it . Awesome work team 😎👍
Good to see a yt woodworker with the saw top guard on and not risking digits. Nice one Mr B. BTW those old timey machines are the same as I trained on 44 years ago
Beautifully done you two. I'm glad to have found you. The craft of 14-minute-design-build-diary-entry-films made on a cycle with a one or two person team is no simple matter and you do a lovely job.
I'm 32 years old and currently a carpentry apprentice in Austria. On the 16th I am starting my schooling part of the apprenticeship. This just hypes me up more. Also the gigs we get here involve way less actual wood. Even building for rich ppl (nobody else can afford it rn) the materials are bad. I hope I get to work with more actual wood once I am in the job.
As an apprentice in Denmark, in the last 3 years I've only done timber framing in the last month and that is just because, the building needs to be "green" that means less CO2 pr. m2 and therefore everything is now just timber and eco concrete
Scott, when you re-saw on the bandsaw, especially with timber with inner tensions that make it want to imitate a banana, use a half-length fence (simple section of MDF will do the job). This should extend about 1" past the blade. This fence allows the board to move, but it is a controlled movement insofar as the board does not now come into contact with the fence. When the tensions cause the board to open up, one half pushes against the fence, and it is this that causes the skewed cut (assuming the blade has enough tension). I wrote a shop tip about this for FWW magazine about 4 or 5 months ago. Regards from Perth, Derek Cohen
@@ScottBrownCarpentry Your fence looks fancy enough that you can probably slide it back towards the in-feed side until it ends just past the blade. (But I could be wrong) Also, make sure you adjust the fence for drift if you haven't yet. I do use the Resaw king carbide tipped blades though and the wide kerf is pretty forgiving. I much prefer to rip lumber on my bandsaw VS cabinet saw.
To fix that pinching issue you can angle your fence to the blade drift angle. While drift varies over time as you change blades etc, it is pretty consistent cut to cut. I gutted my commercial fence, used the front track and clamping lever, and made a wood fence that can be adjusted and fixed at an angle. To set the angle draw a line on a piece of wood parallel to the edge, hand feed it through until it is running straight. The wood will be at an angle, use that angle to set the fence. I learnt this from a fine woodworker who studied under Krenov and resaws tons of wood (veneered panels, large dimensions down etc).
I have only seen pocket holes be created using the Kreg jigs... 2:16 was the smoothest thing I have ever witnessed. Thank you for that beautiful and masterful shot!
Hi Scott, you should check out the stuff Dutch designer Piet Hein Eek does - he made a carteer and a business out of using reclaimed wood & he did it like years before anyone else. Those bench es really reminded me of his stuff (I own two tables and a chair he designed, so I am quite the fan.)
Scott, you will gain much more control from less blade wandering if you lower the blade guide of the bandsaw - putting the bottom of it just above your work. Good luck and great videos! Ive been a fan since your days in the UK.
the bar seating setup looks pretty great its should work out awesome at my setup on the front deck at my place ,,,,,,,, With my new Pallet Pub an Bar setup ive built out off free pallets ive been picking up around the place an asking few local tradies sites or work site for there old pallets or new pallets that are for free for me too come an take them way for them soo i can build cool stuff out off it an sell it off too make some pocket money on the side income etc. or local shop owners out an about in town an around nelson too as well as mot
He didn't get it quite right though. Japanese carpenters compress the fibres with a hammer to insert the piece, and then use a bit of water afterwards to relax them and expand back to their original size, thus tightening the joint.
Don't use any old hammer to do this, by the way. Use a hammer with a convex face like most ball peen hammers. Flat face hammers won't allow the wood to recover from the compression of the hammer.
Nice. Love the channel. We'll be down in Havelock for 3 days around then, will take a trip into Nelson, hopefully the "Dog and Bone" is up and running by 24 Sept?
seems to be a lot of debate on band-saw blade setup. I have a 17" grizzly that I've re-sawed rimu and swamp kauri with, the kauri had the height maxed out for guitar tops and no pinching. The back of the gullet needs to be sitting just on top of the center of the wheel. No drift no pinching.
