I 'm pinning this comment just to address the use of a fan with blades. I didn't name this style of fan 'Bladeless" but it seems very obvious to me why it would be called that, any issue with that seems trivial to me (some comments have even included vulgarities over this point, you just need to chill out a little). If you bought a Dyson fan you would never know it had blades inside so would it matter if it did when you found out? I don't think so, it's still the same fan with no visible blades. Also how else would anyone think these fans move air, Magic? :)
For "giving it a go" it's a total success. I wondered if the gizzards of a small vacuum cleaner, used as a higher than fan pressure, blower, to get around the flow restrictions..? It doesn't need it unless you like to extend the challenge a bit.
This from a 40-year career woodcrafter....this is fabulous work, meticulous attention to detail with a broad skillset I envy. Entertaining too; I'm so impressed.
@@Aykalia Why would he spend 700€ on a fan just to take it apart because someone in a youtube comment section didn't understand that the title says bladeless fan and he proceeds to use blades..
Figure that you're using your router at, roughly 10 20 % of it can do. Some of the jigs i've seen in the chair in industry alone, can blow your mind. One router, and you can make an entire chair, using each specific jig, no sanding, no double fitting, probably 10 13 different bits. Routers are incredibly versatile AND pliable to any task you give them if you think outside the box. Add in variable speed control and you're going places. :))
You won't manage cold fusion, but you can make a regular fusion reactor surprisingly easily. The first fusion reactors where called fusors and could be made with a high voltage power supply and a vacuum pump. It won't do much other than eat power and spew out neutrons (if you put in _alot_ of power), but atleast the glow it gives off looks nice.
Watching this made me so happy for some reason. It's made out of scraps and instead of hiding it, the patchwork-kind pattern is a highlight. The entire process of shaping it was so satisfying to watch. The design itself is quite elegant. The horizontal holes look great and you didn't hide the mistake, instead explained it and decided on a way to fix it. The way you made the holes was brilliant. All in all just such a wholesome video! How on earth did it get almost 6k dislikes is beyond me, luckily the algorithm still picked this up and suggested the video to me ♥
I said, out loud, sitting alone in my office, "ooooh that's smart" when you showed the guide you made for cutting the slots into the base. Thanks for sharing the video!
I have no need what so ever for a wooden blade-less fan . With that being said, I would buy this in a skinny second without question, hesitation or doubt. This is more than just expert craftsmanship , this my friend is art !!
@@mikerotchurts1103 well a Dyson fan is around $300.00. So, I would say a hand crafted one that took two days to build, which I'll guess is about 16 hours of work at $30.00 an hour would be $480.00 + the wee fan we'll say is $20.00. That puts us at $800.00 for a conservative price add another $200.00 to round it up to a solid 1K I think would be a fair estimate.
I have great admiration for your slot cutting jig, and the ingenuity of using pieces of plywood for successive _equal_ height gauges. Your patience with the segments deserves a medal!
This is such a great representation of your channel. Problem solving, fun, incredible skill, patience, educational, and fully entertaining. Thank you so much for sharing it with us!
I must admit, when I saw the end result, I was blown away by the quality of your work. I wasn't a fan before, but I am now. It really sucks that people got so up in arms about-- alright I'm done with the fan/air puns. Seriously though, excellent work.
This was one of the most fun projects I've made! It involved plenty of problem solving, well before I even started making it. I think it came out fabulous as I honestly didn't know if it would work. Although, I think a more powerful fan would take it further still and maybe I'll pursue that at a later date. Thanks to all my Patreons who've had input in this one, encouraged me and gave me great advice! :)
Nicely done! Question about your woodturning tools: I see you use most exclusively tools with inserts. What are the advantages? What tools do you use there?
@@thatcrazyguy1971 They are Carbide Scrapers, they are easier to use than traditional tools, and an easier learning curves, they get the job done though.
I know restoration and creation channels being largely silent has its own appeal, and I can appreciate that. However, there's something about a narrator on the video that acts like a calming guide on what's going on in the video. I dunno, it might just be a me-thing, but I appreciate the commenrary throughout the video.
It's about the perfect level of narration: just enough to guide a complete newbie, not so much as to irritate someone familiar with the work. That's a trickier line to walk than most people realize.
I agree. I'm impressed with his wood working skill. (Oh, keep in mind. It was all done with scrap wood, which is the main point of the video. Don't waste the wood.) Also he revealed something about the marketed products claims it is a blade-less fan. That is false. It just looks that way. A traditional fan is in the base and you can't see it. So it looks fan less. I use to think those products did what they did by electrically charging the air alternately to make it flow. Give the air a positive charge and the next chamber would have an opposite charge. The air would move towards it. Now that the air is mostly negatively charged, have a positively charged chamber to attract that air and it an move it along to the next one. It could be done that way. But really. They have a very quiet fan in the base.
@Red Pilled Fox "Wizardry" Exactly right. Kind of fits in with fake news/advertizement. Hehe. I bet it could be done though. A device that moves air with literally no moving parts. But it would probably take a lot of energy to do it. Just buy the 20 dollar fan instead of the 120+ dollar fan. They both do the same job.
I'm replying to my own comment. I loved the craftsmanship you did. Fantastic work. That wood work was spot on. The best part of it was how it showed those blade-less fans were not truly blade-less.
I've been really enjoying your videos and I especially love how you explain why you chose to do things the way you did (including "it was easier" or "i didn't feel like making a jig") as well as how you point out your mistakes and what you did to fix them. Nobody's perfect and DONE is better than perfect anyway. Your ingenuity and adaptability is inspiring.
I never gave it any thought when I saw these in the store, but I never really knew how they worked. Thank you so much for your trial and error and showing the world 🌎 👍👍
@@kennmossman8701 You'll note the cross-section they show on the Dyson fan was the exact same cross-section he used on this. It's the exact same thing as a Dyson, but beautifully made with wood.
@@ConstantlyDamaged The air flows through the channel in the pedestal, through a curved path, and comes out from small 16mm slits around the frame of the fan at a 16-degree angle slope. You may think that this just causes air to blow in the shape of the surface area of a cylinder, but because of the physical laws of inducement and entrainment, this allows for the surrounding air to also become drawn in from multiple areas around the fan. In other words, picture your TV weather map; a small low-pressure region is created which actually draws the air in from behind it, like a forming tropical storm. This simultaneous push and pull of air creates a quiet, even, constant flow of cool breeze.
Your craftsmanship is incomparable, you have an enormous talent at devising jigs and creating innovative design features, and best of all you possess healthy amounts of self-deprecation and abiding patience! From Kauai...best wishes, stay healthy, and give the dog a hug.
This has to be one of the best makes on UA-cam. Don't know how you're going to top this, unless you make a working nuclear submarine. What a top bloke.
True craftsmanship and ingenuity. Your work is a marriage between the ancient craft of woodwork with the new era technology. UA-cam should promote such channels instead of viral meaningless contents in the name of entertainment. You, sir, got yourself a new subscriber. Thank you for sharing your work and please keep it coming.
Mr Pask, you move quicker than anyone I've ever seen in the shop! Thanks for posting the great entertaining videos. Your narration (speaking voice) is a great compliment to your videos.
There's nothing more soothing than watching a craftsman or craftswoman as they create. Years of their dedication, failures and triumphs, money, injuries, etc. condensed into a half hour of satisfaction for the rest of us. Thank you for allowing us to live vicariously through your efforts and for sharing your talent. This is gorgeous. Thank you.
as a woodworker myself i have to say this is the most beautiful thing ive seen in a very very long time!!! and the jig for the air intake slots was brilliant. the whole project is sooo aesthetically pleasing!!!
