Hi Geoff. I am new to woodworking. I want to build a weatherproof wooden letterbox that is postie friendly using my new table saw. I am going to spend a bit of time trying to set up my new saw for mitres as I love the exposed end grain on ply. Thank you so much for this video, it is very beginner friendly. Will check out more of your content soon. Thank you from NZ :)
@@KiwiZD greetings Kiwi from the land of the long white cloud, love NZ I’ve been over twice! Great to hear you liked the video and thanks for watching, good luck with your letterbox 👍😎
Making floating shelves, that are essentially the same thing, just elongated, with an open end for the support framing. I've been getting not so clean edges with plywood and this will help me get to the next level. Only difference would be I'd need another miter cut instead of your bottom rabbet cut as that would be my external 'showing' bottom (on a wall mounted floating shelf) for a much cleaner look.
Thanks Geoff, your tutorials are easy to follow, informative and your advice has raised my game a lot! Of all the woodworking advice channels on UA-cam, I find that yours is the one that is easiest to understand and follow. Any chance of a tutorial on using flush trim router bits? I made a "jewellery box" that needs serious adjusting lol. Ashamed of it!!! Pete (Ireland)
Thanks for your support Pete! I have shown a little demo using a flush trim bit when cleaning up dovetail joints, see link below: ua-cam.com/video/0qytgwnV8xI/v-deo.htmlsi=3Za5FDNY2nlEoZq- If that clip doesn’t help, let me know what you want to see or learn and I will try and help out. 👍
Hi Geoff, great video! I have been trying to make boxes similar to yours for a while although have really struggled to get the mitres looking good. Do you have any tips or any advice on which table saws you find are most accurate? Thank you
I invested in a Sawstop several years ago and I am very happy with it. Not only can you calibrate it to be very accurate, it's other large advantage over the other table saws is that it's safer. I have actually done a review of mine after using it for over five years, I will leave a link below if your interested: ua-cam.com/video/33v9YmNKLXI/v-deo.htmlsi=_jRC-6sSFCDudQdY
Hi Geoff. I am new to woodworking. I want to build a weatherproof wooden letterbox that is postie friendly using my new table saw. I am going to spend a bit of time trying to set up my new saw for mitres as I love the exposed end grain on ply. Thank you so much for this video, it is very beginner friendly. Will check out more of your content soon. Thank you from NZ :)
@@KiwiZD greetings Kiwi from the land of the long white cloud, love NZ I’ve been over twice! Great to hear you liked the video and thanks for watching, good luck with your letterbox 👍😎
Making floating shelves, that are essentially the same thing, just elongated, with an open end for the support framing. I've been getting not so clean edges with plywood and this will help me get to the next level. Only difference would be I'd need another miter cut instead of your bottom rabbet cut as that would be my external 'showing' bottom (on a wall mounted floating shelf) for a much cleaner look.
@@raywright2401 great to hear, thanks for sharing 👍🏼
Thanks Geoff, your tutorials are easy to follow, informative and your advice has raised my game a lot! Of all the woodworking advice channels on UA-cam, I find that yours is the one that is easiest to understand and follow. Any chance of a tutorial on using flush trim router bits? I made a "jewellery box" that needs serious adjusting lol. Ashamed of it!!! Pete (Ireland)
Thanks for your support Pete! I have shown a little demo using a flush trim bit when cleaning up dovetail joints, see link below:
ua-cam.com/video/0qytgwnV8xI/v-deo.htmlsi=3Za5FDNY2nlEoZq-
If that clip doesn’t help, let me know what you want to see or learn and I will try and help out. 👍
Good job 🇵🇱 Perfect
Hi Geoff, great video!
I have been trying to make boxes similar to yours for a while although have really struggled to get the mitres looking good. Do you have any tips or any advice on which table saws you find are most accurate?
Thank you
I invested in a Sawstop several years ago and I am very happy with it. Not only can you calibrate it to be very accurate, it's other large advantage over the other table saws is that it's safer. I have actually done a review of mine after using it for over five years, I will leave a link below if your interested:
ua-cam.com/video/33v9YmNKLXI/v-deo.htmlsi=_jRC-6sSFCDudQdY