For the stools I would have done a mortise and tenon with two dowel pins straight through. The dado joints with the wood screw won't stand up to the constant weight of people sitting on the stools. It will break easier over time. A mortise and tenon takes a little more time to do and learn... And if you are going to do a dado joint I would have made them a little deeper, so you have more of the two faces meeting. This is meant as advise and not criticism of your fine wood working skills. I only share, as I made the same mistake and wasted good wood and time doing exactly what you did. I am hoping in the future you take that trip to Japan and can learn great joinery skills from those wonderful Japanese carpenters.
Hey Scott, you might find less deflection in the bandsaw when your resawing wide sections, use a 25mm or deeper blade, I think at about a 3-4 tpi tooth count. It will track to your line far better than the 10mm blade you've got in the vid (guessing that only). Admittedly, with a hard old timber you still may get deflection anyway if that Remu is anything like the Jarrah I've used, in which case your better off going the table saw route anyhow. Thanks again for a great start to the weekend, loving your work and great to see you expanding in joinery...or decks😅
old rimu is very hard. you cannot hammer a nail into it without pre drilling. and you are correct with the need for a resaw blade in the bandsaw. it makes all the difference.
On top of that, I think the guides could be brought in tighter (cigarette paper away from the blade) and lower (minimum amount of blade exposed possible). The blade also seems to wobble front to back in another shot, so it may not be centered on the top wheel (some people like the back of the gullet on the crown, some like the center of the blade on the crown) but it could be not enough tension or a bad weld. Finally, I was taught that you should only push through the bandsaw with one finger. Let the saw do the work, it may be slow but it has to clear a lot of wood out of the kerf without heating up. Once you get your bandsaw setup perfectly it'll be your favorite tool. They are such a joy to use and safer than a table saw in so many ways.
Nice.. I like the way the edge of the bench seat flattens off a bit.. (people with shorter legs will appreciate) If the front wall of the bench seat was recessed a bit, your heals wouldn't hit and mark the wood.
The debate about which way the 'Bum Divot' goes has been going literally for Millenia - well back into the days of the Greeks and Romans. The Romans seem to have liked the high points to be at the front and back, but somewhere along the way it changed to have the high points on the left and right, possibly because the Romans liked short seating and the bar stool hadn't been invented yet.
Involving the police in any approval or undertaking of a venue where alcohol is going to be served just kinda makes sense now that I see it. But also involving them in council inspections of new construction just seems like good safety for the council members.
For the electrical and network cabling running through the ceiling trusses (where you guys were stapling the greenery), why not build a large version of a old-school style wooden cable conduit? I.e. four planks nailed edge on to form a box structure. Easy to knock up quickly. You could even leave the top open so it's more of a cable tray so to speak. That way, the cables are out of sight of customers, the wood will match nicely, and if anyone wants to run more cabling, they can simply drop it into the top of the tray. A good use for some old T&G flooring with the tongue and groove removed. Could even go with old ripped down weatherboarding with aged paint to match your awesome seating.
The fact that you applied glue to the joint, which has water in it, will make it expand. Some joints are glue free, to those you apply a spritz of water to help the wood to return to its original size. It’s similar to the technique of removing dents in wood by applying a wet cloth and using a hot iron to force water into the crushed wood fibers. In England, the Bodgers who made mainly chairs in the woods, following coppicing, using fresh wet wood, would dry round tenons over a fire so when fitted to the drilled mortises, still wet, they would shrink to form a joint without glue or fasteners. I’m sure the technique has been used by many craftsmen the world over. Check out the history of chair making in the Cotswold hills. Sadly this tradition is barely kept alive by a few stalwart enthusiasts today. Modern techniques and materials have made this almost obsolete. The chairs that are still in use are considered to be valuable if they ever come to market. Luckily, there are a few places where you can go to learn how to use the tools and techniques that were used. In the UK traditional crafts and craftsmanship have almost disappeared, only a small number of people struggle to keep them alive. In this modern world of instant gratification spending time and effort has fallen out of fashion. I’m a wood turner, and try to pass on the craft to the younger generation but sadly, there are not many who want to learn. The mighty CNC is now king, sad but inevitable. Only a hundred and fifty years ago every village or town had a blacksmith, wood turner, wheelwright, carpenter, baker etc. poor people ate off wooden plates, drank from wooden mugs and sat on wooden chairs all made locally, and their food came from an area close to where they lived. Now it comes from China, America or anywhere other than five miles down the road.
