This channel is so sick mate. Bang on the money for a relatively inexperienced person like myself. Your presentation and laid-back style of narrating take all the fuss away. Again, bang on the money and makes me feel like I can achieve what I want to build! cheers
I was sent here by the diy knuckleheads man and he`s right you do know your pallets. Great video as a new viewer i will be back. Thank you for sharing your knowledge on pallets. ( Stay Safe ) .
That was great! I can’t wait til I can start building things that will hopefully be almost as nice as yours. Thank you for all your amazing videos. I really do enjoy them. Very inspiring!
Brilliant straightening jig. Especially for a beginner who has a ton of hope and little money and less experience. Basics are important for success and skill growth. Thanks for sharing your experience. I truly enjoy watching your videos. 👍🏻👍🏻🇺🇸
If I ever get around to it I'll make a video of how to save more of your pallets as you take them apart. Don't know if you have any harbor freight stores down under, but get a cheap hydraulic porta power set and attach the spreader section, put the spreader in the pallet (use 2x4 spacers for support) and pump, the pallet will come apart saving most of your lumber. Great Video keep them coming.
Thanks for this, and all your other videos. I've been making rustic looking items from pallets for a while, and this really helped me to diversify and make different types of things!
Did a bunch of pallets recently with dodgy nails breaking heads off all over the place. My solution was vise grips and a pry bar worked, like magic. The pincers you where using look like they will cut the nail more than grip them. I've got two pairs from my old man when he was around. He said they where for pulling up Lino tacks. Nice work though enjoyed the video. 👍 Here have a brewsky on me 🍻 don't worry it's not Fosters
I've just come across your channel and its great. I'm based in Townsville as well and I've been building pallet projects for a while now. I often work with larger pine pallets which are usually fairly new, and unweathered. I've found that the larger crowbars like the ones you use can dent the softer thin wood quite heavily. For lighter boards I like the short thin flat wrecking bars, bunnings sell cheap Craftright ones for $6. Also, when you had the nail snap with the nail extractor pliers, I find that the really brittle nails can do this fairly often - I suspect that its due to a concentrated stress on the nail from the pliers. When I get one that breaks I like to use a pair of vicegrips with a sacrificial block underneath. I find that the greater purchase on the nail from the vicegrips can work wonders.
Hi, just something I found out when watching you trying to remove nails from a skid & the heads come off, if you hit the nail in a couple of taps, then pull it out straight away with your crow bar, it will come out better. striking the nail first breaks the adhesive that some of the nails are coated in causes a friction to break its hold on the nails!!!
You little ripper, that pallet wood turned out magnificent !!I recently came across your channel after looking into DIY cement pots, as well as watching some drag racing video's and some video's about making chopping boards - my wife suggested she needs a few, how youtube pair things together is beyond me. Another of my favorite channels is called DIYForKnuckleheads You walk people through with genuine commitment to help people become better in whatever they take from your Video's. I have about 6 other woodworking channels I am subscribed to, those ones are for those who have a few years or more experience. I myself am working on Pallet wood, at least this way if I screw up? The damaged wood can be thrown in the odds n ends bucket to find a use for later on.
Mate, this was great. I am a lover of all free wood, sure it takes more time and effort but it's a special feeling making something nice from materials that someone else wanted to throw away. Thanks for the tips.
Just discovered your channel. Bloody awesome. Love all the tips. Only one I use that I don't see others use very often, is heat stubborn nails... Sometimes the pallets have used the big twist nails that have glue on them. Stick like a bastard (as designed). But I have a little gas torch (only a kitchen size one), only takes 30sec to heat the nail, then it will pull out he'll of a lot easier.
Hi just found your channel YT recommended you. You make interesting use of the pallet wood it looks very effective the way you laminate it together with the different contrasting colours. You've saved yourself some time using the new machinery. Tony
Excalibur Extractor HL 1121. They are a plier type of gizmo that grips the nail, head or headless, and outs them with relative ease. The harder you grip, the easier it comes. C&L Tool centre at Banyo, Brisbane have them for $35. Kind of expensive, but I wouldn't be without mine.