I love the way you both show us and talk us through your errors it’s very helpful and could be your main attribute?? Well maybe second place as your projects are right on track for me. Thanks Bob England
This is a work of art even if it never moved any air! The fact that it works makes it that much better. I am amazed at your skill to make this from scrap wood. The jigs you made are worthy of a separate video just highlighting those creations! Thank you for sharing!
I'm not a woodworker, I actually only saw this because it loaded immediately after another video I was watching, but I loved watching this! I always wished I had the tools for woodworking, I am an upholsterer and seamstress, and I found this whole process fascinating - I couldn't stop watching it. Great job! It's a beautiful fan, and the work that goes into it is even more appreciated when you get to see the whole process.
Oh lord,!, Now I feel that I must invent an actual ""Bladeless", (Bladeless), fan. It can be done. Using, "Bournoulli's" forth principle, His "Theorem", that of "variable pressures" will do it. But this fellow here will have to actually make it. Not sure that I have his patience.
That was awesome! With all the stress in life, sometimes you just need to take a 28 minute break and watch a master craftsman make something amazing, and beautiful out of scraps of wood. Thank you!
Was hovering over the fast forward but 28 minutes later realised I'd felt more calm and satisfied than I have all weekend. Excellent video, beautiful creation and lots of good ideas. Thank you.
Neon Indian me too! I haven’t read many comments past this, but I’m sure there are some criticizing his use of hot glue to mount the stock to the turning base, or maybe not!
This is probably one of my favorite builds I have seen on your channel. I have gotten so many ideas from watching you and the surprises never stop. Thank you, sir. I wish I could go down to Australia just to learn from you.
I watch these types of videos and say to myself "I can do that if I stopped watching UA-cam and put some effort into a handy craft instead"... Then I click the Up Next button to see how to make a Brick Rocket Stove... ...Rinse and Repeat... Seriously, great work Mr. Man.
Absolutely blown away (no pun intended), by your skills, sir. Didnt even notice the vid was 20+ minutes long. I wish i had at least, 1/4 the skill you have in woodworking. Greetings from the Philippines!
I have to be honest. You're very good with a layeth, really. I'm not very good at turning and you do beautiful work. It's a pleasure watching someone doing beautiful work. Even if the fans worked or not, you did a beautiful turning job. Congratz!
That was very cool. I love how you mixed modern engineering with classic woodworking. I have no doubt it's a piece that you can't capture the total beauty in a picture. I'm sure it looks amazing in person. Nice craftsmanship.
Absolutely great. As others have said, you've done it all in this one - scrapwood, problem solving, elegant router jig, and inspiration for our own creativity. Keep them coming!
This is the second video that I have watched and have learned quite a bit from your knowledge and experience. I find your videos as a level about the other folks who make some pretty awesome ideas and turn them into a reality. As I said before your projects are levels about the other folks. That’s not to take away anything from them at all. I appreciate all your project that have given me multiple ideas of my own coupled with the jigs that you made with help me to make my ideas come to reality. I hope that you don’t mind me making some of the jigs you have made. Thanks
I wonder... If you tied a paper/model plane to a string and fed the string through the fan, would the plane just hover? You'd need a well designed plane most likely.
Even when I do not plan to make this fan, your video gave me quite a few excellent ideas, that made me stop and repeat a lot of places. Congratulations for your genius and problem solving ability, my sincere respect to you sir. I'm an engineer with 42 years of professional experience, and truly recognize your capability! Suscribed and liked!
This project really shows how good you are and how much passion you have for this, I just loved watching this one, it was truly one of the best challenges yet
I’m sure I’ve commented this on your channel before but I’d like to say it again. I really appreciate how much you embrace all the possible ways of doing things rather than just looking at it though a “woodworking only” lens. That was a big barrier when I was growing up and it took me years to learn and develop skills in other areas like metal fabrication and electronics. This is to say that I feel like you’re opening the door for woodworkers to embrace other disciplines and expand their capabilities.
The creativity, ingenuity, and skill you possess is astounding. I learned many new tricks for the tools I use everyday. You made something that I do not believe anyone has ever tried to do with wood. The amount of experience you have in carpentry shows. This is an amazing project made by an amazing creator. I cannot believe I got to watch this for free. Looking forward to binging your channel now that I have found it.
if you do look into using a pc fan, they come in 2 verities, one is for "high airflow" where there is no pressure difference, these are just good at moving air where there is no pressure difference to worry about.. the other is "static pressure" which is good for pushing air through constricted spaces, as they are better for overcoming differences in air pressure. i suspect the latter will be better for your purposes.
Very satisfying to watch this wood work. Dude has good wood working skills. With all those skills and tools could easily make wood stave snare drums. Beautiful finish on that wood fan. Would definitely buy one.
Thanks for leaving the mistakes in and showing how you solved them. I think that we learn more from these types of videos than when everything goes perfect...which in most projects it doesn't!
I like that there isnt background music. I feel like music takes away from the video. I love woodworking/turning and I love engineering, I also always wondered how those types of fans work. This is an awesome video!!!!!!!!!!!!
I'm impressed by this build, it looks so beautiful... For all the halfwits out there, it is indeed considered a bladeless fan because there is the word "fan" in there, it simply means there isn't a blade where it's supposed to be. Although if you want something that doesn't have blades but moves air, it wouldn't be a "fan" at all. You would need an ion wind device that could move air with electricity.
“I’ve a few scraps of camphor laurel that were offcuts from a chopping board. I’ve had a quick go at building a fully functioning city for around 200000 people, and for fun I’ve included a public transport network and clean energy reactor.”
Bobafetting, I didn't realise how many 6 year olds infested UA-cam. It appears a number of them followed each other here simply to show just how childish they are. Now run away, your Mummy is calling, it's way past your bed time. I'm sure you already know what you can do with your offcuts, this time try it sideways.
@@57thorns OK, so please tell us which person is the amazing age of 90, and why do you associate people of that age as cranky? It appears you're associating with the wrong 90 year olds in your nursing home. If you can, get out a little more and meet more 90 year olds. I assure you I've met many more cranky 40 year olds than those in their 90's. You appear extremely judgemental, or should I shorten that to simply mental?
Neat. Not only is it a functional device but beautiful too. I like the look of gluing all the scraps together. Lathe work, always a plus. It's strange to me for people to give such hate over a bladeless fan. How else do they think it's going to move air. I've always loved how much more quiet those fans are and I love seeing things that are usually made out of one material made out of another, be it wood or metal.
20 years ago I've wanted to become a carpenter. Sadly - for the profession - I've had terrible experiences with school traineeship programs and thus forfeit the idea and became a programmer. Today I find myself watching this kind of videos on a very frequent basis and can't think anything but "Oh, i'd love to try doing that" :))) I love the clever ideas (The slots on the cylinder for example). Finished product looks really great. Job well done mate!
Hey, I'm a programmer too and love both code and wood working but never did much of the latter. A while ago I decided to just go for it and built a wardrobe on either side of the bed with overhead storage, side boxes for phones or books and inset led strips etc. I even spray painted it myself which required some practice and time. It all certainly took more time than expected but turned out great and it brought a lot of happiness to finally make something! I would recommend just starting something, anything! It's really never too late.
Yeah, but you still need to do something for living. No carpenter can make only fancy gadgets. You have to make kitchen after kitchen and time to time one interesting project. Believe me. My brother-in-law is a carpenter and he's definitely not so enthusiastic after years. One must be famous on YT...that's the way.