Nice work but one thing worried a non carpenter like me. I don't know how stable the fibres of that timber are but you did make a comment about building a deck. I'd be reluctant to use nails on anything that someone has to sit on. It only needs one nail head to get pushed up slightly on reclaimed timber and the bar is up for an expensive replacement of someone's clothing or worse. I think I'd be opting for stainless steel screws.
The binding you experienced on the bandsaw is because the fence hasn't been adjusted to account for any blade 'drift' in the cut. Most bandsaws don't cut exactly at 90 degrees to the table. It's an easy fix and there are plenty of videos on how to do it.
You made me laugh. "...just building a deck". On all my deck builds I seem to have built in benches these days - straight out of the deck itself. I'm calling them "Deck Chairs" now. :)
As a hard of hearing person with preferences for how subtitles should be done, I must ask: what's the reason you copy paste the UA-cam automatic captions into the subtitle editor, making the generated subtitles come in as blocks of text instead of on the deefault word by word basis? It's a little strange to have/difficult to read subtitles appearing for stuff that might only happen a scene or two after when the first part of the subtitles begin. Personally, I'd prefer to either have the normal UA-cam word by word closed captioning OR properly timed and formatted scene by scene subtitles (which is way too much work for most channels). Mind you, this is ultimately a minor issue and having slightly wonky subtitles is 100 times better than not having them at all! I love your content, keep up the good work.
It’s always a good morning when a new SBC shows up! Scott, are you guys part owners in the dogs bone or just helping with fitout? I might have missed that part.
I was getting flashbacks to Jeremy and Super Hans' plans for their 'pub' in Peep Show during the liquor licence inspection. "What's a photocopier doin' in a pub? I need a drink... And boom, they'll have to have one of our organic scrumpys."
First, to comment, and it's another Scott Brown video. Brill videos keep them coming and very informative, and in the know has helped me decide on new tools from your videos.
if the Bandsaw does not cut streight anymore .. here are 2 of the most likely possibilities .. one; you cut to fast .. second; Saw-Band is dull .. if the Band gets dull fast .. Band is to soft for the hard Timber, use hardened teeth .. third could be wrong tension of the Band, but the burn-marks let me think it's the second
The bandsaw should have been able to rip that board with a fence that is aligned to the drift angle. ua-cam.com/video/bxVyKsbuwZQ/v-deo.htmlsi=Or27Tx1RRGB0Eer5&t=353 alternatively you could use this method which I find much better when resawing a board with a lot of tension. You use a bearing mounted to a block so that there is only one point of contact with the board. It is surprisingly easy to keep a straight line with this method. Another bandsaw setup video ua-cam.com/video/wGbZqWac0jU/v-deo.html
screws in furniture only work if the furniture does not move .. at all.. otherwise, the screw acts as a saw and works it's way out of the hole... stools must be trad joinery. The bum divit is a very good idea.
Hey Scott! This may be a bit of a random question, but I'll be living in New Zealand from Canada starting in November and was wondering how good the streets are for cruising on a skateboard? I'll be staying in Auckland and Wellington!
As with anywhere, it is a mixed bag of asphalt or concrete (lips galore). The chip seal on the road is sometimes chunky. A lot of asphalt on the inner city roads.