Jesper Makes recommended to take a look at your builds. I'm a long way off getting to a glue up man. Built a big shed 12x 9 mtrs . Needs power and concrete floor. I have some tools and some time . Ya given me a shit load of inspiration, to keep going and it all done. I got a few pallets, made a pallet buster, broke em up. Gonna keep chipping away at it. One question. Logical I recon . Nail holes. Do you organize your wood in any particular way to avoid them, and if so how do you do that. Maybe a video! Cheers Lex
I really appreciate how to joint and plane without jointer or planer, I’m far from being able to afford them, as you know what Aussie prices are like here
Love the work. Beautiful looking furniture. Upcycling pallets does take a lot of work and can lead to many asking why the effort - sometimes it's difficult for people from other parts of the world to understand how starved woodworking in Australia and New Zealand are for affordable variety of timber. And mat not realise how expensive common timber is, 2x4 from Bunnings is $1.71 USD per linear foot, where the same from Lowes (CA) is as low as $0.50 USD. In the antipodes we're paying more than 3 times as much as elsewhere (US) just for basic framing - exotics and specialty timbers are many multiples of that.
Well done. One trick for nail removal, when all else is failing put your crowbar in place then grab the top of the nail with vise grips tightened as much as possible. You are then leveraging something stronger than a rusty nail head. It's a bit of a time chewer so save it for when the only alternative is drilling numerous holes around the nail.
Absolutely love your videos, they’ve inspired me to give woodworking a go! Can you tell me if your pallet wood slabs are a mixture of hard and soft wood or do you just stick to one type of wood? Thanks
But I did comment on it... I am sure I did. You mentioned this last time, and I checked. I did, and I think you even responded to it... I have to check later on tomorrow, if not tonight.
from cape coral florida a tip on how to remove nails from the pallet runners easy. wet the wood realy good the water expanced the wood nails come out like butter.
Thanks for the info, I love that jig! Aren't the coloured pallets treated with toxic stuff? I thought it's recommended to not even touch them with bare hands?
Hello and thanks for watching. I have a video that dispels that myth. ua-cam.com/video/4IblRBJMh-k/v-deo.htmlsi=l0ufkuVlWDVjlQ0N
4 роки тому+1
Hello my friend. You are very skillful in creating perfect boards from pallet boards. You do great things with recycling and pallet boards. I always watch you with great attention. I love what you do. If the person can find and reveal new deficiencies every day and can keep in mind the subjects he has mastered every month, we can say that he has a passion for learning. You are a very talented master. Thank you for the ideas you gave. See you. Warm hug. Great greetings. I wish you have a nice weekend....(Karl Pope Wooden Craft sticker is now yours. I hope my sticker will reach you as soon as possible.)
4 роки тому
@@dainermade My precious friend. Thank you for your good answer. Yes, even if it takes a long time from the other side of the world, we will wait for the labels. See you. I wish you a nice new day. Warm hug. Best regards.
I have a jointer and a straightening jig as well and I always feel like it is easier to get a perfect 90 with the table saw. But I think you might have a nicer jointer than me ;) p.s. thank you for the extra thank you, lol!
Which straightening jig do you prefer? This one or the one you have with those bessey pull clamps? I made the latter, I thought that looked genius, and I have those clamps. But I made it out of two pieces of 18mm ply, so it came out a bit too high, not getting to utilize the max of my saw blade. I'd plane it, but I put in a bunch of brads for glue, so that was a bad idea
When you first planed them down I thought “hey what a great idea to leave each board single, slice in half lengthways them in 6” pieces. Parkay flooring wood. A lot of work but much cheaper than the real thing.
OK just getting myself organised to do a side hustle of playing with wood. Wondering why you have made a sled to get a square edge on the timber? I thought that's what that stand up edge on the table saw was for? Cheers keep up the videos
Hi, what ever runs up against the fence must be nice a straight. A bowed board won’t run through the blade nicely and can cause severe kickback. A wonky board will bind the blade, like trying to cut a curve with a circular saw. It will kick back
Dan thank you for your videos I have very much enjoyed these and have been using pallets due to your videos. I need to buy a de-nailer gun and a nail detector were did you get yours from and what makes are they. I know you mention these been trying to back track to find the info. Hit a nail the other day not good on the blades Best Regards Rob T from WA
Free wood costs time... but it's still free wood! I need me one of those metal detectors next time I'm reclaiming, will have to go find your link ;) A denailing gun on the horizon?
