INDESTRUCTABLE: I have NEVER seen a box made like this before
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- Опубліковано 1 гру 2024
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(If you use one of the affiliate links above, we may receive a small commission) - Навчання та стиль
*(BOW is a small, 2-man business and a supporter of our channel. They are worth supporting!)*
BOW GuidePro Bandsaw Guide: amzn.to/3PC5dg3
*My hand tool collection includes premium tools from Bridge City Tool Works:* bridgecitytools.com/
*Please help support us by using the link above for a quick look around!*
(If you use one of these affiliate links, we may receive a small commission)
*Some other useful links:*
-Check out our project plans: stumpynubs.com/product-category/plans/
-Instagram: instagram.com/stumpynubs/
-Twitter: twitter.com/StumpyNubs
★SOME OF MY FAVORITE INEXPENSIVE TOOLS★
- #ISOtunes Hearing Protection (Save 10%): bit.ly/3BHYdH7
- BOW Featherboards: amzn.to/430ldhv
-123 Blocks: lddy.no/vpij
-Mechanical Pencils: amzn.to/2PA7bwK
-Lumber pencil: amzn.to/2QtwZjv
-Pocket Measuring Tape: amzn.to/2kNTlI9
-Nut/Bolt/Screw Gauge: amzn.to/2CuvxSK
-Self-Centering Bits: amzn.to/2xs71UW
-Steel Ruler: lddy.no/10mv7
-Center-Finding Ruler: lddy.no/10nak
-Bit & Blade Cleaner: amzn.to/2TfvEOI
-Narex Chisels: lddy.no/sqm3
-Mini Pull Saw: amzn.to/2UEHBz6
-Shinwa Rulers: lddy.no/zl13
(If you use one of the affiliate links above, we may receive a small commission)
i just purchased a Harvey bandsaw based upon your review. I'm looking forward to setting it up in my shop. I'll be sure to let you know how it works ;-) Thanks for the videos. Merry Christmas!
Fantastic lesson on joint strength. And I love that Bow fence extention. Thanks.
What a great way to illustrate that construction method.
I've never even seen anything like that before. Thanks for sharing this. I always learn something from your videos.
James. Thank you very much for sharing this challenging piece with the rest of us. The edge grain splines are a perfect solution to a gift I am making. Thanks again!
Fascinating concept and wonderful execution
You are so clever in adapting this technique!
Wow! This is very cool! I can’t wait to try this build. Thank you for sharing!
I love it! There is a log Smokehouse here that belonged to my Grandad. It has the same joints. ❤
Interesting process. That bit about cabins is very cool!
I failed geometry, but int this video… I think you gave it a new angle.
Fantastic demo. Thanks for sharing, James! Watching the bandsaw segment, I can't help but think that ramp would be easier to use with a couple magswitches installed in the base.
The putting together looks easier than I thought. It's the cutting of the dove tails I would fail at massively 😅
Why? It's just straight cuts with a bandsaw. You only have to follow a line for about 1/4-inch.
@StumpyNubs it's not the cuts, it's the flipping the pieces over on the ramp. I'm bound to go wrong.
@@StumpyNubs I'm assuming you cleaned everything up with a chisel between the bandsaw step and assembly? This looks like a fun challenge. I've marveled at locking log cabin joinery and never really thought I would have cause to use it, but the ideas in there now! Thank you!
Nice Build !!
Very clever. I don’t like math lol but I appreciate when someone uses it well.
Reminded me immediately of traditional Japanese construction joints & when I first saw that the sides of the box were made up of panels, I knew how you'd done it ~ still impressive box jointing
Absolute insanity, and I love it
You need to get in touch with Mark Bowe, star of Barnwood Builders. His team buys and sells log buildings. I've seen them freehand notches with a chainsaw
Has it really been seven years since I first saw this? Still nice.
What a great challenge, well done. Stay safe.
Loved it.
I have seen these log cabins before, even worked a bit on a restoration, but missed the significance of the shapes of the cuts. Pretty damn cool, or more correctly: ausgezeichnet!
Awesome work
Awesome
Very impressive James. I’ll need to ponder whether or not I’ll try to make one, but fascinating nonetheless. Thanks for sharing how you made it, especially the precise measurements for various stock thicknesses.
Would be interesting to have somebody do this up as a program (or Vectric Gadget) for CNC machines. There's all kinds of ways of doing CNC joints already, so it shouldn't be hard to do.
Nice
Great job
me 2 minutes in: "what the hell am I looking at?" 🧐
I may need to add something extra to the egg nog... to realign my brain waves... after watching this video.