To clarify on my post, keep your day job but start as a hobby as mentioned by others. If you really want to do more of it in the end you can become a carpenter. There are no age restrictions or education required as long as you do a good job of it.
Wow! I really seldom comment especially to a conversation as disappointingly inane as elements of this one but i am compelled ... the Dyson bladeless fan is not bladeless. That is not the point. The point is to make a fan that has very little turbulence and no visible blade to create said turbulence and potentially to be dangerous. The bigger point to me is that this guy is a straight up brilliant crafts person. To build this housing that has very small tolerances and very specific complex curved surfaces out of scraps of hardwood is simply spectacular to me. I am a fan ( pun intended) and I just subscribed. Thanks for demonstrating what your exceptional problem solving and years of experience in the shop can accomplish.
it is the point tho. i clicked on this shit because of the clickbait title. i wanted to see a fan with no blades, not some Dyson marketing bullshit. i'm glad you are all excited about woodworking... good for you.
The word bladeless fan is just all over this sht. So yes, it is the point. And yes it is click bait👎 you would creat something cool and wanna let people know about, just tell all the truth no need to deceive no one. This guys must know that people will still appreciate the work without lying beforehand
Do I care if a "bladeless" fan uses hidden fan blades or impeller blades? No. All I need and want from a fan is the ability to push a lot of air preferably at me. I clicked on this video because I subscribe to the maker's channel and the picture shown was a thing of beauty. After viewing the entire video from beginning to end I am left thinking four things: 1. This build most definitely did not disappoint. 2. The maker truly has the patience and determination required for the completion of such a project, especially with all the fiddly bits involved. 3. The finished product is almost too pretty to be utilitarian. 4. That workshop must smell amazing when the wood is being turned on the lathe.
I really enjoyed this video. I found it completely by accident. I cant believe how many people are getting uppity about the fan having blades. I was curious as to see how the air flow was made. Now I know so thank you for that very instructive video.
What a pleasure to watch you do this. When I was little I used to sit around watching my dad build wooden furniture, and he was pretty good, but what you do is amazing. After I grew up I put together a wood shop of my own and designed and built some furniture, but what you do is way above and beyond. Beautiful workmanship and a pleasure to watch you at work. Thanks.
I am a skilled maker/designer and was HUGELY impressed with every aspect of this, skill/ingenuity - and as some one said below, cracking jig for the vents - brilliant commentary too.
William Morris said: "Have nothing in your house that you do not know to be useful or believe to be beautiful." That wooden bladeless fan meets both criteria. I'm amazed by your skill and problem-solving.
You. Are. INCREDIBLE! 🙌🙌🙌 I can’t believe anyone had negative things to say about this project. Some people just need to get a life. Haha. Love what you do and how you go about it. 👏👏👏
First time I've seen your channel. This was amazing. I watched because I knew I would discover exactly how a "bladeless" fan works. I love woodwork, and conserving resources, so this tics all the boxes for me. I think your fan is a beautiful work of art. I wish I had the tools and the skills to do this myself. Dyson's got nothing on you. I would rather have your beautiful scrap wood fan than their sleek modern product. Thank you very much for sharing this project on video.
THANK YOU SO MUCH for posting a great video!!! Thanks, also, for showing the safety appliences you built, to do tiny work safely! That was kewl, the way you made that jig to do the slots with! Keep on! You show GENIOUS ! Here's a little trick, to add to your little bag of tricks...when you're final sizing for fit, drape a piece of 320 grit emory cloth/paper; around the article to fit. Then, place it where it's going and use the whole thing like a sanding block. It comes near to perfect very quickly! You said you didnt have a tool to do the inside front corner...take an old heavy duty phillips cabinet screwdriver, that's shot, (stripped) and weld a piece of 1/4" thick steel on the end and grind it to look like you want the tip to look like. Then weld a flat plate, for the tool rest. Remember, if you have an offset, the sideways torque will need to be dealt with, by putting a flange on your handle to prevent twisting out of your grip and digging material. Get it like you want it and put your torch on it, and 3 more inches up the tang of the cabinet screwdriver. Bring it up to red and then stir a bucket of oil till it cools down to the touch. Then wash it off real good and either stick it in an oven at 350 degrees, or play your torch on it and just guess...to aneal it...(do it wont snap from being too hard and brittle). Then go dress it on the fine rock I'm your grinder. You'll like it because YOU CREATED it! You already have a good designing mind. Just "SEE" the tool you need, write down it's perameters, and make the tool. If you have a local store, that has some heafty handled screwdrivers, but they're el-cheap-o junk...buy a few packages of them. Don't try to use them for screwdrivers...they'll strip out...just make your tool and weld the screwdriver to your tool. Now, you have a matched set of custom tools, and you didn't even have to make the handles! THANKS AGAIN for posting! (( I'm an old retiree from Tennessee. ))
I never bought a Dyson so-called "bladeless fan" (over priced gadgetry) and was able to figure out right away. It's a form of "duct": 1. passageway in a building or machine for air. I build things all the time...it's fun. Maybe rename your post "anything Dyson makes I can make out of wood". I appreciate everything about wood...what a gift from (dare I say) God. Great video....thanks for taking the time.
Lament of an average woodworker: "I have the tools but not the inspiration!" I am also a guitar player. The last time I felt so insignificant was the first time I ever saw Pat Methany play. After that experience, I would sometimes just sit and stare at my guitars, wondering where that music was? I had the same 6 strings, the same beautiful instruments but could only stare longingly at them, humbled by the notion that such music existed within the confines of that device, but I lacked the ability to unshackle it. I just felt that very same longing as I watched this video. I've never watched anything else you have done sir, but I will, and I will again feel the deep sense of wonder and respect that such talent exists. As I contemplate the continued isolation this virus has brought upon us all, I hope that the coming days spent in the woodshop can even begin to approach the mastery you have displayed here. Hell, I'd be thrilled just to be able to make that base! Well done friend. I stand in awe of your abilities.
I very much know how you feel. Somewhere deep inside you is the magic needed to create on this level. whether it be music, craft, whichever.. I hope you are able to find it as I also hope for the inspiration and understanding to achieve great things myself. Good luck to you!
You're not alone bud. I grew up having a love for drawing. I even won awards during my senior year of high school. Then that love, inspiration, and drive just dwindled down. All I hear was family and friends telling me I should draw again and if they had that talent they would be doing art all the time. But I also grew up building furniture and/or helping my dad (and mom) renovating the house. My parents both taught me lots about building, using tools, wiring, and the list goes on. So I have a love for woodworking that I've never lost. With that said, I haven't done any art or woodworking. Side note; I was born with brittle bones and I was blessed in so many ways from the Lord. Where others have told me I can't do something my family/friends encouraged me to do anything. Fast forward to today, I've been forced to go on disability. I'd rather be working but as I've gotten older my health has declined. But that still doesn't mean I can't do the things I love; it just means I can't do everything that I used to. With that said, I still am sitting here instead of using my gifts. We all go through this but sometimes we need a boost, a word of encouragement, or (like my wife does) a kick in the pants lol. And don't compare yourself to another artist; you aren't them and why would you want to? Be you. Pick up your guitar and start jamming and just messing with it and you'll catch something you like. That's how songs/music is made.
My son is a musician too. He has a 32 track studio in his house, but he has not even been it in the last 3 months. Reason: He is an RN at the local VA hospital. HE and many others are in a war all of their own. Do me a favor, play your guitars a little for him. Thanks , a proud Dad....