The "AirLocker" pnumatic nail remover works awesomely, however from time to time punching nails from thicker boards they only come out half way, I just continue punching all from that board then flip it over shoot them back in flip again and they come out second hit. I've got an area set up where I have a gal bucket set about 250mm below the under side of my board with a thick wood lid I made with like a letterbox slit in it to catch the nails, they come out at a squillion miles an hour... Wear your safety gear! 👍🏾 www.amazon.com.au/dp/B003X2QM3G/ref=cbw_direct_from_1
@Kim Pulsipher I get mine from our local Tile and Flooring shop. The ones I get are a one off use and are generally clean other than sometimes they might have a bit of dried mud on them, and maybe a few rocks embedded on the bottoms from being placed on gravel when unloaded. All are HT only (heat treated) no point wasting chemicals on them when they are intended for landfill after delivery. 👍🏾
I'm well aware of the cost of time in the disassembly of pallets. Anyone who even thinks of it as "FREE-WOOD!!!!" is most terribly mistaken. For even entertaining the thought, they should consider having to mow the backyard and trim with string trimmer, then, without a cool-off period, no shower, no changing clothes, head out to the businesses and score those "jems-of-free-wood" and transport them to the aforementioned backyard, and disassemble 15 of those bad-boys! With the metal detector to get every blade destroying nail/spike/bolt/staple/deck-screw. Then, I want to hear them call it "FREE-WOOD"? I can't force myself to refer to it as free wood, but rather "Reclaimed-Wood". It's largely my media of choice, but it ain't free. I use $300.00 worth of tools just to reclaim it. Not mention the transport and disassembly of the media.
@@dainermade como hago para ver el video en español? Me encantaría saber lo que explicas, ya que yo también hago trabajos con pallets. Gracias desde ya. Muy buen video. Saludos desde Argentina 👍🍺🍺
Bel lavoro complimenti bel video, un saluto dal nuovo canale fai da te Impariamo e ripariamo, il canale che insegna veramente a lavorare il legno e non solo...vieni a trovarmi, ti aspetto e poi chissà un grazie in anticipo a chi vorrà seguirmi, un ciao da Diego Il falegname di Impariamo e ripariamo!!!
I'm a bigger boy than you. I mean, I'm a bit larger and evidently much heavier than you are. If I were to walk around on pallets due to my heft. We call the "thicknessa" a "planer" here in the US.
This channel is so sick mate. Bang on the money for a relatively inexperienced person like myself. Your presentation and laid-back style of narrating take all the fuss away. Again, bang on the money and makes me feel like I can achieve what I want to build! cheers
Like I said - bingewatching..... 😍😍😍👍👍👍
I was sent here by the diy knuckleheads man and he`s right you do know your pallets. Great video as a new viewer i will be back. Thank you for sharing your knowledge on pallets. ( Stay Safe ) .
That was great! I can’t wait til I can start building things that will hopefully be almost as nice as yours. Thank you for all your amazing videos. I really do enjoy them. Very inspiring!
Brilliant straightening jig. Especially for a beginner who has a ton of hope and little money and less experience. Basics are important for success and skill growth. Thanks for sharing your experience. I truly enjoy watching your videos. 👍🏻👍🏻🇺🇸
I just tuned in to hear “check square” and you call yourself a DH. Love your humor and your work. Darlington, South Carolina USA
If I ever get around to it I'll make a video of how to save more of your pallets as you take them apart. Don't know if you have any harbor freight stores down under, but get a cheap hydraulic porta power set and attach the spreader section, put the spreader in the pallet (use 2x4 spacers for support) and pump, the pallet will come apart saving most of your lumber. Great Video keep them coming.
Thanks for this, and all your other videos. I've been making rustic looking items from pallets for a while, and this really helped me to diversify and make different types of things!
Seeing you without facial hair for the first time 😂🤣😅. It's weird, like seeing a turtle out of its shell.
Did a bunch of pallets recently with dodgy nails breaking heads off all over the place. My solution was vise grips and a pry bar worked, like magic. The pincers you where using look like they will cut the nail more than grip them. I've got two pairs from my old man when he was around. He said they where for pulling up Lino tacks. Nice work though enjoyed the video. 👍 Here have a brewsky on me 🍻 don't worry it's not Fosters
I've just come across your channel and its great. I'm based in Townsville as well and I've been building pallet projects for a while now. I often work with larger pine pallets which are usually fairly new, and unweathered. I've found that the larger crowbars like the ones you use can dent the softer thin wood quite heavily. For lighter boards I like the short thin flat wrecking bars, bunnings sell cheap Craftright ones for $6. Also, when you had the nail snap with the nail extractor pliers, I find that the really brittle nails can do this fairly often - I suspect that its due to a concentrated stress on the nail from the pliers. When I get one that breaks I like to use a pair of vicegrips with a sacrificial block underneath. I find that the greater purchase on the nail from the vicegrips can work wonders.