OMG those Magnolia trees looked absolutely amazing 😊 Don't like Black Swans, Jess was correct when saying that they attack. I had a experience as a small child at a park in Rotorua when I was attacked by 2 of them - traumatised for life 😱😱
As a retired cabinetmaker , I could explain why your bandsaw is “drifting”. Instead I’ll recommend you watch Canadian cabinetmaker Michael Fortune on tuning your bandsaw. The best bandsaw advice I’ve had. If you’re ever in Sydney I’ll be happy to show you.
@moonpie21012 At my work we sand/scratch the hammer head so it doesn't slip off the nails the same. Only really bother when doing cladding and you can see when someone's hit the finished timber.
"Good to think about stuff before you fuck it up." Wise words
Yup. So many people just don’t think things through these days.
The old recycled timber look with the paint still on there looks amazing a good friend of mine had a complete kitchen unit made out from the recycled timber that came out of the grandstand from athletic park in Wellington and the bench top had the seat numbers still on it . Awesome work team 😎👍
Good to see a yt woodworker with the saw top guard on and not risking digits. Nice one Mr B. BTW those old timey machines are the same as I trained on 44 years ago
Your videos make me so relaxed, the music was perfect in this one! Thank you very much
Beautifully done you two. I'm glad to have found you. The craft of 14-minute-design-build-diary-entry-films made on a cycle with a one or two person team is no simple matter and you do a lovely job.
Scott can only identify trees when they’re dead and milled.
I’m imagining a butcher with the same problem. “That’s pig.” “No honey, that’s a deer.”
This is hilarious.
I love how right at the last second a dude comes walking out holding a guitar - so New Zealand!
Kiwi pronunciation of deck never fails to deliver
Hey bro... Is Scott working on this dik all weekend? 🏗️
Best use is eating Fush and Chups on it 😁
Scott erecting decks, always a good time. Lots of tips. Without decks, I feel shafted.
Nor does your name Mike😂
@@gregh_1962 stop giving it a hard time. It hits deep.
I'm 32 years old and currently a carpentry apprentice in Austria.
On the 16th I am starting my schooling part of the apprenticeship.
This just hypes me up more.
Also the gigs we get here involve way less actual wood.
Even building for rich ppl (nobody else can afford it rn) the materials are bad.
I hope I get to work with more actual wood once I am in the job.
I have some "real wood" you can work with homes.
@LibertyDino
As an apprentice in Denmark, in the last 3 years I've only done timber framing in the last month and that is just because, the building needs to be "green" that means less CO2 pr. m2 and therefore everything is now just timber and eco concrete
Scott, when you re-saw on the bandsaw, especially with timber with inner tensions that make it want to imitate a banana, use a half-length fence (simple section of MDF will do the job). This should extend about 1" past the blade. This fence allows the board to move, but it is a controlled movement insofar as the board does not now come into contact with the fence. When the tensions cause the board to open up, one half pushes against the fence, and it is this that causes the skewed cut (assuming the blade has enough tension). I wrote a shop tip about this for FWW magazine about 4 or 5 months ago. Regards from Perth, Derek Cohen
That’s a great tip Derek, thanks. I’ll give it a go
@@ScottBrownCarpentry Your fence looks fancy enough that you can probably slide it back towards the in-feed side until it ends just past the blade. (But I could be wrong) Also, make sure you adjust the fence for drift if you haven't yet. I do use the Resaw king carbide tipped blades though and the wide kerf is pretty forgiving. I much prefer to rip lumber on my bandsaw VS cabinet saw.
this is a killer tip, thanks Derek
Putting a wedge in the wood after the cut also helps to prevent pinching .
7:17 - It's actually a _very_ similar hue and pretty similar saturation, just different levels of luminance.
My thoughts exactly!
regarding the resaw, give a couple relief cuts top and bottom with the table saw and the band will follow that. finish up with the jointer.
