@@BjornAndreasBull-Hansen Hi Bjorn! It's really nice work. Have you ever considered to try out the Japanese Ryoba saw? It can cut through pretty nicely and straight the wood you might need.
thank you for showing us that a bucksaw can be well made without a professional woodwork shop. also, i appreciate seeing you use a crossbuck. thank you
Excellent! Great job with the hand tools. Couple of observations. 1. Make sure you use a dry or hardwood blade in the saw. Most of the blades are for green wood and they do a TERRIBLE job cutting dry wood. 2. There is a another version of the bucksaw in which the handles pivot and provide a sheath for the saw blade. Great job and well done.
thank yew bjorn. when i was a boy we'd visit my grandparents sometimes and i noticed most of the neighbors had such a saw in their sheds. have fun gare
A bit of help with your English. The joint is a mortise and tenon joint, where the mortise is the female and the tenon is the male component. Love your videos. Thanks.
i think you need some sharper tools! working with blunt chisels and drill bits is dangerous and also messes your work up :( cool saw though! i'll be making one this year!
Gratulerer med ny sag. Buesaga mi er også 24 tommer. Fin størrelse å ha med seg i skogen. Jeg må si at din ble mye finere enn den jeg kjøpte på Jula :) - Martin
I was thinking about making a buck saw, now I know how. Bjorn have you been to denmark I saw earth work's there identical to here in newark Ohio? Google mound builders park and take a look, and when bodys are found perfectly preserved a museum takes them and they were never there? It has been the same in michigan and other great lake's state's they deny rocks with nordic writing on it? About indians attacking them.
Very informative video, definitely going to try this out!
Jase Hogarth That's awesome. If I can do it, I'm sure you can. It's a great and sturdy design.
@@BjornAndreasBull-Hansen Hi Bjorn! It's really nice work. Have you ever considered to try out the Japanese Ryoba saw? It can cut through pretty nicely and straight the wood you might need.
thank you for showing us that a bucksaw can be well made without a professional woodwork shop.
also, i appreciate seeing you use a crossbuck.
thank you
There are some great videos on UA-cam that explain how to properly make a bucksaw
Very nice job. Thanks for posting this how to video. I used the dimensions you mentioned and got an awesome result. Very helpful and informative
Awesomely made! Love how such a simple design makes a great saw. Really like the looks of it
Casper Mittendorp Thanks! Yes, these saws look great. It's a very old design!
The sound of the Saw=ASMR
Ivan Noal It's a wonderful sound, absolutely!
Excellent!
Great job with the hand tools.
Couple of observations.
1. Make sure you use a dry or hardwood blade in the saw. Most of the blades are for green wood and they do a TERRIBLE job cutting dry wood.
2. There is a another version of the bucksaw in which the handles pivot and provide a sheath for the saw blade.
Great job and well done.
thank yew bjorn. when i was a boy we'd visit my grandparents sometimes and i noticed most of the neighbors had such a saw in their sheds. have fun gare
Thank you I am going to try my hand in making my own. Love your video's you r so helpful thanks again.
That looks so satisfying!
Thanks for the great video! You make it look easy to make that saw!
Looks good.
Looks good. You did a very nice job.
Nicely done! An informative and educational video.
Shawn Abbott Thank you, Shawn!
Great job brother
Thank you!
nice tool !
Hi Bjorn! It does the job, it seems to me.
Brilliant 👍👍👍
Pretty nice looking find job
Thanks a lot!
Found your video. You did good. Thanks for the lesson. Now got to make me one
Aha, never mind my other comment then. Have a great day and good luck! I am sure you'll make a great buck saw! (If you haven't already.)
that's a nice saw I think I'll try one this weekend.
Thomas Barron Awesome!
La vie est si belle
Very very good ! You have inspired me to make one myself ..... great channel keep it up! 🍻 🌏
A bit of help with your English. The joint is a mortise and tenon joint, where the mortise is the female and the tenon is the male component. Love your videos. Thanks.
Thank you!
If you want your drill to go in a specific lengths you measure the bit and tap it off at the desired length/depth
you did a awesome job...
Thanks a lot, Jim.
Good job! I had my thoughts of building or buying a saw like this. Nice video!
Thank you, Joakim. I think you should build one!
This video really made me full more comfortable to do so
That's right Bjorn, when in doubt use the bigger saw... ;-)
I think I... saw ...this one before......(dad joke).
Nice work ! I like the Buck saw great for small trees and firewood.
Cheers\Skal
🌲🇳🇴🇨🇦🌲
try chiselling toward the Tenon (male) saw marks so you don't get splits in the tenons
I know you are not a professional woodworker but it helps a lot if you get your chisels to a razor sharp.
💪AWESOME👍
i think you need some sharper tools! working with blunt chisels and drill bits is dangerous and also messes your work up :( cool saw though! i'll be making one this year!
You're probably right! Thanks for pointing that out.
Gratulerer med ny sag. Buesaga mi er også 24 tommer. Fin størrelse å ha med seg i skogen. Jeg må si at din ble mye finere enn den jeg kjøpte på Jula :)
- Martin
NorwegianWoods Takk for det! Det var et artig, lite prosjekt og man sparer nok ikke så mye, men så har man jo gleden over å ha laget noe selv.
ancient fold out saw
I was thinking about making a buck saw, now I know how.
Bjorn have you been to denmark I saw earth work's there identical to here in newark Ohio?
Google mound builders park and take a look, and when bodys are found perfectly preserved a museum takes them and they were never there?
It has been the same in michigan and other great lake's state's they deny rocks with nordic writing on it? About indians attacking them.
I have been reading a lot about that, and it's very fascinating.
It ok, i dont know how to read a tape measure either. But I can measure like a M.F.
You are just making a mortise and tenon joint -call it what it is.
the world uses metric. America choose not to.