Best piece of advice I heard on a Maker podcast was to be inspired by bad workmanship. Good workmanship, like this amazing fan, is great but CAN make you feel inadequate but if you find something that was badly made it might inspire you to think ""even I could do better than that" and to of ways in which you COULD do better. At the end you might not have something that you think of as a masterpiece but if you have done a better job than the bad workmanship you were inspired by then you'll have built your skills and still have a feeling of achievement.
I want one, but shaped like a tree with bladeless fans as leaves. I want it to be tall and proud so everyone can see how freaking bladeless its beautiful fanholes are. And I want to put it in my yard, so i can sit in a breeze on a hot summers day, enjoying a cold drink, while i sit in awe of this magical, groovy air-moving device. Awesome build, ignore the keyboard-warriors out there man and just keep pooping out brilliant stuff!
Well done, I like the balance of safety and "get it done" and the speeding up of the tedious parts while still giving the sense of just how much time went into the project. Very good looking end product. Ignore the haters, they couldn't make a paper airplane, let alone what you created out of firewood!
I honestly thought that it spun somehow and that's how it moved the air. I have no problem calling it a bladeless fan and it was a great video and great craftsmanship - definitely NOT clickbait
@@juanpls3856 It CAN,Mate! In the 1960's we had air-movers["Fans"] without any blades. They were used underground in deep shaft coalmining,where I worked. They employed the principle of differentials in air pressure,the very science of how we get windy days,caused by lowering of the air pressure on a frontal system. Compressed air being forced through the fine slot in the "Fan",lowered the air pressure,causing the surrounding air to rush through the air-mover ["Fan"],at high speed and with a tremendous volume of air being moved. No reason why a small compressor couldn't be mounted inside ,instead of a small fan that this guy has used...maybe he didn't know about this ancient technology from the 1960's...![and maybe now he might post another video showing the conversion,to shut up the critics who are so P.C.!!]..Without buying a Dyson fan,and dismantling it to find it has blades,I fully expected that it worked on the deployment of a small compressor providing the depression factor.....There now,I've just made Dyson a few more million pounds,when they read my comments!!
you sir are a Genius and a master wood worker ,,, you made an object of beauty and functionality,, it was a pleasure watching you ,,,, will continue to do so ,, thank you
I 'm pinning this comment just to address the use of a fan with blades. I didn't name this style of fan 'Bladeless" but it seems very obvious to me why it would be called that, any issue with that seems trivial to me (some comments have even included vulgarities over this point, you just need to chill out a little). If you bought a Dyson fan you would never know it had blades inside so would it matter if it did when you found out? I don't think so, it's still the same fan with no visible blades.
Also how else would anyone think these fans move air, Magic? :)
Pask Makes if you look at the fans they use impellers which is basically a bladed fan
Just like apple users......they get angry when you point out the obvious
For "giving it a go" it's a total success. I wondered if the gizzards of a small vacuum cleaner, used as a higher than fan pressure, blower, to get around the flow restrictions..?
It doesn't need it unless you like to extend the challenge a bit.
I watched for over 5 minutes because of the click bait title, then I stopped. Truth in advertising is best.
@@troyclayton Gosh! You got to widen your perspectives here. It's bladeless where we usually figure there should be blades.
That jig for cutting the air intake slots in brilliant.
I was mind blown seeing it
I learned something new with this concept. Thank you for the brilliant idea
Absolutely, I found a schematic for something quite similar and will be making one for myself SOON! Absolutely fantastic!
I finally got to that part of the video and hit damn you're right, that was ingenious.
And now we have that trick in our back pockets. Amazing
@Hanaldai Munamana 20:11
Can we just appreciate that this guy didn't put any ads.
Y'all this was made 7 months ago, I don't know what happend
he missed out on a lot of ad revenue that would have been a slight inconvenience to us, and a well deserved major pay check to him
@@syv6173: You could always support his patreon. I much prefer giving a dollar a month for great content than all those ads.
Ooga booga
Ooga booga
I pay for UA-cam premium so I haven't seen ads in months
This from a 40-year career woodcrafter....this is fabulous work, meticulous attention to detail with a broad skillset I envy. Entertaining too; I'm so impressed.
@@Aykalia dont bother with Angry Pent, the name tells u all. This is awesome work.
@Angry Pent Your parents are 100% failures as are you. Good luck out there, pal.
@@Aykalia Why would he spend 700€ on a fan just to take it apart because someone in a youtube comment section didn't understand that the title says bladeless fan and he proceeds to use blades..
@@Tauchio because idiots only learn doing stupid things
@@Tauchio It was a sarcastic way of telling him those fans have blades , genius.
Beyond amazing. So satisfying to watch an expert at his trade. Loved the jigs and problem solving. The final result is beautiful, That's a $600 fan.
probably works better than a Dyson as well.
More like 800
You're paying for the name with Dyson
That router jig for cutting slots on round objects, why haven't I ever thought of that?
Your videos are full of good ideas, cheers.
Need a tool? Make a tool.
Figure that you're using your router at, roughly 10 20 % of it can do. Some of the jigs i've seen in the chair in industry alone, can blow your mind. One router, and you can make an entire chair, using each specific jig, no sanding, no double fitting, probably 10 13 different bits. Routers are incredibly versatile AND pliable to any task you give them if you think outside the box. Add in variable speed control and you're going places. :))
Matthias Wandel levels of ingeniousness :-).
@@schm4704 Better than Matthias, Pask incorporates style,and art
Ya, that was genius... but an hour to build? Come on, it took longer than that.
Next up on the "Scrapwood Challenge," a cold fusion reactor.
In place of the fan power supply.
It's scrap, it's crap, it's firewood, but some of the wood contains high levels of deuterium
I'd prefer to see him make a Yugo outta wood.....1 to 1 replica of course
no shit eh? how else can you top this? best lathe project these eyes ever spied..
You won't manage cold fusion, but you can make a regular fusion reactor surprisingly easily.
The first fusion reactors where called fusors and could be made with a high voltage power supply and
a vacuum pump. It won't do much other than eat power and spew out neutrons (if you put in _alot_ of power),
but atleast the glow it gives off looks nice.
High school engineering teacher here - wicked excited to show this to my students while they are home and bored. Thanks!!!
Jesse F dude I’m in middle school and I’m totally going to engineering in high if this is what you’re doing lmao.
Sign me up!!
@@vap1777 well, depends. See if you can choose a class like that. Best of luck dude!
no such thing as "engineering" in high school
you are a loser and your school is probably worst in the state
@@bobsagget823 Learn to use punctuations.
Watching this made me so happy for some reason. It's made out of scraps and instead of hiding it, the patchwork-kind pattern is a highlight. The entire process of shaping it was so satisfying to watch. The design itself is quite elegant. The horizontal holes look great and you didn't hide the mistake, instead explained it and decided on a way to fix it. The way you made the holes was brilliant. All in all just such a wholesome video! How on earth did it get almost 6k dislikes is beyond me, luckily the algorithm still picked this up and suggested the video to me ♥
The algo doesn't differentiate between up or down votes. "Engadgement" is what matters..
I said, out loud, sitting alone in my office, "ooooh that's smart" when you showed the guide you made for cutting the slots into the base. Thanks for sharing the video!
Eric Burnett same
Same
Eric Burnett you watching UA-cam during work?😺
Same here. I'm sure my coworkers thought I was nuts.
Yup, me too.
I have no need what so ever for a wooden blade-less fan . With that being said, I would buy this in a skinny second without question, hesitation or doubt. This is more than just expert craftsmanship , this my friend is art !!
After watching the video, how much do you think would be a fair price to buy it?