Nice, the projects is taking shape, it’s always fascinating to watch a space being transformed.
Guys Great job, good to see Jess joining in the party looks like you'll be regular patrons of the new shop. Thanks for Sharing...
St Arnaud! Love that place
Fun series and I love the happy chill vibes from the bar owners
To fix that pinching issue you can angle your fence to the blade drift angle. While drift varies over time as you change blades etc, it is pretty consistent cut to cut. I gutted my commercial fence, used the front track and clamping lever, and made a wood fence that can be adjusted and fixed at an angle. To set the angle draw a line on a piece of wood parallel to the edge, hand feed it through until it is running straight. The wood will be at an angle, use that angle to set the fence. I learnt this from a fine woodworker who studied under Krenov and resaws tons of wood (veneered panels, large dimensions down etc).
*running straight relative to feeding the blade....
I have only seen pocket holes be created using the Kreg jigs...
2:16 was the smoothest thing I have ever witnessed.
Thank you for that beautiful and masterful shot!
I have an antique table, made sometime in the 1800's, which has 'pocket holes' made with a brace & bit.
Helpful hint when resewing timber... first cut both sides with your table saw, and then use the bandsaw to cut the middle...
Great to see you back out on the job Scotty. Excellent name for the new business, Cheers
Love seeing you dive headfirst into woodworking projects. I've been eyeing one of those Laguna Bandsaws for my garage shop
8:21 - this is the greatest quote in all history.
Ace project dude. Can’t wait to see how it turns out. Chairs look ace by the way 🤙
Thanks for the Japanese wood hammering technique. Cheers.
4:30 I saw a video about bar stools from Scotland, for the men with Kilts, rounded for seat bottom with a carve out for the jewels.
Closed captions are hilarious in the beginning
Lol. True!
I was just about to comment the same thing. "Deck" apparently sounds like, well, something else to the closed caption robots.
Hi Scott, you should check out the stuff Dutch designer Piet Hein Eek does - he made a carteer and a business out of using reclaimed wood & he did it like years before anyone else. Those bench es really reminded me of his stuff (I own two tables and a chair he designed, so I am quite the fan.)
Seeing your spring means it's becoming fall for me!
Scott, you will gain much more control from less blade wandering if you lower the blade guide of the bandsaw - putting the bottom of it just above your work. Good luck and great videos! Ive been a fan since your days in the UK.
0:26 *Me putting on subtitles. You're building what now?!
he's going to get accent-dently demonetized
As long as there are no unsolicited deck pics 😂
@@chrisr8996 does 6:23 count? 😜
@@BitsOfInterest lol, nice one
Had to rewind
When we're up that way for a holiday sometime we are 100% dropping in, place is shaping up amazing!
Cant wait for to see the burger bar finished ☺
the bar seating setup looks pretty great its should work out awesome at my setup on the front deck at my place ,,,,,,,, With my new Pallet Pub an Bar setup ive built out off free pallets ive been picking up around the place an asking few local tradies sites or work site for there old pallets or new pallets that are for free for me too come an take them way for them soo i can build cool stuff out off it an sell it off too make some pocket money on the side income etc. or local shop owners out an about in town an around nelson too as well as mot
"Killing the wood." Genius tip. Thanks Scott.
He didn't get it quite right though. Japanese carpenters compress the fibres with a hammer to insert the piece, and then use a bit of water afterwards to relax them and expand back to their original size, thus tightening the joint.
Don't use any old hammer to do this, by the way. Use a hammer with a convex face like most ball peen hammers. Flat face hammers won't allow the wood to recover from the compression of the hammer.
Looking good … the Bar/restaurant will be good to visit !!😎
good music choice.
“Swans are such assholes”. Truer words were never spoken
Love it when it's noticed the clothes being worn are similar color scheme
5:12 That's an awfully thick piece of lumber to cut with a bandsaw blade for curved cuts (if I'm not mistaken...).
