People are so dependent on THE MACHINES of all kinds. I washed a shirt by hand once, and my girlfriend thought i was nuts. She's gone, and my dog doesn't mind me doing laundry by hand. And without the girlfirend living with me, I have much less laundry too lol. Blow Me Up Tom
"Work smarter not harder" is a reminder not to overwork yourself. Some people think they can just throw more hours at a task and expect improvement, which is true to a point, but it often leads to burnout, injury, and other careless mistakes.
Sure, and I agree. but as a saying it falls short in my opinion. there are many who misunderstand this and many who use it in the wrong way. More than not I see it used as a cop out. Also. I think our work ethic has diminished. Those with poor work ethic will find very quickly that All tasks require hard work. it is an assumed base line for me.
@@CROWSFOOT Oh, OK! In my field, education, I see many teachers and many students who push themselves so hard they burn out, and somehow they never saw it coming.
It’s always the case on a build site with many workers and the productivity is low it’s because there’s to many chiefs and not enough indians...there’s been too many build sites I’ve been on that there’s been more mistakes because of poorly skills and management you be surprised how many tradie’s who can’t read and interpret a building plans...I’m talking about major mistakes where the cost are in the many thousands of dollars sometimes in the hundreds of thousands....I’m a builder as well and I refuse to accept urgent jobs because to do something fast you cut corners on safety and the quality of work which is a recipe for disaster and customers not happy with end result..you have to have a competent crew where everybody takes pride in their craft...
Don't try this at home,,, it's how I built the place,, lol, sketchy and questionable are my favorite ways to do it,,, great job, just a side note, when working with green lumber, the more you can bolt together the sooner it moves as one, and very little
Proper post and beam joints and angle iron wouldn't be needed. Read this book The Timber-frame Home: Design, Construction, Finishing Book by Tedd Benson
I have another video coming up with interlocking joints. In this particular case I was up against time and what the engineer would sign off on... Thanks for sharing.
The purpose is to tell people why I am doing certain tasks. The channel is geared toward education. You are the only person who has asked such a question so far. Another person wanted to listen to what I was saying, but didn't want to hear the music... And yet another was so happy that I was telling viewers what I was doing and why... so...
finally, I am using trade terms and describing standards for methodologies and identifying specific processes. I am an instructor and I work with apprentices every week. so I am interested in an instructive narrative. The New York comment was hilarious!
Here's one thing you could do if you don't want to hear anything: turn the volume off. I often will turn the video off, for example, if what I'm watching doesn't appeal to me. I for one am grateful to know what is being done and why. Semper Fi Zane, and keep up the great work.
Awesome stuff! Very impressed! Keep it up!
Thank you Rusty!
Nice work. I like your creativities.
People are so dependent on THE MACHINES of all kinds. I washed a shirt by hand once, and my girlfriend thought i was nuts. She's gone, and my dog doesn't mind me doing laundry by hand. And without the girlfirend living with me, I have much less laundry too lol. Blow Me Up Tom
I love this!!! lol!!
Dude! Your kid is so big now!!
"Work smarter not harder" is a reminder not to overwork yourself. Some people think they can just throw more hours at a task and expect improvement, which is true to a point, but it often leads to burnout, injury, and other careless mistakes.
Sure, and I agree. but as a saying it falls short in my opinion. there are many who misunderstand this and many who use it in the wrong way. More than not I see it used as a cop out. Also. I think our work ethic has diminished. Those with poor work ethic will find very quickly that All tasks require hard work. it is an assumed base line for me.
@@CROWSFOOT Oh, OK! In my field, education, I see many teachers and many students who push themselves so hard they burn out, and somehow they never saw it coming.
@@dper1112 Yes, I see that too... I am an educator as well.
It’s always the case on a build site with many workers and the productivity is low it’s because there’s to many chiefs and not enough indians...there’s been too many build sites I’ve been on that there’s been more mistakes because of poorly skills and management you be surprised how many tradie’s who can’t read and interpret a building plans...I’m talking about major mistakes where the cost are in the many thousands of dollars sometimes in the hundreds of thousands....I’m a builder as well and I refuse to accept urgent jobs because to do something fast you cut corners on safety and the quality of work which is a recipe for disaster and customers not happy with end result..you have to have a competent crew where everybody takes pride in their craft...
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Don't try this at home,,, it's how I built the place,, lol, sketchy and questionable are my favorite ways to do it,,, great job, just a side note, when working with green lumber, the more you can bolt together the sooner it moves as one, and very little
great advice all round!
Proper post and beam joints and angle iron wouldn't be needed.
Read this book
The Timber-frame Home: Design, Construction, Finishing
Book by Tedd Benson
I have another video coming up with interlocking joints. In this particular case I was up against time and what the engineer would sign off on... Thanks for sharing.
Mate, why the continual chatter? Can't we just enjoy the video without the documentary approach???
The purpose is to tell people why I am doing certain tasks. The channel is geared toward education. You are the only person who has asked such a question so far. Another person wanted to listen to what I was saying, but didn't want to hear the music... And yet another was so happy that I was telling viewers what I was doing and why... so...
I do, very much appreciate the feedback! Thank you for sharing.
finally, I am using trade terms and describing standards for methodologies and identifying specific processes. I am an instructor and I work with apprentices every week. so I am interested in an instructive narrative. The New York comment was hilarious!
Here's one thing you could do if you don't want to hear anything: turn the volume off. I often will turn the video off, for example, if what I'm watching doesn't appeal to me. I for one am grateful to know what is being done and why. Semper Fi Zane, and keep up the great work.