@@mikerotchurts1103 well a Dyson fan is around $300.00. So, I would say a hand crafted one that took two days to build, which I'll guess is about 16 hours of work at $30.00 an hour would be $480.00 + the wee fan we'll say is $20.00. That puts us at $800.00 for a conservative price add another $200.00 to round it up to a solid 1K I think would be a fair estimate.
Ok consoomer
I have great admiration for your slot cutting jig, and the ingenuity of using pieces of plywood for successive _equal_ height gauges.
Your patience with the segments deserves a medal!
This is such a great representation of your channel. Problem solving, fun, incredible skill, patience, educational, and fully entertaining. Thank you so much for sharing it with us!
Thanks very much Tharemy, glad you enjoyed it! :)
@@PaskMakes Not to mention making a practical item, which doesn't look ugly! :P
You deserve more subs my man that was fantastic
Hey Tharemy! Are you the cousin of Anthony Hopkins by any chance?
@@humungous09 the actor? Nope
Don’t care what negative comments this received, they simply missed the point that you are one heck of a craftsman.
that is what i was thinking
I must admit, when I saw the end result, I was blown away by the quality of your work.
I wasn't a fan before, but I am now.
It really sucks that people got so up in arms about-- alright I'm done with the fan/air puns. Seriously though, excellent work.
the wood wasn't either
@@seanderfuss6865 Two drums and a cymbal.
This was one of the most fun projects I've made!
It involved plenty of problem solving, well before I even started making it. I think it came out fabulous as I honestly didn't know if it would work. Although, I think a more powerful fan would take it further still and maybe I'll pursue that at a later date.
Thanks to all my Patreons who've had input in this one, encouraged me and gave me great advice! :)
Try softening your hot glue with isopropylene alcohol to remove it (rubbing alcohol), it should peel right off
Nicely done!
Question about your woodturning tools: I see you use most exclusively tools with inserts. What are the advantages? What tools do you use there?
This is what I look for in woodworking videos. Cool innovative projects that I may or may not build. Nicely done.
@@thatcrazyguy1971 They are Carbide Scrapers, they are easier to use than traditional tools, and an easier learning curves, they get the job done though.
👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
I know restoration and creation channels being largely silent has its own appeal, and I can appreciate that.
However, there's something about a narrator on the video that acts like a calming guide on what's going on in the video. I dunno, it might just be a me-thing, but I appreciate the commenrary throughout the video.
It's about the perfect level of narration: just enough to guide a complete newbie, not so much as to irritate someone familiar with the work. That's a trickier line to walk than most people realize.
How It's Made.
Its a kinder way to say “here’s whats going on because you don’t think “
Holy shit! This dude just made a Dyson fan out of wood. Skill level is at 3000! Great work my friend!
I agree. I'm impressed with his wood working skill. (Oh, keep in mind. It was all done with scrap wood, which is the main point of the video. Don't waste the wood.) Also he revealed something about the marketed products claims it is a blade-less fan. That is false. It just looks that way. A traditional fan is in the base and you can't see it. So it looks fan less.
I use to think those products did what they did by electrically charging the air alternately to make it flow. Give the air a positive charge and the next chamber would have an opposite charge. The air would move towards it. Now that the air is mostly negatively charged, have a positively charged chamber to attract that air and it an move it along to the next one. It could be done that way. But really. They have a very quiet fan in the base.
@Red Pilled Fox "Wizardry" Exactly right. Kind of fits in with fake news/advertizement. Hehe. I bet it could be done though. A device that moves air with literally no moving parts. But it would probably take a lot of energy to do it. Just buy the 20 dollar fan instead of the 120+ dollar fan. They both do the same job.
I'm replying to my own comment. I loved the craftsmanship you did. Fantastic work. That wood work was spot on. The best part of it was how it showed those blade-less fans were not truly blade-less.
Chinese invented them first.
Denver Gevero What’s your f@&$ing point. GTFOH with that mess.
I've been really enjoying your videos and I especially love how you explain why you chose to do things the way you did (including "it was easier" or "i didn't feel like making a jig") as well as how you point out your mistakes and what you did to fix them. Nobody's perfect and DONE is better than perfect anyway. Your ingenuity and adaptability is inspiring.
I never gave it any thought when I saw these in the store, but I never really knew how they worked. Thank you so much for your trial and error and showing the world 🌎 👍👍
This works by simple redirection. The Dyson works on a different principle.
@@kennmossman8701 It works exactly like the Dyson does. :)
@@PaskMakes www.jameco.com/Jameco/workshop/howitworks/dysonairmultiplier.html
@@kennmossman8701 You'll note the cross-section they show on the Dyson fan was the exact same cross-section he used on this. It's the exact same thing as a Dyson, but beautifully made with wood.
@@ConstantlyDamaged The air flows through the channel in the pedestal, through a curved path, and comes out from small 16mm slits around the frame of the fan at a 16-degree angle slope. You may think that this just causes air to blow in the shape of the surface area of a cylinder, but because of the physical laws of inducement and entrainment, this allows for the surrounding air to also become drawn in from multiple areas around the fan. In other words, picture your TV weather map; a small low-pressure region is created which actually draws the air in from behind it, like a forming tropical storm. This simultaneous push and pull of air creates a quiet, even, constant flow of cool breeze.
I just burnt down my woodworking shop out of respect and decided to live vicariously through his videos. Great project. Well done!
amen, brother! so funny
Your craftsmanship is incomparable, you have an enormous talent at devising jigs and creating innovative design features, and best of all you possess healthy amounts of self-deprecation and abiding patience! From Kauai...best wishes, stay healthy, and give the dog a hug.
I agree totally
Here, here! :)
I love how you show EVERYTHING...and from at least 2 povs. I'm learning so much from you. Thanks 🙏🙏🙏🙏. ( From South Africa)
This has to be one of the best makes on UA-cam. Don't know how you're going to top this, unless you make a working nuclear submarine.
What a top bloke.
Word!!
Scrapwood submarine.. :D
Timber cooling rods are problematic
wooden PC case or wooden xbox case would be cool. Something along those lines
Not sure a working nuclear submarine would be enough.
True craftsmanship and ingenuity. Your work is a marriage between the ancient craft of woodwork with the new era technology. UA-cam should promote such channels instead of viral meaningless contents in the name of entertainment. You, sir, got yourself a new subscriber. Thank you for sharing your work and please keep it coming.
Mate, your skills are out of this world. Your patience is commendable. Keep up the good work!👍🏻
Abjt G did it hurt? Becoming a fan? I don’t think I’d want any of the things he did to the wood done to me, maybe being rubbed in a layer of oil.
Are you also bladeless?
hehe a "fan" now...
And do you operate on 110 or 240 volts?
Mr Pask, you move quicker than anyone I've ever seen in the shop! Thanks for posting the great entertaining videos. Your narration (speaking voice) is a great compliment to your videos.
There's nothing more soothing than watching a craftsman or craftswoman as they create. Years of their dedication, failures and triumphs, money, injuries, etc. condensed into a half hour of satisfaction for the rest of us. Thank you for allowing us to live vicariously through your efforts and for sharing your talent. This is gorgeous. Thank you.
Aodhan Paeder Mac Cionaoith..what a lovely thruthful and inspiring comment!
as a woodworker myself i have to say this is the most beautiful thing ive seen in a very very long time!!! and the jig for the air intake slots was brilliant. the whole project is sooo aesthetically pleasing!!!
This is a ridiculous idea, ridiculously well thought out and executed. Love that router jig, genius.
I've never sat transfixed for half an hour watching ANY UA-cam video. except this one. marvellous workmanship Sir!