Well done Stumpy!
"We choose to do these things not because they are easy, but because they are hard."
“If you always choose the easy way, you will find life hard, Grasshopper”
JFK
Now that was a woodworking video a old/new joint that I may just have to make myself for the fun of it.
Joinery sorcery!
Very neat idea. Trouble is, the only people who would appreciate it are other woodworkers 😂.
untrue, I'm a Software architect and find information, knowledge, and skill interesting in and of itself this channel has been an excellent source of content.
@@ezmodey1105very true. I try to assimilate as much knowledge as I can. Now if only I could remember were that knowledge gets stored.... Getting old has its challenges
German ingenuity. That's about it.
I saw a similar assembly made by soaking the joint tabs and compressing them for assembly. Once pressure was released, the wood returned to the original shape.
I thought I had seen this done before but can't remember if it was a box or just a demonstration of water manipulation of wood.
Intriguing !
That’s still glue dependent, except the glue is between the strips. I do drawer faces with through dovetails. Since the female dovetail mortise has to be bigger than the male dovetail, I pound two strips of wood into the mortise on each side of the male dovetail. Once they’re in and cut flush they’re impossible to remove without destroying them, and the joints are glueless. 😁
Excellent video as always, very interesting and entertaining. Keep up the great work.
I have the BOW Fence and it great .. but make sure you get a new tape since you lose 1 in of cut you need to set a tape adding 1 in or sooner or later when your in a hurry you forget to do it in your head and end up cutting something 1 in too small haha
Only three minutes in and my head hurt...
I hope Indiana Jones does not break into your shop to steal this box.
Neat!
That's pretty cool
Interesting‼️
Wow, nice joint, especially considering free-hand bandsaw work. Complicated and time consuming show piece!
VERY clever, and it makes sense why it worked well for building cabins
James, I’ve been trying to figure out how to dovetail all three sides of a flag shadowbox. The top would be easy, as it is 90 degrees… but the bottom two corners would be 45 degrees, and need to be dovetailed to prevent the bottom board falling off.
How would someone go about making dovetails on such an acute angle? Would this technique even be any help for that?
Butt joint. That's the way to do it. Butt. Joint.
😂❤
Wild
It would be pretty cool if these were made as kits.
As complex as this project was, why didn't you make it out of spalted unobtanium or some other exotic wood?
By the way.... You look pretty good with the beard!
Dumb question - instead of cutting the sides into strips and then cutting splines, could the same effect be achieved by scoring and splitting the boards with a fine hatchet or froe? Of course this assumes an easier splitting wood, like pine or oak that is also very dry.
The splines help with the alignment during glue-up.
Look at you!… Get’n all “fancy” and what-not.
Those corners are the same as a Finnish style log cabin corner.
Interesting build but, apart from log cabins, I can't think of real life uses for it. Regards 👍
How about a box?
Make it from steel, weld it, bam done
“Mud and hogs hair”! I’ll try to keep my standards a bit higher.
Very interesting but well beyond my ability
Now make 100 of these boxes. I'll get back to you in a year or so to hear of the progress. 😅
Some of the best projects are onr time builds
I would catastrophicly mess this up.
Yay! First comment!
Nice, but I am a wood whacker, not a wood worker.
My next set of cabinets are going to cost my customer dearly.
TRANSLATION: I will be able to retire after this job, even if I provide a lifetime guarantee.
I confess, I love these, but will stay with the drawers I built to replace the shelving of the lower cabinets in our house. The dado's on faces and sides mean they can never be pulled apart, when pulling drawers out. Good enough.
That was the fanciest thing I’ve seen today
Could this be more complicated, please? I’ve only burned through two calculators trying to figure this out.
You don't have to build one. It's interesting to just see it.
No thank you. Keep your box.
I'm not sure I offered it to you...
@@StumpyNubs thanks for trying but i don't want it either
@@StumpyNubs No sense in trying to fool us. We all saw you relentlessly pushing it on that poor guy. I don't know why him specifically but here we are.
And " your mom's" box too
@@StumpyNubs I'll take it! I like to keep all the tricks and tips just in case
@James-ke5sx0 seconds ago
This reminds me of Japanese joinery, whether it be cabinet making or house building. I remember they used to make extremely complicated joints that would actually move rather than break apart during earthquakes for their house Construction. I briefly studied Japanese joinery when I was young but it was too complicated especially their boat building joinery. I'm a retired Carpenter.
Great job