I love it when Kiwis say “deck”
a real deck needs real hardwood
This video is so cool, guys. I want to be there. I love the music.
Nice. Love the channel.
We'll be down in Havelock for 3 days around then, will take a trip into Nelson, hopefully the "Dog and Bone" is up and running by 24 Sept?
seems to be a lot of debate on band-saw blade setup. I have a 17" grizzly that I've re-sawed rimu and swamp kauri with, the kauri had the height maxed out for guitar tops and no pinching. The back of the gullet needs to be sitting just on top of the center of the wheel. No drift no pinching.
For the stools I would have done a mortise and tenon with two dowel pins straight through. The dado joints with the wood screw won't stand up to the constant weight of people sitting on the stools. It will break easier over time. A mortise and tenon takes a little more time to do and learn... And if you are going to do a dado joint I would have made them a little deeper, so you have more of the two faces meeting. This is meant as advise and not criticism of your fine wood working skills. I only share, as I made the same mistake and wasted good wood and time doing exactly what you did. I am hoping in the future you take that trip to Japan and can learn great joinery skills from those wonderful Japanese carpenters.
Hey Scott, you might find less deflection in the bandsaw when your resawing wide sections, use a 25mm or deeper blade, I think at about a 3-4 tpi tooth count. It will track to your line far better than the 10mm blade you've got in the vid (guessing that only). Admittedly, with a hard old timber you still may get deflection anyway if that Remu is anything like the Jarrah I've used, in which case your better off going the table saw route anyhow. Thanks again for a great start to the weekend, loving your work and great to see you expanding in joinery...or decks😅
old rimu is very hard. you cannot hammer a nail into it without pre drilling. and you are correct with the need for a resaw blade in the bandsaw. it makes all the difference.
On top of that, I think the guides could be brought in tighter (cigarette paper away from the blade) and lower (minimum amount of blade exposed possible). The blade also seems to wobble front to back in another shot, so it may not be centered on the top wheel (some people like the back of the gullet on the crown, some like the center of the blade on the crown) but it could be not enough tension or a bad weld. Finally, I was taught that you should only push through the bandsaw with one finger. Let the saw do the work, it may be slow but it has to clear a lot of wood out of the kerf without heating up. Once you get your bandsaw setup perfectly it'll be your favorite tool. They are such a joy to use and safer than a table saw in so many ways.
Nice.. I like the way the edge of the bench seat flattens off a bit.. (people with shorter legs will appreciate) If the front wall of the bench seat was recessed a bit, your heals wouldn't hit and mark the wood.
beautiful work
loved the music on this one scott.. cool project, looks like fun...
Kia Ora -,Lake Rotoiti- surprised the sandflies didn't pick you up and cart you away😉. Good to see the dust mask on too, Scott. Enjoy your shows.
The debate about which way the 'Bum Divot' goes has been going literally for Millenia - well back into the days of the Greeks and Romans. The Romans seem to have liked the high points to be at the front and back, but somewhere along the way it changed to have the high points on the left and right, possibly because the Romans liked short seating and the bar stool hadn't been invented yet.
Is there going to be a sign that says, "As featured on Scott Brown Carpentry" in the cafe and on the furniture? :D
Involving the police in any approval or undertaking of a venue where alcohol is going to be served just kinda makes sense now that I see it.
But also involving them in council inspections of new construction just seems like good safety for the council members.
0:55 The police there because they are looking for a new after hours hangout.😀
For the electrical and network cabling running through the ceiling trusses (where you guys were stapling the greenery), why not build a large version of a old-school style wooden cable conduit? I.e. four planks nailed edge on to form a box structure. Easy to knock up quickly. You could even leave the top open so it's more of a cable tray so to speak. That way, the cables are out of sight of customers, the wood will match nicely, and if anyone wants to run more cabling, they can simply drop it into the top of the tray. A good use for some old T&G flooring with the tongue and groove removed. Could even go with old ripped down weatherboarding with aged paint to match your awesome seating.
try sitting on the stool by turning it 90 degrees. i bet it is more comfortable.
