AMAZINGLY SIMPLE Shop MAKEOVER!!
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- Опубліковано 28 лип 2024
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DON'T MISS OUT GUYS! The Mora Chisel is finally back in stock! Get yours before they are gone. goo.gl/oCiIys
Shipped to UK Cody? I've been looking for one of these for a while now.
Thanks so much for sharing! Really great detail shots as always. I'm no expert, but wanted to mention something I was recently told by an electrician. He said that if you ever have a short circuit, the first potential culprit is the push-in wire connectors on outlets. He recommended always using the side screws.
I've seen the Bahco Wrecking Knives for sale from UK sellers @ about £11, it's the same idea.
Gav Man thanks!
Oh, wow. The list price is $24.98? That's more than double the list price over here. And they're on sale just around the corner for nine bucks. But we don't have to import them though... ;)
Cody, we all love your videos, that's why we're here, but the titles exaggerate what's actually going on. Most of us would appreciate simple, concise titles! =)
*Edit:* What I really mean, is that your videos are gracious, fascinating and good-natured. Your titles however? Are not.
UA-cam makes the rules I must play by,
amen.
Ben Brierley please speak for yourself.
I personally get the feeling you're choosing clickbait for as many views as possible over your trusty subscriber base. There are PLENTY of channels that do not use clickbaity titles, and do just fine.
Miss-use of the word "all", you're right. But, a lot of people have commented, if rather rudely, about the titles, I thought I'd do it in a constructive way.
Finally someone who knows what the holes in the stripper are for. But I would have mounted the wires on the screws instead of the push in connection it can stand up to more amps! We did a load test in college and push in connections create more heat and fail sooner!
Silent Death they work loose and burn up when people use them I just call it a Service call
Anyone knowledgeable in house or industrial wiring already know what those holes are for. BTW, I never use the push-in connectors even on light switches. I personally don't trust them.
Glenn Martin
I worked for a guy who insisted we use the push ins. I hate them, but did it because that's what he wanted. The end of the job rolled around and we had numerous non working receptacles on the punch list. Everyone of those receptacles didn't work because wires came loose. It was a huge waste of time and money.
So true I never use the push connection. To many problems and not reliable. Takes longer but I would rather have a wire held by a solid screw.
Having watched how you do things on your side of the pond I would say that we have a better and much safer system here in the UK. I also note that you do not sleeve the earth with an insulator to prevent it coming into contact with the metal box, conduit and face plate.
Have we descended into anarchy, or will you go back and align all the Phillips screw heads on those faceplates?
Not to mention all the screws holding the cleats.
Typical doing electrical just dropping the waste on the floor Cody! Tisk Tisk! Lol looks good.
Thatworks haha! I see what you did there. Lol.
boss will bill it against your pay if you don"t return to clean it up nice
Hee hee hee hee!
I LOVE YOUR VIDEOS CODY AND WILL CONTINUE TO WATCH THEM, BUT PLEASE WATCH A VIDEO OR TWO ON HOW TO PROPERLY PIG TAIL AND INSTALL RECEPTACLES BEFORE YOU SHOW OTHERS HOW TO DO IT. PLEASE DON'T USE THOSE CHEAP RECEPTACLES WHERE YOU CAN STAB THE WIRES IN THE BACK. THOSE ARE THE WORST ELECTRICAL CONNECTIONS YOU CAN POSSIBLY MAKE. THOSE CONNECTIONS ARE GOING TO LOOSEN UP AND GIVE YOU PROBLEMS IN A FEW YEARS.
OTHER THAN THAT, KEEP UP THE GOOD WORK.
If you say so, but I have seen journeyman electricians use them and they are approved by the UL and local inspectors. Are you a certified journeyman?
I'm a state certified journeyman electrician with 12 years experience. 5 years commercial and 7 years in residential. Even though they are UL approved and will pass inspection they are terrible. I have to replace those receptacles and similar light switches all the time, if you break one open you will see that the entire connection is a knife edge that holds the wire in place.
Also, you are using the receptacle as a connecting device. If that receptacle gets damaged it could prevent the flow of electricity down the line, that's why we "pigtail" receptacles. If a "pigtailed" receptacle gets damaged it won't effect anything else on the circuit.
He has a basic meter that only tests for voltage.