My favorite part is when he made the mistake in lining up the vent thingies but kept a positive mindset and finished the project
The hallmark of an excellent tradesman isn't getting it right every time, it's knowing how to fix your mistakes and make it right.
Neosi Axiom, the old adage, “Learn mistakes (or errors) and you will never make the same mistake again the next time”.
Bob ross.
That jig for the trim router was a genius move. Kudos again, sir!
I always wondered what Created the wind in a bladeless fan: Apparently it's blades.
Illuminati confirmed
Sometimes they have a tour of the disks actually rotate at a fast enough speed to create wind
@@cheesequack7gaming531 the Illuminati Freemason Lost symbol
😂 comment on point mate 👍
@@patrickkrueger3164 So disc shaped blades then.....
I love the way you both show us and talk us through your errors it’s very helpful and could be your main attribute?? Well maybe second place as your projects are right on track for me.
Thanks
Bob
England
This is a work of art even if it never moved any air! The fact that it works makes it that much better. I am amazed at your skill to make this from scrap wood. The jigs you made are worthy of a separate video just highlighting those creations! Thank you for sharing!
I'm not a woodworker, I actually only saw this because it loaded immediately after another video I was watching, but I loved watching this! I always wished I had the tools for woodworking, I am an upholsterer and seamstress, and I found this whole process fascinating - I couldn't stop watching it. Great job! It's a beautiful fan, and the work that goes into it is even more appreciated when you get to see the whole process.
Oh lord,!, Now I feel that I must invent an actual ""Bladeless", (Bladeless), fan. It can be done. Using, "Bournoulli's" forth principle, His "Theorem", that of "variable pressures" will do it. But this fellow here will have to actually make it. Not sure that I have his patience.
Nora i can pretty much relate. I like working with wood (got that from my grandfather) but don't have the tools for anything like this.
That was awesome! With all the stress in life, sometimes you just need to take a 28 minute break and watch a master craftsman make something amazing, and beautiful out of scraps of wood. Thank you!
Master Craftsman is right!
You are a fine craftsman Sir, as well as an excellent video producer. It is a pleasure to watch you at work.
Was hovering over the fast forward but 28 minutes later realised I'd felt more calm and satisfied than I have all weekend. Excellent video, beautiful creation and lots of good ideas. Thank you.
An absolute masterclass in turning, jig making and use, routing and so many other different things.
Just stunning!
“i’ll save salt for my dinner” best thing i heard in a while
Neon Indian me too! I haven’t read many comments past this, but I’m sure there are some criticizing his use of hot glue to mount the stock to the turning base, or maybe not!
Videos for kids
@mrdabbleswithpotion my man what are you talking about
I love the technical creativity you demonstrate in this project. It made me think about production processes in a whole new way.
That slot jig was just brilliant - what a cool project.
This is probably one of my favorite builds I have seen on your channel. I have gotten so many ideas from watching you and the surprises never stop. Thank you, sir. I wish I could go down to Australia just to learn from you.
This was easily the coolest scrap wood challenge to date. It was a breath of fresh air.
Hehe
Ha! I see what you did there!
Funny
ya... fan in a duct... use em all the time in remote control aircraft
You’re a genius ! Your work is pure art. Thank you for allowing us to join you in your love of woodworking ! Be safe, happy and healthy ! Cheers !
I love that you leave in the sounds even when you speed up the film. Gives it a bit of a Wallace and grommet vibe 💕
I watch these types of videos and say to myself "I can do that if I stopped watching UA-cam and put some effort into a handy craft instead"...
Then I click the Up Next button to see how to make a Brick Rocket Stove...
...Rinse and Repeat...
Seriously, great work Mr. Man.
Absolutely blown away (no pun intended), by your skills, sir. Didnt even notice the vid was 20+ minutes long.
I wish i had at least, 1/4 the skill you have in woodworking.
Greetings from the Philippines!
It's amazing how some people have skills to make and plan stuff and some just don't have a clue on how to grab hammer
I have a friend who is in the Philippines now
really?? i am here now in the philippines but sadly in a lockdown
Stay safe, indoors. Even if the lockdown is gone, TRY not to go out for the next 2weeks.
I have to be honest. You're very good with a layeth, really. I'm not very good at turning and you do beautiful work. It's a pleasure watching someone doing beautiful work. Even if the fans worked or not, you did a beautiful turning job. Congratz!
That was very cool. I love how you mixed modern engineering with classic woodworking. I have no doubt it's a piece that you can't capture the total beauty in a picture. I'm sure it looks amazing in person. Nice craftsmanship.
You, sir, are a master of creativity and problem solving, and you have my everlasting envy and admiration.
Absolutely great. As others have said, you've done it all in this one - scrapwood, problem solving, elegant router jig, and inspiration for our own creativity. Keep them coming!
This is the second video that I have watched and have learned quite a bit from your knowledge and experience. I find your videos as a level about the other folks who make some pretty awesome ideas and turn them into a reality. As I said before your projects are levels about the other folks. That’s not to take away anything from them at all. I appreciate all your project that have given me multiple ideas of my own coupled with the jigs that you made with help me to make my ideas come to reality. I hope that you don’t mind me making some of the jigs you have made. Thanks
it would be so cool to throw a paper airplane through one of those
Oh yeah!! Good thinking!
Great idea. My bet is the paper pilot would vomit due to the turbulence. 😋
Put them in a row and you can make it fly as long as it goes through another ring.
It doesn’t work like you think it would☹️ I have a dyson fan and it just kinda falls to the ground the moment you fly one through it
I wonder... If you tied a paper/model plane to a string and fed the string through the fan, would the plane just hover? You'd need a well designed plane most likely.
Even when I do not plan to make this fan, your video gave me quite a few excellent ideas, that made me stop and repeat a lot of places. Congratulations for your genius and problem solving ability, my sincere respect to you sir. I'm an engineer with 42 years of professional experience, and truly recognize your capability! Suscribed and liked!
This project really shows how good you are and how much passion you have for this, I just loved watching this one, it was truly one of the best challenges yet
Thank you - glad you enjoyed it! :)
I’m sure I’ve commented this on your channel before but I’d like to say it again. I really appreciate how much you embrace all the possible ways of doing things rather than just looking at it though a “woodworking only” lens. That was a big barrier when I was growing up and it took me years to learn and develop skills in other areas like metal fabrication and electronics. This is to say that I feel like you’re opening the door for woodworkers to embrace other disciplines and expand their capabilities.
"It worked, which is a bonus"
If only I had that mindset in the past years..
That line hit me too... What a peaceful mindset
Regretful moments
I relate to his mindset, often even failures can be reused
Isn't that what Oppenheimer said about the bomb?
I mean, even if it hadn't worked, he could have made a cool-looking flower pot out of it or something. It was a beautiful piece of wood turning.
The creativity, ingenuity, and skill you possess is astounding. I learned many new tricks for the tools I use everyday. You made something that I do not believe anyone has ever tried to do with wood. The amount of experience you have in carpentry shows. This is an amazing project made by an amazing creator. I cannot believe I got to watch this for free. Looking forward to binging your channel now that I have found it.
if you do look into using a pc fan, they come in 2 verities, one is for "high airflow" where there is no pressure difference, these are just good at moving air where there is no pressure difference to worry about..
the other is "static pressure" which is good for pushing air through constricted spaces, as they are better for overcoming differences in air pressure. i suspect the latter will be better for your purposes.
Very satisfying to watch this wood work. Dude has good wood working skills. With all those skills and tools could easily make wood stave snare drums. Beautiful finish on that wood fan. Would definitely buy one.