Cool stuff man. I salvage all sorts of materials from job sites and have recently started salvaging pallets. Thanks for the good videos and ideas!
Hi, just something I found out when watching you trying to remove nails from a skid & the heads come off, if you hit the nail in a couple of taps, then pull it out straight away with your crow bar, it will come out better. striking the nail first breaks the adhesive that some of the nails are coated in causes a friction to break its hold on the nails!!!
I've been doing this for a while and it works brilliantly every time 👍🏾
Just the right amount of inspiration for this Saterday morning. Thanks cousin Knackers.
I am so inspired by your work. Can’t wait to give it a go, cheers mate 👍👌
You little ripper, that pallet wood turned out magnificent !!I recently came across your channel after looking into DIY cement pots, as well as watching some drag racing video's and some video's about making chopping boards - my wife suggested she needs a few, how youtube pair things together is beyond me. Another of my favorite channels is called DIYForKnuckleheads
You walk people through with genuine commitment to help people become better in whatever they take from your Video's.
I have about 6 other woodworking channels I am subscribed to, those ones are for those who have a few years or more experience.
I myself am working on Pallet wood, at least this way if I screw up? The damaged wood can be thrown in the odds n ends bucket to find a use for later on.
Mate, this was great. I am a lover of all free wood, sure it takes more time and effort but it's a special feeling making something nice from materials that someone else wanted to throw away. Thanks for the tips.
@@dainermade Mate, I know the feeling!
Just discovered your channel. Bloody awesome. Love all the tips. Only one I use that I don't see others use very often, is heat stubborn nails... Sometimes the pallets have used the big twist nails that have glue on them. Stick like a bastard (as designed). But I have a little gas torch (only a kitchen size one), only takes 30sec to heat the nail, then it will pull out he'll of a lot easier.
Hi just found your channel YT recommended you. You make interesting use of the pallet wood it looks very effective the way you
laminate it together with the different contrasting colours. You've saved yourself some time using the new machinery. Tony
Excalibur Extractor HL 1121. They are a plier type of gizmo that grips the nail, head or headless, and outs them with relative ease. The harder you grip, the easier it comes. C&L Tool centre at Banyo, Brisbane have them for $35. Kind of expensive, but I wouldn't be without mine.
Just got my ' gp-pointer' and loveee it. It works as advertised 😁 . I think a mustttt tool. Thnx
Jesper Makes recommended to take a look at your builds. I'm a long way off getting to a glue up man. Built a big shed 12x 9 mtrs . Needs power and concrete floor. I have some tools and some time . Ya given me a shit load of inspiration, to keep going and it all done. I got a few pallets, made a pallet buster, broke em up. Gonna keep chipping away at it.
One question. Logical I recon . Nail holes. Do you organize your wood in any particular way to avoid them, and if so how do you do that. Maybe a video!
Cheers Lex
I really appreciate how to joint and plane without jointer or planer, I’m far from being able to afford them, as you know what Aussie prices are like here
Love the work. Beautiful looking furniture. Upcycling pallets does take a lot of work and can lead to many asking why the effort - sometimes it's difficult for people from other parts of the world to understand how starved woodworking in Australia and New Zealand are for affordable variety of timber.
And mat not realise how expensive common timber is, 2x4 from Bunnings is $1.71 USD per linear foot, where the same from Lowes (CA) is as low as $0.50 USD. In the antipodes we're paying more than 3 times as much as elsewhere (US) just for basic framing - exotics and specialty timbers are many multiples of that.
Where does that blue handle come from? I think that’s pretty cool use of something not originally designed for. Great job !,
Well done. One trick for nail removal, when all else is failing put your crowbar in place then grab the top of the nail with vise grips tightened as much as possible. You are then leveraging something stronger than a rusty nail head. It's a bit of a time chewer so save it for when the only alternative is drilling numerous holes around the nail.
At around %;40 you mention waiting for a pop... from the boards. I was thinking you were talking about waiting for my back to pop.
Absolutely love your videos, they’ve inspired me to give woodworking a go!
Can you tell me if your pallet wood slabs are a mixture of hard and soft wood or do you just stick to one type of wood? Thanks
Another bag full of goodies this video proved to be!
Thank you Mark.