He could use it to test the ground if the circuit was turned on.
Right, all he had to do was test from hot to neutral and then test from hot to ground.
When I saw Cody just pop those wires into the terminal without any screws that just irked me. Screw down terminals also have their drawbacks, in high current (30 or so amps )industrial applications some tend to loosen up. I am not sure how it happens, but it might be thermal cycling. Some terminals are better then others.
Laying out the screws makes a huge difference in aesthetics, great job, great video.
My chisel came in yesterday. Love it. Love the way this shop is turning out.Have a blessed day.
Thank you for putting in the music credits. I noticed if nobody else did.
Nice to see you back in the shop mate, youre giving me all sorts of ideas for my own shop. Thanks again.
love the electrical boxes!!! this is how I want my downstairs kitchen set up. lots of outlets.
Cody great job! It's great to watch you and your project progress and see the fun that you are having in creating the workshop that will work for for the rest of your life. I know that you Grandpa is smiling down on you and "God Bless" . Roy
The shop is coming along great! Excellent motivation and ideas for when I build mine!
Love how you saw the suggestions and went with it.
Cody,
I liked the meticulous work flow shots, they're always so pleasing to watch. The shop is coming along quite nicely, everything look beautiful so far. Thanks for sharing as always,
Brad
Great to see you use French Cleats. Seems like the best option.
Land to House that is what you will want in your shop soon
I Love the idea of the French Cleat, I've been trying to figure out what to do in my shop. Can't wait to see the finished product.
Awesome Video!
Shop looks Amazing!!!!!!!
Coming along nicely, gonna be a wonderful place to play!
Cody, your shop starts to look really nice. I cannot wait to see it finished (and all the steps between).
Wow those glasses are really living on the edge ;)
I'm in my first year of an eletrical apprenticeship here in nz and it's so crazy to see how different our systems and equipment is !
I used a story board years ago when I built a picket cedar fence. It really makes it look professional. Take a few extra minutes now and enjoy the results for a life time!
Things are looking good and great idea for the shelves!
That back wall looks amazing Cody. I want one in my office! Your wood shop videos are going to be a real visual treat when you're all done.
This is great that we can help each other even from across the globe. The french system is great! Greetings from Sweden!
thos totally thrilled me when you converted.
I appreciate that you give such attention to detail like you do and show in. with how you level the plug boxes and measured out the torques screws like that, it'll be worth every bit of effort when you'll be working in there again.
This is such an inspiration.
I have a small room we call the safe room. When we built our home we made a concrete room roughly 10'x12' for storms and tornadoes. It's built by using cinder blocks filled w concrete w a concrete floor and ceiling. We finished it with drywall and it looks like any other room in our house. And in that room I have my gun safe and I have a small table/bench where I do all my gun work and cleaning. I used an old butcher block kitchen table and cut it down to make a proper bench and I sat it in top of two floor cabinets I bought from Lowes. Very inexpensive for what they are. I couldn't build them for the price.
Anyway...Ive toyed w the idea of buying 2 wall cabinets 18"x30" and put pegboard between them for my tools.
However Watching you create these French cleats gives me a whole new outlook on my small space.
I'm very eager to create these cleats on my wall and make shelves, boxes for parts and I can even hang the small cabinets on them.
The ceiling height is 9' so I'll have 5' wide and roughly 6 1/2' of cleats.
Thanks for sharing and giving the inspiration!
I'm so glad for you that you got feedback before you spent a ton of time and effort on the other system.
Cant wait for the next video! Good work there Cody and glad you went for the french cleat system!
Love your attention to detail. Looking forward to lots of good content being created in this shop
WOW! Your shop is really turning out nice !
the wood shop coming along pretty good Mr.Wranglerstar . all that attention to detail well pay off in the long run . God bless
Cody, you are going to enjoy this shop so much!!! And I love that you're building it "nice"...and it will last through your lifetime, and anyone who follows you on that property. AND, it's done so well that women would enjoy it just as much as a quilting/sewing space...or any other hands-on usage. What a great video, and example, you are!