This is maybe the most aesthetically pleasing thing I've seen on youtube
Have you seen the women’s pole vaulting? Never mind..
Thanks for leaving the mistakes in and showing how you solved them. I think that we learn more from these types of videos than when everything goes perfect...which in most projects it doesn't!
I like that there isnt background music. I feel like music takes away from the video. I love woodworking/turning and I love engineering, I also always wondered how those types of fans work. This is an awesome video!!!!!!!!!!!!
The sound of wood cutting and sanding is music to my ears 👂
I'm impressed by this build, it looks so beautiful... For all the halfwits out there, it is indeed considered a bladeless fan because there is the word "fan" in there, it simply means there isn't a blade where it's supposed to be. Although if you want something that doesn't have blades but moves air, it wouldn't be a "fan" at all. You would need an ion wind device that could move air with electricity.
Seeing "lots of problem solving" as a project quality criterion is something I learned from you! Best video in a long time!
“I’ve a few scraps of camphor laurel that were offcuts from a chopping board. I’ve had a quick go at building a fully functioning city for around 200000 people, and for fun I’ve included a public transport network and clean energy reactor.”
Lol. The city now has the third largest economy in the world.
@@Holocaustica And it is all based on scrap wood.
Bobafetting, I didn't realise how many 6 year olds infested UA-cam. It appears a number of them followed each other here simply to show just how childish they are. Now run away, your Mummy is calling, it's way past your bed time. I'm sure you already know what you can do with your offcuts, this time try it sideways.
@@propfella The number if cranky 90-year olds however is larger.
@@57thorns OK, so please tell us which person is the amazing age of 90, and why do you associate people of that age as cranky? It appears you're associating with the wrong 90 year olds in your nursing home. If you can, get out a little more and meet more 90 year olds. I assure you I've met many more cranky 40 year olds than those in their 90's. You appear extremely judgemental, or should I shorten that to simply mental?
28 minutes of my life watching this, and it was 28 exceedingly well-spent minutes.
I watched this at 2x speed and only spent 14 mins
Amen
Agreed!
I didn't realise it was 28 minutes
Jess Harriman yes, it’s not only me who watches everything on 2 times speed
UA-cam gave me a total gem this time. I love watching construction videos. This channel seems to be full of that, so I'm subscribing.
Neat. Not only is it a functional device but beautiful too. I like the look of gluing all the scraps together. Lathe work, always a plus. It's strange to me for people to give such hate over a bladeless fan. How else do they think it's going to move air. I've always loved how much more quiet those fans are and I love seeing things that are usually made out of one material made out of another, be it wood or metal.
I’m a woman in my 60s and I watched the entire show with great pleasure, thankyou for your clever. Self
Next up on the "Scrapwood Challenge," a cold fusion reactor.
He is married.
20 years ago I've wanted to become a carpenter. Sadly - for the profession - I've had terrible experiences with school traineeship programs and thus forfeit the idea and became a programmer. Today I find myself watching this kind of videos on a very frequent basis and can't think anything but "Oh, i'd love to try doing that" :))) I love the clever ideas (The slots on the cylinder for example).
Finished product looks really great. Job well done mate!
Hey, I'm a programmer too and love both code and wood working but never did much of the latter.
A while ago I decided to just go for it and built a wardrobe on either side of the bed with overhead storage, side boxes for phones or books and inset led strips etc. I even spray painted it myself which required some practice and time. It all certainly took more time than expected but turned out great and it brought a lot of happiness to finally make something! I would recommend just starting something, anything! It's really never too late.
Yeah, but you still need to do something for living. No carpenter can make only fancy gadgets. You have to make kitchen after kitchen and time to time one interesting project. Believe me. My brother-in-law is a carpenter and he's definitely not so enthusiastic after years. One must be famous on YT...that's the way.
To clarify on my post, keep your day job but start as a hobby as mentioned by others. If you really want to do more of it in the end you can become a carpenter. There are no age restrictions or education required as long as you do a good job of it.
Get yourself a lathe and have at it!
Wow! I really seldom comment especially to a conversation as disappointingly inane as elements of this one but i am compelled ... the Dyson bladeless fan is not bladeless. That is not the point. The point is to make a fan that has very little turbulence and no visible blade to create said turbulence and potentially to be dangerous. The bigger point to me is that this guy is a straight up brilliant crafts person. To build this housing that has very small tolerances and very specific complex curved surfaces out of scraps of hardwood is simply spectacular to me. I am a fan ( pun intended) and I just subscribed. Thanks for demonstrating what your exceptional problem solving and years of experience in the shop can accomplish.
it is the point tho. i clicked on this shit because of the clickbait title. i wanted to see a fan with no blades, not some Dyson marketing bullshit. i'm glad you are all excited about woodworking... good for you.
Peter Boice technically dyson fan is bladeless. Google dyson bladeless fan breakdown
The word bladeless fan is just all over this sht. So yes, it is the point. And yes it is click bait👎 you would creat something cool and wanna let people know about, just tell all the truth no need to deceive no one. This guys must know that people will still appreciate the work without lying beforehand
@@SickPillow Just because you are an idiot doesn't mean this was a clickbait.
@@Foryogaonly I just did and there are blades.
Do I care if a "bladeless" fan uses hidden fan blades or impeller blades?
No.
All I need and want from a fan is the ability to push a lot of air preferably at me.
I clicked on this video because I subscribe to the maker's channel and the picture shown was a thing of beauty. After viewing the entire video from beginning to end I am left thinking four things:
1. This build most definitely did not disappoint.
2. The maker truly has the patience and determination required for the completion of such a project, especially with all the fiddly bits involved.
3. The finished product is almost too pretty to be utilitarian.
4. That workshop must smell amazing when the wood is being turned on the lathe.
25:06 - the dog's reaction, though! So cute! :)
I truly envy your patience and skill. I appreciate woodwork of this level .
I really enjoyed this video. I found it completely by accident. I cant believe how many people are getting uppity about the fan having blades. I was curious as to see how the air flow was made. Now I know so thank you for that very instructive video.
What a pleasure to watch you do this. When I was little I used to sit around watching my dad build wooden furniture, and he was pretty good, but what you do is amazing. After I grew up I put together a wood shop of my own and designed and built some furniture, but what you do is way above and beyond. Beautiful workmanship and a pleasure to watch you at work. Thanks.
I am a skilled maker/designer and was HUGELY impressed with every aspect of this, skill/ingenuity - and as some one said below, cracking jig for the vents - brilliant commentary too.
William Morris said: "Have nothing in your house that you do not know to be useful or believe to be beautiful." That wooden bladeless fan meets both criteria. I'm amazed by your skill and problem-solving.
You. Are. INCREDIBLE! 🙌🙌🙌 I can’t believe anyone had negative things to say about this project. Some people just need to get a life. Haha. Love what you do and how you go about it. 👏👏👏
This looks so impressively complicated and intricate, it hurts my brain a little, but Bravo. This is amazing craftsmanship
Paulina Klevgaard 69
Not DoomSlayer ah , I see you’re a man of culture aswell
@@SurBean
Poubelle! J'espère que vous pourrez passer plus de temps à nettoyer votre bouche puante ... vraiment puante!
Archer no hablar espanol
A perfect thing, done in a perfect way, filmed and narrated pleasantly! Admirations!
This kind of project requires a lot of knowledge and skills. And you have all of them. It turned out amazing.
My adoration for your craftsmanship is endless. So beautiful. So elegantly made!