Sorry for the late comment 😅
But I did comment on it... I am sure I did. You mentioned this last time, and I checked. I did, and I think you even responded to it... I have to check later on tomorrow, if not tonight.
😂🤣😂🤣😂 "Put a horn on a jellyfish" 😂🤣😂🤣😂
I never knock back some free wood. Thankfully, where I work, I can get pallets by the ton. Lot of great tips in this video.
from cape coral florida a tip on how to remove nails from the pallet runners easy. wet the wood realy good the water expanced the wood nails come out like butter.
Glue some sandpaper on the bottoms of you push paddles and they won’t slip as you push the slab through the jointer.
Love it mate. Good to see some more aussie woodworkers :)
Free wood is good wood. Helluva lot of work in making "free wood" 😂👍
sure its a hell of a lot of work, but tell me where you're gonna buy wood that looks this awesome straight off the shelf.
All sorts of various pallets? Loscam, Chep, the cheaper ones? Which is your preferred?
Super gut, das Video macht Spaß und you are a Good Worker
You should get a air powered denailer, they work great getting nails out fast.
"A bit of hard yakka" Gold
Just a thought..............what about using some RHS in the glue process to keep the wood from bowing under pressure?
Just found your channel. Nice work man! Good on ya
Excellent vid, I made my first brick from seeing your vids 👍👍
Your videos are great! One question though, did I miss the video where you made the straightening jigs? Id love to see that one!
Thanks for the info, I love that jig! Aren't the coloured pallets treated with toxic stuff? I thought it's recommended to not even touch them with bare hands?
Hello and thanks for watching. I have a video that dispels that myth. ua-cam.com/video/4IblRBJMh-k/v-deo.htmlsi=l0ufkuVlWDVjlQ0N
Hello my friend.
You are very skillful in creating perfect boards from pallet boards. You do great things with recycling and pallet boards. I always watch you with great attention. I love what you do. If the person can find and reveal new deficiencies every day and can keep in mind the subjects he has mastered every month, we can say that he has a passion for learning. You are a very talented master. Thank you for the ideas you gave. See you. Warm hug. Great greetings. I wish you have a nice weekend....(Karl Pope Wooden Craft sticker is now yours. I hope my sticker will reach you as soon as possible.)
@@dainermade My precious friend. Thank you for your good answer.
Yes, even if it takes a long time from the other side of the world, we will wait for the labels. See you. I wish you a nice new day. Warm hug.
Best regards.
Love your channel great 👍 info thank you.
Thanks so much for this. One question: Are the thickness of the slats mostly the same and how thick are they?
Greetings from South Africa.
I have a jointer and a straightening jig as well and I always feel like it is easier to get a perfect 90 with the table saw. But I think you might have a nicer jointer than me ;) p.s. thank you for the extra thank you, lol!
Excelent man! More pallets videos please.
Do you think pallet wood glued can make building beams to create a new room for a mobile home?
Awesome video mate, how wide do you generally cut your bricks?
Your welcome. 👍🏼I do use those techniques for pulling nails. Thanks for the tips.
What are the measurements you come up with on those pieces? I mean the slats, before they are glued.
Which straightening jig do you prefer? This one or the one you have with those bessey pull clamps? I made the latter, I thought that looked genius, and I have those clamps. But I made it out of two pieces of 18mm ply, so it came out a bit too high, not getting to utilize the max of my saw blade. I'd plane it, but I put in a bunch of brads for glue, so that was a bad idea
You make it so easy !
When you first planed them down I thought “hey what a great idea to leave each board single, slice in half lengthways them in 6” pieces. Parkay flooring wood. A lot of work but much cheaper than the real thing.
Nicely done, mate.👍🏾
Awesome video mate, that jointer is a beast mate...and i get a extra pinky👍🤣
@@dainermade me too, i sent it awhile back, hopefully it gets there soon...was my last one, cheers mate 🍻
Very good work mark
Great videos. How often do things go wrong. Any value to posting a video where things have gone wrong and why and showing the fix.
Really clever!
Put vice grips on the end of the broken nail then use a pry bar against the vice grips as if it were a nail head.
OK just getting myself organised to do a side hustle of playing with wood. Wondering why you have made a sled to get a square edge on the timber? I thought that's what that stand up edge on the table saw was for? Cheers keep up the videos
Hi, what ever runs up against the fence must be nice a straight. A bowed board won’t run through the blade nicely and can cause severe kickback. A wonky board will bind the blade, like trying to cut a curve with a circular saw. It will kick back
How thick do you cut your pallet wood? I mean, what thickness are your slabs when they're finished? Love your work!
