Hey buddy. You should always joint the face of the board before the edge. Jointing the face will make sure you have a flat surface down on your table saw, and a flat jointed edge to register against the fence. This will help prevent the board from rocking and potentially pinching the blade, causing kickback. Great work!
@@robertgrlic6505 basically planing the face of the board before planing the edge square on the jointer or using a table saw to square the edge, that way you're sure you're getting a 90 degree edge!
I wish I could assist in making a reversable 1.5" teak end grain cutting board with all the grooves you've added. Your cutting board looks awesome, a bit dark for my taste (I love to see all the details in the woods grain). You have been blessed with an awesome talent & the tools to make numerous amazingly beautiful wooden items❣ I was blessed to see you create an awesome end grain cutting board from start to finish. Thank you for sharing your talented gifts with us. I'll probably watch this video a couple of times 😊 🤭❣ Your shop must smell amazing❣ I love the smell of freshly cut wood 🙆♀️❣ God bless you ❣
Beautiful. I love your juice groove jig, too. Also, I was wondering why you routed the board prior to planing it but then realized it was maybe to prevent the planer from chipping the board? Brilliant! Definitely gonna be adding that to my routine.
Good to “see” you have all your tools “looking” out for you 😂 love all the eyes on your tools and hoses Great craftsmanship sir. The Lord says we should envy anyone, but seeing your shop makes it hard not to. 🥴
Was trying to guess which part of the boat you are working on. Till I figure out near the end, it was a beautiful chopping board. Great results. I love it. ❤️ Big fan from the UK 😊
Every time I saw another jig come into play, I was thinking this is not a one off project. I wonder what they sell for? I've seen them anything up to NZ$300 plus, and that was just macrocarpa pine!
I really love the jigs you’ve made to cut the juice grooves and the handles. Very smart. Also I’ve never seen anyone use carpet the way you are using it. How did you start using that?
Carpet? Interesting. I haven’t seen anyone else use it that way. Usually I see people using the cabinet / drawer liner stuff, often with limited success.
Did you just put end grain through the planer? This is a serious question. I always thought that putting end grain face-up into a planer would end badly. How did you do it successfully?
Beautiful board! But as a professional chef, I can’t stand the grooves that come on the cutting surface. I understand their functionality but they are rarely needed. It just kills the surface area of a nice wooden cutting board.
@@hesswoodworkI made one of these the other day; my wife wanted one that covers the sink to give her some extra room to work. One thing I noticed is that the board soaked up a ton of oil through the end-grain, way more than a regular board would. The color came out a lot darker than expected. How much oil did you have to apply?
@@kaasmeester5903 Your wife is blessed to have such a talented husband that can make her beautiful wooden items for making awesome meals in the kitchen❣ I've worked with wood, but it was always taking care of the teak wood lining the inside & outside of my sailboat. Now I want to get a nice 1.5" end grain teak cutting board to work on in my galley & take it with me when we move on land. Someone told me to get an edge grain cutting board, they're very beautiful, but I don't want to have deep cut marks on my board to have to have planed out to keep it nice looking. Am I concerned for no reason here? How often would planing have to be done on either types of teak cutting boards to keep them looking good? I don't have the tools, so I'd have to bring it to a carpenter's shop to have it planed. Thank you for your reply in advance. God bless you 🙌.
@@robynm7221 Dunno how blessed she is but I certainly am with her :) As for cutting boards, if you worry about durability I would definitely go with end grain. It will better resist deep cuts and also be easier on your knifes. The only downsides are the price, and the fact that you’ll have to oil it more frequently. But unlike refinishing it, you can do that yourself. Get a sanding block and some coarse and fine sand paper, and you can keep that block looking like new.
Hey buddy. You should always joint the face of the board before the edge. Jointing the face will make sure you have a flat surface down on your table saw, and a flat jointed edge to register against the fence. This will help prevent the board from rocking and potentially pinching the blade, causing kickback.
Great work!
Thank you for the tips!
What do you mean by joint the face b4 the edge?
@@robertgrlic6505 basically planing the face of the board before planing the edge square on the jointer or using a table saw to square the edge, that way you're sure you're getting a 90 degree edge!
Great video, to the point, no endless hours watching repetitive tasks, love your ingenuity and your great jigs. Thanks
I wish I could assist in making a reversable 1.5" teak end grain cutting board with all the grooves you've added.
Your cutting board looks awesome, a bit dark for my taste (I love to see all the details in the woods grain).
You have been blessed with an awesome talent & the tools to make numerous amazingly beautiful wooden items❣ I was blessed to see you create an awesome end grain cutting board from start to finish.
Thank you for sharing your talented gifts with us.
I'll probably watch this video a couple of times 😊 🤭❣
Your shop must smell amazing❣ I love the smell of freshly cut wood 🙆♀️❣
God bless you ❣
I love a video that just shows very clearly and doesn’t make the task more confusing with a bunch of jibber jabber
Thank you!