The fact that you applied glue to the joint, which has water in it, will make it expand. Some joints are glue free, to those you apply a spritz of water to help the wood to return to its original size. It’s similar to the technique of removing dents in wood by applying a wet cloth and using a hot iron to force water into the crushed wood fibers.
In England, the Bodgers who made mainly chairs in the woods, following coppicing, using fresh wet wood, would dry round tenons over a fire so when fitted to the drilled mortises, still wet, they would shrink to form a joint without glue or fasteners. I’m sure the technique has been used by many craftsmen the world over.
Check out the history of chair making in the Cotswold hills. Sadly this tradition is barely kept alive by a few stalwart enthusiasts today. Modern techniques and materials have made this almost obsolete. The chairs that are still in use are considered to be valuable if they ever come to market. Luckily, there are a few places where you can go to learn how to use the tools and techniques that were used. In the UK traditional crafts and craftsmanship have almost disappeared, only a small number of people struggle to keep them alive. In this modern world of instant gratification spending time and effort has fallen out of fashion.
I’m a wood turner, and try to pass on the craft to the younger generation but sadly, there are not many who want to learn. The mighty CNC is now king, sad but inevitable. Only a hundred and fifty years ago every village or town had a blacksmith, wood turner, wheelwright, carpenter, baker etc. poor people ate off wooden plates, drank from wooden mugs and sat on wooden chairs all made locally, and their food came from an area close to where they lived. Now it comes from China, America or anywhere other than five miles down the road.
Nice work but one thing worried a non carpenter like me.
I don't know how stable the fibres of that timber are but you did make a comment about building a deck.
I'd be reluctant to use nails on anything that someone has to sit on. It only needs one nail head to get pushed up slightly on reclaimed timber and the bar is up for an expensive replacement of someone's clothing or worse.
I think I'd be opting for stainless steel screws.
The binding you experienced on the bandsaw is because the fence hasn't been adjusted to account for any blade 'drift' in the cut. Most bandsaws don't cut exactly at 90 degrees to the table. It's an easy fix and there are plenty of videos on how to do it.
For somebody who works with wood all the time, it's great to see you know the difference between a pine a eucalyptus tree😂
Can I ask what is the brand of the paint scrapper please at 11:02?
The charm of these people makes me consider moving to new zealand
You made me laugh. "...just building a deck". On all my deck builds I seem to have built in benches these days - straight out of the deck itself. I'm calling them "Deck Chairs" now. :)
Episode 444😎 congrats❤️
As a hard of hearing person with preferences for how subtitles should be done, I must ask: what's the reason you copy paste the UA-cam automatic captions into the subtitle editor, making the generated subtitles come in as blocks of text instead of on the deefault word by word basis? It's a little strange to have/difficult to read subtitles appearing for stuff that might only happen a scene or two after when the first part of the subtitles begin. Personally, I'd prefer to either have the normal UA-cam word by word closed captioning OR properly timed and formatted scene by scene subtitles (which is way too much work for most channels).
Mind you, this is ultimately a minor issue and having slightly wonky subtitles is 100 times better than not having them at all! I love your content, keep up the good work.
You need a rip saw blade to cut those bigger boards, it is just too much for the thinner blades. Great video as always.
Nice workshop man.. how do you like the Laguna bandsaw? thinking of getting one.
It’s always a good morning when a new SBC shows up!
Scott, are you guys part owners in the dogs bone or just helping with fitout? I might have missed that part.
(Is all that plastic hanging from the ceiling Fire retardant?) The video is in a loose style pleasing to see, thanks for the effort😉
I was getting flashbacks to Jeremy and Super Hans' plans for their 'pub' in Peep Show during the liquor licence inspection. "What's a photocopier doin' in a pub? I need a drink... And boom, they'll have to have one of our organic scrumpys."