Thank you Joyce,
Really like the clean layout of the wood shop.Great motivation for me to upgrade my garage work area that looks like Fred Sanfords junkyard.
great video cody. really can appreciate how great the wall with the molding looks now. well worth the effort
Awesome Video Wranglerstar. Thanks
Cody... I really enjoy your videos on all the variety of things you do. I like how you deliver your messages and thoughts on different topics. It makes me think a bit more about all aspects of life on how one should be respectful to others and oneself.
Thanks and keep up the great work!
I've used that cleat system for years but this is the first I've heard it called a French cleat it was just the way my grandpa did it. I love it it's the only way I will use to hang tools on the wall because it was modular before modular was cool.
I'm glad you went with the french cleat. The shelf system were building might have turned out well too, but hopefully this will work better for you in the long run! Great video
Looking good Cody! I knew when I saw you use the push connectors in the back of the outlets that you were going to get grief over it! Lol
Thankyou, thankyou, thankyou! .....for naming the musician accompanying your video. You might recall Ive asked for this a few times so I am especially pleased to see this. I hope this will now be a regular feature.
Regards, Mike in the UK.
Great video Cody
It looks great so far!
Not sure about the code in your area, but shouldn't the bare/ground in the second box also be bonded separately to the box itself?
lmiddleman yep!!
yes!
A pigtail from the box added to the grounds coming from the other box and the receptacles. All wire nutted together.
Only in commercial buildings with metal boxes, do you have to connect the receptacles to the boxes with ground wires. You can do it if it makes you feel good but it's unnecessary and kind of overkill since the receptacles are already self grounding to the box by the mounting screws. Think about it, would you bother if you had plastic receptacle boxes? Connecting the receptacles to the existing ground wire is good enough considering how most people don't even bother grounding them at all.
Tyson Burns the metal boxes should be grounded. if for example a hot wire got chaffed and makes contact with the box, if you happen to touch the box you'll get shocked. if it was grounded the breaker would've popped before you can touch it.
I think it looks wonderful. I am jealous of the amount of outlets you now have at your disposal.
At 10:45. For those copying Codys idea, use plastic electrical boxes. Much safer.
new and old tech As long as he grounds the boxes, it should be an okay. Although he appears to skip this step...
I dont even think we have metal boxes in my country. Only plastic. Metal is not safe.
new and old tech
Bonded metal boxes are perfectly safe.
McMahon and Kunkle:I have worked with electrical engineering for 20+ years at all different levels and with all different Equipment. But to use metal housing require knowledge that is not needed when using plastic ones. Regardless of your skill or level of knowledge plastic is safer. One faulty wire, or forgotten connection creates a dangerous situation with metal boxes. Especiallt with boxes that are connected in a serial way.
new and old tech
Sure, metal boxes require more knowledge than plastic boxes, but they still don't require a lot of knowledge. Bond the boxes, and you're good.
Saying plastic boxes are much safer is an exaggeration.
This project is so interesting! I just can't wait for the next video.
Great job WS!
looking good Cody! I think I'll have to put conduit in my future shop!!
That's a nice clean look! Well done.
ive watched all your videos. This shop series is my favorite.
That shop looks so beautiful!
Love the fact you went with the cleats, much cleaner and stronger in the end I think. Though the other idea had merits too :) glad its all coming together so nicely. Thanks for sharing!
Looking GREAT!
Came out looking good
Hey Cody, great tips on the jigs and story board and a fine looking project!!
I had a similar electrical/french cleat setep. I just routed a rabbit path on the back side of the cleatboard. worked pretty well and no conduit to be seen from the shop.
I had longer runs between boxes though
This would leave less than 1/8" of wood on the cleat and compromise it's strength,
True. Granted I had a wider board in my application.
Wider wouldn't help, it would need to be thicker,
thicker is what I meant, sorry.
Thank you so much for posting these. Since you have started redoing you shop, it has inspired me to begin working on organizing my garage work bench and tool storage. I opted to go with a galvanized steel peg board system for extra strength by a company called wall control. Your shop is coming out amazing! I will have to look into getting those LED shop lights to put over my work bench area.
April Wilkerson made some very nice and ingenious holders to use for her French cleat system in her wood shop you might want to watch her videos to get some ideas
Great video, really enjoying the workshop video's
Now thats a nice idea. Good job executing it.
excellent work as usual.
Those Makita Impact Drivers are just awesome aren't they, once you have one you'll be lost without it. Incredible tool - I'd recommend it to any carpenter.
