SIMPLE JIG- Handheld router dovetails that LOOK HAND CUT!
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- Опубліковано 8 лют 2017
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Router table dovetail jig video: • EASY router table dove...
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Looking at the wall behind you makes me happy.
James(Stumpy) Hamilton, Well Done sir! You deserve a cold one for this one, my friend!
When i am pounding my dovetail joints together i hold it with both hands and hit it with my manly forehead :)
Tim White - That's using your head. Sorta. :-)
Thanks so much for your website and your videos! I continue to learn here and ther, and I've been been enjoying wood working for years! Thanks again!!!!! W
Thanks for the great tip!!! Heading to the garage-shop immediately!!
Love the simplicity of this method. Thanks James.
I like this! Simple things are the smartest.
Just found stumpy and am thrilled! Which I could like these lessons more than once.
Charles Field Don't Tell his wife where he is, she thinks he plays piano at the brothel down the street. You can always like him more by sharing him with your friends. Remember, don't tell his wife he's a woodworker.
love this jig by the way!
Another clever solution! Cool video, thanks
This is so simple and cool. 👍
That's the guide video I've been looking for, thankyou very much. 👍
Awesome,awesome ,awesome
Hey James. Cool video. I just might revisit my inclination to avoid dovetails for SO many reasons!
thanks for the great tip and vid. will be making this one
Awesome, thank you!
Nice vid Stump!
Well done mate thankyou
Great idea!
Well taught!
This is great information! I have a hand held router and have been struggling to get my joints correct.
On carriage bolts I grind and file opesasit sides to the square making a tee head, then I chisel a slot to match. It puts the head below or flush with the surface. I think the superior hold is worth the extra work.
Super Video verstehe zwar kein Englisch aber was Sie gezeigt haben ist auch so zu verstehen, mein Abo haben Sie
Wow this is so simple I can't believe it. Sheesh
Dear James, why not cutting the tails first, then trace them in the pins piece and rout away? 😮 Great jig, btw! I want to try to make a 2" thick board bench with it!
you didn't explain the black tape but I saw that you position it against the filler block... is this for clamping?
I explained it. It acts as a shim to hold the scrap in place when you tighten the wing nuts.
Ok I missed that but figured it out Nice jig!
Hey I'm just constructing this jig myself and I can't think of a reason to use the scrap piece. Why not only have one rabbeted side and let the router come out against the jig? I could see this being an issue if you wanted to use the jig a lot but I only intend to use it on one project
The scraps provide support for the wood fibers on your work piece so you don't get tear-out. The jig itself could provide that support (if you didn't make the rabbets), but only once. Why let the bit chew up the jig when it's so easy to make it last a lot longer?
@@StumpyNubs thanks for the speedy reply and your excellent channel. I'll use the double rabbet
I noticed when you mentioned about setting the router depth to the depth of your workpiece, it looked like you then backed the setting up a little bit. Are my eyes deceiving me?
I wouldn't back it up. If anything, you could set it a little bit deeper so the pins are slightly longer than the thickness of the mating work piece. Then you could plane or sand the pins flush once the joint is assembled.
Your vids could be used to learn woodworking. And to learn how to teach.
I find it funny that people will go to inexhaustible lengths to avoid having to cut dovetails by hand. For all the effort with jerry-rigged machines, jigs, etc., etc., one can just... I dunno... cut them by hand. (this is coming from someone who uses any and all woodworking machines, constantly.) Some things are better for machines, some things are better by hand. Why the fierce resistance? Unless you're working in production capacity, you don't need jigs to knock out a small number of drawers for a project.
PS. Should have prefaced this by saying that I think this jig is very cool. Great idea. Great video, as always... enjoy and appreciate your channel.
Cutting by hand is more for recreational woodworking. Jigs and machines can be too, but they can also help you feed a family :)
Don't have an f ing band saw
This did not do what you said it would do in the last video I want the tails cut by a router