Rory Wilkinson here Scott Brown Carpentry
I can smell that workshop
First, to comment, and it's another Scott Brown video. Brill videos keep them coming and very informative, and in the know has helped me decide on new tools from your videos.
taking shape
if the Bandsaw does not cut streight anymore .. here are 2 of the most likely possibilities .. one; you cut to fast .. second; Saw-Band is dull .. if the Band gets dull fast .. Band is to soft for the hard Timber, use hardened teeth .. third could be wrong tension of the Band, but the burn-marks let me think it's the second
Is that a cheeky new bandsaw?..
Does the bone belong to a specific dog... or all dogs? Asking for a friend.
As all ways mr brown you smashed it 👍
The bandsaw should have been able to rip that board with a fence that is aligned to the drift angle.
ua-cam.com/video/bxVyKsbuwZQ/v-deo.htmlsi=Or27Tx1RRGB0Eer5&t=353
alternatively you could use this method which I find much better when resawing a board with a lot of tension. You use a bearing mounted to a block so that there is only one point of contact with the board. It is surprisingly easy to keep a straight line with this method.
Another bandsaw setup video
ua-cam.com/video/wGbZqWac0jU/v-deo.html
drift is the result of an incorrectly set blade. the same as snipe is an incorrectly set up planer.
screws in furniture only work if the furniture does not move .. at all.. otherwise, the screw acts as a saw and works it's way out of the hole... stools must be trad joinery. The bum divit is a very good idea.
i miss Ray 😔
Miss you too, Jared
Hey Scott! This may be a bit of a random question, but I'll be living in New Zealand from Canada starting in November and was wondering how good the streets are for cruising on a skateboard? I'll be staying in Auckland and Wellington!
As with anywhere, it is a mixed bag of asphalt or concrete (lips galore). The chip seal on the road is sometimes chunky. A lot of asphalt on the inner city roads.
Look up crunchie longboarding there’s lots of good stuff around nz
Your fire department is not going to like the ivy hanging down. :( Thank you and have a great week.
Especially if it's flammable plastic and has electrical wiring adjacent
2:15 Is this Kreg's jig?
OMG those Magnolia trees looked absolutely amazing 😊 Don't like Black Swans, Jess was correct when saying that they attack. I had a experience as a small child at a park in Rotorua when I was attacked by 2 of them - traumatised for life 😱😱
What is with all the printers?
That old timey bandsaw is a beast! Gears need a bit of lube tho lol.
The "bum divot", a technical woodworking term
As a retired cabinetmaker , I could explain why your bandsaw is “drifting”. Instead I’ll recommend you watch Canadian cabinetmaker Michael Fortune on tuning your bandsaw. The best bandsaw advice I’ve had. If you’re ever in Sydney I’ll be happy to show you.
I hope Scott sent the clip of him sanding the hammer face to Gaston. 😂😂
What is the purpose of sanding the hammer?
Stops it slipping on the nail heads so they drive true - @@FusRoDarshinae
@@PhilandErika Oh thats a good idea!
"Swans are such arseholes" 🤣
Boys and their “decks “ always polishing and cleaning 😂😂😂😂😂!
Generated captions are convinced you're building some male anatomy
When the blade on a bandsaw wanders - it need sharpening and setting.
I started making neck massagers. Everything I build looks like a deck now too.
Nice
The dogs bone ?
Ian Dury, 'Cool for cats'.
The closed captions have trouble with Kiwi way of saying deck. lol
Non-woodworker here, what is the purpose of sanding the head of your hammer?
@moonpie21012
At my work we sand/scratch the hammer head so it doesn't slip off the nails the same. Only really bother when doing cladding and you can see when someone's hit the finished timber.
Oliver is right, you roughen up the hammers surface to make it grippy. You can also rub it on concrete ...
I watched this purely to childidhisly giggle at a Kiwi saying Deck. Joking aside, great content as aways, thanks.
Swans are just massive "decks". 😉