First time I've seen your channel. This was amazing. I watched because I knew I would discover exactly how a "bladeless" fan works. I love woodwork, and conserving resources, so this tics all the boxes for me. I think your fan is a beautiful work of art. I wish I had the tools and the skills to do this myself. Dyson's got nothing on you. I would rather have your beautiful scrap wood fan than their sleek modern product. Thank you very much for sharing this project on video.
Well this is one of those really really rare times when youtube recommendations are spot on. Loved watching this.
I keep getting videos I've already watched in the past year.
THANK YOU SO MUCH for posting a great video!!! Thanks, also, for showing the safety appliences you built, to do tiny work safely! That was kewl, the way you made that jig to do the slots with! Keep on! You show GENIOUS !
Here's a little trick, to add to your little bag of tricks...when you're final sizing for fit, drape a piece of 320 grit emory cloth/paper; around the article to fit. Then, place it where it's going and use the whole thing like a sanding block. It comes near to perfect very quickly!
You said you didnt have a tool to do the inside front corner...take an old heavy duty phillips cabinet screwdriver, that's shot, (stripped) and weld a piece of 1/4" thick steel on the end and grind it to look like you want the tip to look like. Then weld a flat plate, for the tool rest. Remember, if you have an offset, the sideways torque will need to be dealt with, by putting a flange on your handle to prevent twisting out of your grip and digging material. Get it like you want it and put your torch on it, and 3 more inches up the tang of the cabinet screwdriver. Bring it up to red and then stir a bucket of oil till it cools down to the touch. Then wash it off real good and either stick it in an oven at 350 degrees, or play your torch on it and just guess...to aneal it...(do it wont snap from being too hard and brittle). Then go dress it on the fine rock I'm your grinder. You'll like it because YOU CREATED it!
You already have a good designing mind. Just "SEE" the tool you need, write down it's perameters, and make the tool. If you have a local store, that has some heafty handled screwdrivers, but they're el-cheap-o junk...buy a few packages of them. Don't try to use them for screwdrivers...they'll strip out...just make your tool and weld the screwdriver to your tool. Now, you have a matched set of custom tools, and you didn't even have to make the handles!
THANKS AGAIN for posting! (( I'm an old retiree from Tennessee. ))
I never bought a Dyson so-called "bladeless fan" (over priced gadgetry) and was able to figure out right away.
It's a form of "duct": 1. passageway in a building or machine for air. I build things all the time...it's fun.
Maybe rename your post "anything Dyson makes I can make out of wood". I appreciate everything about wood...what a gift from (dare I say) God.
Great video....thanks for taking the time.
This guy is so patient, I think he could listen to an entire dinner conversation with my wife without falling asleep. What a cool looking project.
this made me crack up.
how does it feel to talk abt yr wife this way and still can look at her when she is there for u ?
lol
...what a lucky lady.
@@kadaalili7381 how does it feel to not get a joke?
Lament of an average woodworker: "I have the tools but not the inspiration!" I am also a guitar player. The last time I felt so insignificant was the first time I ever saw Pat Methany play. After that experience, I would sometimes just sit and stare at my guitars, wondering where that music was? I had the same 6 strings, the same beautiful instruments but could only stare longingly at them, humbled by the notion that such music existed within the confines of that device, but I lacked the ability to unshackle it. I just felt that very same longing as I watched this video. I've never watched anything else you have done sir, but I will, and I will again feel the deep sense of wonder and respect that such talent exists. As I contemplate the continued isolation this virus has brought upon us all, I hope that the coming days spent in the woodshop can even begin to approach the mastery you have displayed here. Hell, I'd be thrilled just to be able to make that base! Well done friend. I stand in awe of your abilities.
I very much know how you feel. Somewhere deep inside you is the magic needed to create on this level. whether it be music, craft, whichever.. I hope you are able to find it as I also hope for the inspiration and understanding to achieve great things myself. Good luck to you!
You're not alone bud. I grew up having a love for drawing. I even won awards during my senior year of high school. Then that love, inspiration, and drive just dwindled down. All I hear was family and friends telling me I should draw again and if they had that talent they would be doing art all the time. But I also grew up building furniture and/or helping my dad (and mom) renovating the house. My parents both taught me lots about building, using tools, wiring, and the list goes on. So I have a love for woodworking that I've never lost. With that said, I haven't done any art or woodworking. Side note; I was born with brittle bones and I was blessed in so many ways from the Lord. Where others have told me I can't do something my family/friends encouraged me to do anything. Fast forward to today, I've been forced to go on disability. I'd rather be working but as I've gotten older my health has declined. But that still doesn't mean I can't do the things I love; it just means I can't do everything that I used to. With that said, I still am sitting here instead of using my gifts. We all go through this but sometimes we need a boost, a word of encouragement, or (like my wife does) a kick in the pants lol. And don't compare yourself to another artist; you aren't them and why would you want to? Be you. Pick up your guitar and start jamming and just messing with it and you'll catch something you like. That's how songs/music is made.
Just seen this guy for the first time and to say that I am in awe of his skillset would be an understatement
My son is a musician too. He has a 32 track studio in his house, but he has not even been it in the last 3 months. Reason: He is an RN at the local VA hospital. HE and many others are in a war all of their own. Do me a favor, play your guitars a little for him. Thanks , a proud Dad....
Best piece of advice I heard on a Maker podcast was to be inspired by bad workmanship. Good workmanship, like this amazing fan, is great but CAN make you feel inadequate but if you find something that was badly made it might inspire you to think ""even I could do better than that" and to of ways in which you COULD do better. At the end you might not have something that you think of as a masterpiece but if you have done a better job than the bad workmanship you were inspired by then you'll have built your skills and still have a feeling of achievement.
I want one, but shaped like a tree with bladeless fans as leaves.
I want it to be tall and proud so everyone can see how freaking bladeless its beautiful fanholes are.
And I want to put it in my yard, so i can sit in a breeze on a hot summers day, enjoying a cold drink,
while i sit in awe of this magical, groovy air-moving device.
Awesome build, ignore the keyboard-warriors out there man and just keep pooping out brilliant stuff!
Thanks!
That little unfolding Sketchup move - Genius. Going to save me hours.
Well done, I like the balance of safety and "get it done" and the speeding up of the tedious parts while still giving the sense of just how much time went into the project. Very good looking end product. Ignore the haters, they couldn't make a paper airplane, let alone what you created out of firewood!
I honestly thought that it spun somehow and that's how it moved the air. I have no problem calling it a bladeless fan and it was a great video and great craftsmanship - definitely NOT clickbait
Even if it spun I don't think it can move the air without some kind of blades xd
@@juanpls3856 It CAN,Mate! In the 1960's we had air-movers["Fans"] without any blades.
They were used underground in deep shaft coalmining,where I worked.
They employed the principle of differentials in air pressure,the very science of how we get windy days,caused by lowering of the air pressure on a frontal system.
Compressed air being forced through the fine slot in the "Fan",lowered the air pressure,causing the surrounding air to rush through the air-mover ["Fan"],at high speed and with a tremendous volume of air being moved.
No reason why a small compressor couldn't be mounted inside ,instead of a small fan that this guy has used...maybe he didn't know about this ancient technology from the 1960's...![and maybe now he might post another video showing the conversion,to shut up the critics who are so P.C.!!]..Without buying a Dyson fan,and dismantling it to find it has blades,I fully expected that it worked on the deployment of a small compressor providing the depression factor.....There now,I've just made Dyson a few more million pounds,when they read my comments!!
you sir are a Genius and a master wood worker ,,, you made an object of beauty and functionality,, it was a pleasure watching you ,,,, will continue to do so ,, thank you
*This is **_pure, unadulterated art! . . . ._* - Thank you for uploading this gem! ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️