6:49 of my life well spent. . Great video😊
Thank you!
I recently started using Goldman's Wood Balm for finishing cutting boards. It works very well.
I should give it a try
Sent that board right into the planner and no explosion!!! I still can’t find a video of them doing so.
Beautiful. I love your juice groove jig, too. Also, I was wondering why you routed the board prior to planing it but then realized it was maybe to prevent the planer from chipping the board? Brilliant! Definitely gonna be adding that to my routine.
Thank you! Yes, it does prevent chip out!
Handy having that big sander as well.
@@TrevorDennis100jealous
Nice job! Thanks for the great video!
Good to “see” you have all your tools “looking” out for you 😂 love all the eyes on your tools and hoses
Great craftsmanship sir.
The Lord says we should envy anyone, but seeing your shop makes it hard not to. 🥴
Thank you!
I like the idea you have there. Off to the shop i go.
Really love it!!!
Was trying to guess which part of the boat you are working on. Till I figure out near the end, it was a beautiful chopping board.
Great results. I love it. ❤️
Big fan from the UK 😊
Thank you!
All professional butcher blocks are endgraine. No slivers or splinters. Weight 200 pound.
I love that you're proving all the haters wrong by successfully planing end grain in the planer. Do you have a carbide head installed?
Every time I saw another jig come into play, I was thinking this is not a one off project. I wonder what they sell for? I've seen them anything up to NZ$300 plus, and that was just macrocarpa pine!
I really love the jigs you’ve made to cut the juice grooves and the handles. Very smart. Also I’ve never seen anyone use carpet the way you are using it. How did you start using that?
Thanks! A cabinet maker taught me the carpet trick.
On the first glue up. Does it matter if they are on edge or face?
Carpet? Interesting. I haven’t seen anyone else use it that way. Usually I see people using the cabinet / drawer liner stuff, often with limited success.
Did you just put end grain through the planer? This is a serious question. I always thought that putting end grain face-up into a planer would end badly. How did you do it successfully?
Yes, I believe the issues are with smaller planers. I never had an issue with mine big planer.
If you noticed he routed the first two edges before planing
Hi, nice job. Which type of rubber roller do you use? Thanks
That's the biggliest table sled I've ever seen... must be compensating for something 😅😅
Beautiful board! But as a professional chef, I can’t stand the grooves that come on the cutting surface. I understand their functionality but they are rarely needed. It just kills the surface area of a nice wooden cutting board.
As the cutting board is used, won't some of the glue end up on the food?
Titebond ii and iii are both food safe.
Do you have plans or a link on how to make a device for setting the board to cut grooves, shown at 4.51 minutes?
Sorry, I don't have plans for that.
@@hesswoodwork :( okej do you know where I can watch it on YT?
Qué madera es ???
Great work! I am wondering if the glue can withstand the warm water in a dish washer?
👌
Is it the camera or lighting at the end? That's board looks way too dark, at least for my taste. You lose out on most of the wood grains showing
The oil does make it dark, maybe it was the lighting also.
@@hesswoodworkI made one of these the other day; my wife wanted one that covers the sink to give her some extra room to work. One thing I noticed is that the board soaked up a ton of oil through the end-grain, way more than a regular board would. The color came out a lot darker than expected.
How much oil did you have to apply?
use enough oil let it dry for 20 min and clean the excess, repeat 4 times.
@@kaasmeester5903
Your wife is blessed to have such a talented husband that can make her beautiful wooden items for making awesome meals in the kitchen❣
I've worked with wood, but it was always taking care of the teak wood lining the inside & outside of my sailboat. Now I want to get a nice 1.5" end grain teak cutting board to work on in my galley & take it with me when we move on land.
Someone told me to get an edge grain cutting board, they're very beautiful, but I don't want to have deep cut marks on my board to have to have planed out to keep it nice looking.
Am I concerned for no reason here? How often would planing have to be done on either types of teak cutting boards to keep them looking good? I don't have the tools, so I'd have to bring it to a carpenter's shop to have it planed.
Thank you for your reply in advance.
God bless you 🙌.
@@robynm7221 Dunno how blessed she is but I certainly am with her :)
As for cutting boards, if you worry about durability I would definitely go with end grain. It will better resist deep cuts and also be easier on your knifes. The only downsides are the price, and the fact that you’ll have to oil it more frequently. But unlike refinishing it, you can do that yourself. Get a sanding block and some coarse and fine sand paper, and you can keep that block looking like new.
Show
👀
Ten of thousands of pounds worth of machinery.
ZERO woodworking skill 👀
مثل ماحطوني فخ الك اسع يريدون يحطونك فخ الي
L
W
うーん
頑張り具合的に見ても、人柄みてもどう頑張っても、せつなが歌い手とかを僻んで喧嘩売りに行ってるようにしか見えないのは私だけ?
Good wark😊
#anandtrickart
Thank you!