@@dainermade That's great - thanks, and keep up the great work!
Dan thank you for your videos I have very much enjoyed these and have been using pallets due to your videos. I need to buy a de-nailer gun and a nail detector were did you get yours from and what makes are they. I know you mention these been trying to back track to find the info. Hit a nail the other day not good on the blades Best Regards Rob T from WA
Free wood costs time... but it's still free wood! I need me one of those metal detectors next time I'm reclaiming, will have to go find your link ;) A denailing gun on the horizon?
The "AirLocker" pnumatic nail remover works awesomely, however from time to time punching nails from thicker boards they only come out half way, I just continue punching all from that board then flip it over shoot them back in flip again and they come out second hit.
I've got an area set up where I have a gal bucket set about 250mm below the under side of my board with a thick wood lid I made with like a letterbox slit in it to catch the nails, they come out at a squillion miles an hour... Wear your safety gear! 👍🏾
www.amazon.com.au/dp/B003X2QM3G/ref=cbw_direct_from_1
Just found this one cheaper free postage in Australia and quicker delivery.
www.ebay.com.au/itm/254381834569
@@dainermade
😆👍🏾
@@dainermade trade in all buckets of nails you have. They add up after while.
Hey Mark, about what size are you making your bricks? Looks about 2" x 4"...
For an Aussie ur alright😉
what do you do with all the nails?
is that a carbatec jointer? whats the model number
Mixing it up to "Make" it as random as possible..... LOL Is it actually "random" then?
It will be strong after glow
Can I get a link to the video mentioned at 7:17?
You Aussies seem to use better wood to make pallets than most of the furniture you can buy here in Denmark
Haha!
Is that free prise pallet wood
Is that from a BK ???
Where do you find pallets that have not been treated with obnoxious chemicals? All the ones I see are smelly.
@Kim Pulsipher
I get mine from our local Tile and Flooring shop. The ones I get are a one off use and are generally clean other than sometimes they might have a bit of dried mud on them, and maybe a few rocks embedded on the bottoms from being placed on gravel when unloaded.
All are HT only (heat treated) no point wasting chemicals on them when they are intended for landfill after delivery. 👍🏾
Wait till you get the pneumatic mail remover
I miss u mark how r u man
You can have enough clamps. You can't have too many.
Do you love woodworking? Try the Stodoys plans.
I'm well aware of the cost of time in the disassembly of pallets. Anyone who even thinks of it as "FREE-WOOD!!!!" is most terribly mistaken. For even entertaining the thought, they should consider having to mow the backyard and trim with string trimmer, then, without a cool-off period, no shower, no changing clothes, head out to the businesses and score those "jems-of-free-wood" and transport them to the aforementioned backyard, and disassemble 15 of those bad-boys! With the metal detector to get every blade destroying nail/spike/bolt/staple/deck-screw. Then, I want to hear them call it "FREE-WOOD"?
I can't force myself to refer to it as free wood, but rather "Reclaimed-Wood". It's largely my media of choice, but it ain't free. I use $300.00 worth of tools just to reclaim it. Not mention the transport and disassembly of the media.
Put a horn on a jellyfish?
@@dainermade What does it mean?
Put a horn on a jelly fish?!
Showwwww. God look
@@dainermade como hago para ver el video en español? Me encantaría saber lo que explicas, ya que yo también hago trabajos con pallets. Gracias desde ya. Muy buen video. Saludos desde Argentina 👍🍺🍺
Is that blood on your left hand ? Just before ‘Stop banging the bench d*”&$@#!’ on the video
@@dainermade well, that’s a comfort, I think?……….
Español por favor
Bel lavoro complimenti bel video, un saluto dal nuovo canale fai da te Impariamo e ripariamo, il canale che insegna veramente a lavorare il legno e non solo...vieni a trovarmi, ti aspetto e poi chissà un grazie in anticipo a chi vorrà seguirmi, un ciao da Diego Il falegname di Impariamo e ripariamo!!!
@@dainermade figurati sono un fans ti aspetto Grazie!😉
I'm a bigger boy than you. I mean, I'm a bit larger and evidently much heavier than you are. If I were to walk around on pallets due to my heft. We call the "thicknessa" a "planer" here in the US.
@@dainermade No problem brother. I knew what tool you talking about. I love your work.
Muy hablador