Nicely done… thank you for creating this video . I need to create something temporary for my friend who’s in a chair that comes by occasionally and this helped .
When I saw that exposed aggregate concrete, the very first thought that I had was, "This dude has got to be located in Nashville, TN." I'm a native Nashvilian and I have to say that I've seen so much of that stuff I'm honestly sick of it. Nashville is eat up with it. So, I have to ask...where are you folks located? BTW, I've got to build an identical threshold for my mother's wheelchair to get into our house. Thank you for helping me figure it out. I honestly did not think about belt sanding the bevel on the OSB to make it completely flush with the porch. I'm so glad I watched. Thanks Again.
it would have been nice to see some more of the technical aspects, especially where its obvious that you are explaining something but decided (thru the edit) to let the music do the talking which disappoints me to no end. also, the beveling of the plywood, which end did you do and I (have to) assume the bevel faced down, but that's conjecture. which orientation was the bevel? was the plywood a bevel'd width longer or did it marry up to the edges perfectly? also, would it not have been prudent to not mount it to the floor before fully assembling the works? I dunno, it was a quick, slick, decently produced video, the camera under the cart thing was cool, the face looking down at it at the end was a bit... oopsie(?) anyways, its a great effort, but maybe less on the slick and more on the trick, if that makes sense....?
I find it somewhat surprising that the word "handicap" is still being used in the States to describe a disability. The origins of the word "handicap" is from a time when people with a disability were forced to beg for an income, holding a "cap in hand". Thankfully the world has moved on, and no longer uses such derogatory language to describe people with a disability. Fascinating video by the way, thank you for making it.
Nicely done… thank you for creating this video . I need to create something temporary for my friend who’s in a chair that comes by occasionally and this helped .
Well done. Simple quick and easy. Thank you for the video.
You got it. Thanks for the comment
Thank you sir this is what I needed, thank you so much
No problem. You got it, Jimmy. Thanks for the comment
you are very well spoken sir! Thank you
Thank you!
When I saw that exposed aggregate concrete, the very first thought that I had was, "This dude has got to be located in Nashville, TN." I'm a native Nashvilian and I have to say that I've seen so much of that stuff I'm honestly sick of it. Nashville is eat up with it. So, I have to ask...where are you folks located?
BTW, I've got to build an identical threshold for my mother's wheelchair to get into our house. Thank you for helping me figure it out. I honestly did not think about belt sanding the bevel on the OSB to make it completely flush with the porch. I'm so glad I watched. Thanks Again.
Well, you ain't gonna believe this, but we are from Nashville,TN. Great guess! 😁 Hey, good luck with your ramp, and thanks for the comment
I KNEW IT! LOL
Best Done!!
Thank you😁
it would have been nice to see some more of the technical aspects, especially where its obvious that you are explaining something but decided (thru the edit) to let the music do the talking which disappoints me to no end. also, the beveling of the plywood, which end did you do and I (have to) assume the bevel faced down, but that's conjecture. which orientation was the bevel? was the plywood a bevel'd width longer or did it marry up to the edges perfectly? also, would it not have been prudent to not mount it to the floor before fully assembling the works? I dunno, it was a quick, slick, decently produced video, the camera under the cart thing was cool, the face looking down at it at the end was a bit... oopsie(?) anyways, its a great effort, but maybe less on the slick and more on the trick, if that makes sense....?
I find it somewhat surprising that the word "handicap" is still being used in the States to describe a disability.
The origins of the word "handicap" is from a time when people with a disability were forced to beg for an income, holding a "cap in hand". Thankfully the world has moved on, and no longer uses such derogatory language to describe people with a disability.
Fascinating video by the way, thank you for making it.
Very interesting history. I did not know. Thanks for the tip