Agreed. A friend loaned me two to use putting a sheet metal roof on a chicken coop. They spoiled the heck out of me. Don't have the change to buy one now, and I refuse to "save money" by getting a Harbor Freight one. The batteries don't have much capacity. At Christmas I looked at "specials" like B&D (not much better than HF, really) and they had low capacity batteries, too. 1.2 or 1.4 Ah. I was using ones that 3 and 4 Ah and they could still run down pretty quick.
I've found that's the only issue with Makita, But they do however have life guarantee on batteries, so if one is old and running a little sluggish - they will replace it free of charge. I've had maybe 1-2 in the past 5 years.
Nathan Burton
I'm convinced they could survive a nuclear explosion.
Yes! Mine have taken a tumble or two and are still working like new.
Nice!
I have Milwaukees because I got a great deal on them, but I really wish I had gotten the Makitas.
Glad to see you went with the French cleats. Those panels are already paying off in videos - they looked great as a backdrop to all the equipment :)
Looking very nice!
Good stuff! Glad you went with the french cleat based system! I picked up one of the Mora chisel knives on your suggestion (and from your link) and love it! It has already earned a permanent place in my tool bag!
Nice Cody!!! You're going to love it. Just the process of making the individual tool hangers and everything is SO much fun and so enjoyable.
Non to mention - its going to be much closer to the wall than the other system you were toying with. This is right against the wall versus the 3/4-1" cleats you had protruding off the wall.
Cant wait to see it all done!
Coming along Cody, looks great so far.
The shop is looking good so far, I'm gonna be building a small shop/shed this spring. If i can implement just a few of the ideas you have shown so far I will be a very happy camper. keep up the good work man
Another great video, really enjoyed. Thank you
I too, like you Cody, really enjoy electrical work. Very satisfying watching you work on that.
This is one of the best vids you've made. Thank you.
Cody
Your photography Skills and editing have really improved over the last year. Love it!
I'm glad you decided to go with that design I have seen it before and like it a lot! If you like it as well it must be good lol.
Top notch work !
Looks great Cody.
Great vid , nice work .
Learned something about the French Cleat. Room is looking good.
nice and neat electrical work. Well done!
looks really good wranglerstar. stay safe.
Love the shop reno videos!!
Looking good!
+Wranglerstar: You are doing a really nice job on this. I'm very excited to see the finished product!
Today's video was great! I really enjoy the construction and re-modeling videos. Keep up the great videos!
the cordless miter and table saw, next level!!
Good choice
Looks so good. 🇨🇦
so after watching one of your videos i went and got myself a aluminum Swanson speed square.... and so far i love it. i love it so much so that i bought the7" model and im planning to grab the larger one in a week or so.
Thank you so much for this video. I can not even walk in my garage. The 1/8 thing is a great idea and I am going to spend the time making that template. As always, I love your video and advice.
And just saw the end of the video - you mention a charging station - check out the Wood Whisperer charging station - you can even mount the system on a french cleat to move it from outlet to outlet along your west wall if you need too.
Your shop is going to be great - a real treat to work in!
Looks Good !!
Looks great! This takes planning but when you cut the 'angle' for the french cleat, you can save cuts by using the other side of the cut as it's mate instead of just discarding.
Small world - I attended Clemson with Richard Tillinghast. Go Tigers!!
Looks great
Progressing nicely...I like that you used mechanical crimps (wing nuts) on your grounds as required by code.
I've been avidly watching your videos for 2 years now and I have a UA-cam channel of my own . Your one of the reasons I started my own UA-cam channel. And I regularly leave comments on a lot of your videos and In 2 years I've never had a single response!
Music credits... That's a welcome development👍
Great video!
Cody I recommend that you run a Ground from the back of the box to your ground splice. Its in the national electrical code. Its purpose is to bond your metallic race way back to ground other wise it could become energized and someone could get whacked. Great video keep up the good work!
Love your Video's. Thanks for sharing and I appreciate all the work you put into production.
I also admire you for enduring the comment interaction. It takes special individual to do that well.
Shop looks great. I will incorporate a lot of your ideas into my soon to be started shop.
Also, Tools rule!!! Tools are Everything ! (Electrician for 48 years)
Good Luck
Bless your Heart Dude