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I put clear shipping tape on the wood, then squirt the hot glue on that. I also fold over the end of the tape, so there's a tab to pull for removal. I do that any time I know I'll be removing any kind of tape.
You mean to put tape in a circle around the wood, same shape as hot glue levee and not cover the hole right? Since if we cover the hole the epoxy won't flow through the tape.
My thought too. Ideally, move the saw forward to have enough room behind it so wood won't hit the back wall, and open the garage door so you have room in front.
It would have to be pretty heavy traffic to not find plenty of time to stick a board out the door for a minute or less. And most garages have a drive area that you turn into to get to your garage. They don't butt right onto the street. I suspect the traffic issue would be minimal.
@@GaryStewart2020 That would not have any significant effect if you only opened the door when you needed it open (less than a minute for one board, a few minutes for several), and did not plan to do this if it was raining.
Came here to say (well, ask) the same thing - on smooth surfaces I'd use Isopropyl Alchohol (or Isopropanol, depending on where you are) and I assume the same would work on wood.. or does the alcohol affect the wood itself?
Wow, that is one beautiful project. The only issue I can see with it, is when you open the doors up you are going to be constantly down on your knees to put stuff into those nicely made compartments, because the doors are going to completely block your view being the cabinet is mounted so low to the floor. I think I would have opted to have those doors swing down. Well, you're a young guy and maybe you won't be accessing those compartments too often. Best regards, Ted Long Island, NY
I often use hot melt glue to mount woodturning blanks. When I am done turning, I spray some denatured alcohol (99%) on the glue, let it sit for a moment, and then I peel the glue off with a putty knife. The alcohol evaporates quickly, does not leave a residue, and does not raise the wood grain. ✔✔✔ Also, acetone or denatured alcohol will clean up wet epoxy "smears" -- as will white vinegar. Scrape off the excess epoxy and wipe up the remainder with one of these solvents and a clean cloth. BTW: A Stanley #80 cabinet scraper works well for removing glue and epoxy -- and it is easier on the hands than a card scraper.
I always enjoy your videos, they are true to how some of us struggle in small workshops with limited equipment yet achieve great results. keep up the great work!!
Yeah, I got me one of those battery adapters. I've got nothing but milwaukee tools and batteries. But then I saw a Dewalt hammer drill (normally $250) on sale for $80. And I needed a hammer drill. But I refuse to have to buy a bunch of different batteries for different brands of tools. But with that battery adapter, it's not an issue. And it totally works like a champ! Thank you for showing that! Just FYI, don't use the adapter to charge the batteries on a different brand charger. It will destroy the battery and not hold a charge anymore. They come with a warning about it, but I was ignorant and had to try it myself...😢
I'm amazed by the amount your able to do in that workspace. When you move to a large shop at some point the sky will be the limit. Great work. Care to share your fav local supplier for rough lumber? Im on the sw side of Cbus. Keep it up !
11:8 Best trick of my life when making lines. After making a point with a pen, keep pen in point and grab the square and move it toward the pen. That way you make a line on the point instead of square+pen messing with your alignment.
Fastest edge joining alignment I've used is splines. Set up a router with a slot cutter and plane your scrap pieces to be the spine material. Have a wide variety of edge joining options, biscuit joiner( permanently retired), Domino (mostly collects dust), edge to edge, etc... splining is the fastest and most precise.
A few things to help out. - Hot glue releases fairly easily using denatured alcohol. ISA works too, but not quite as well. - Sharpening a card scraper is really no big deal. Once you get the hang of it, you can do it in about 5 minutes or less. I LOVE using a card scraper. If done right, no sanding needed after. File off old bevel while card scraper is held in a clamp. Next, put card scraper on a known flat surface, I use a chunk of granite, and use hardened steel rod to draw out the sharpened edge. Then use the same rod to ease the sharp edge over into a bur. It literally takes a few minutes.
When glueing up the edges, I always rotate the grain on every board to prevent potential bow. One board will have a (smile😊) direction at each end, and the next one should have a (frown ☹️) direction. I learned this from my father who built a chair for Henry Kissinger, so I thought he might have a point.
An interesting thought for an epoxy dam - use a bowling ball plug dam. People plug their bowling balls with epoxy to redrill them all the time. To keep the resin in without spilling all over, companies make these plug dams that adhere to the surface of the ball and they just peel up when done. They come in ovals or circles and a bunch of different sizes. Just look up bowling plug dam and voila.
Are you not allowed to open the garage door when you're planing? I don't actually need to, but I usually do just so the whole neighborhood can bask in the sounds.
For the freedom cleats it's not a bad idea to also put a keyhole on the left and right side of your cabinet so that you can have a locking bar shoved in. This way it slides in underneath the part that's attached to the wall and prevents the cabinet from being lifted upward and just popping off the wall.
Saw you video on what Instagram did, awesome attitude, good videos, this is my third video of yours I’m watching. Keep pushing forward, be stubborn, will your way through it, God bless you.
First thing I thought of when you mentioned "your patented hip thrust" was Jason from Bourbon Moth and a few seconds later he shows up. Gotta love the woodworking creators community. Love your videos, keep up the good work!!
Absolutely beautiful and love all the details of how you built this. However, < incoming! >I gotta say that it is odd to me that the cabinet doors are basically at knee height and you made them open up instead of down - seems very awkward to me.
You can use plasticine modelling clay to make a dam. it's easy to apply, just roll it out and then it comes off really easily. You can also reuse most of it so it's economical too.
I noticed how clean the back of the boards were with the epoxy filler just using packing tape. You might consider filling holes that go all the way through the board from the back using the packing tape on the top side of the board. You may need to be more careful in filling the holes and leaving slack in the tape to ensure the epoxy stands proud of the top surface to be "scraped" flush. Then you can use the tape method on the backside as well, and voila, no more hot glue.
Tip for getting the hot glue off easier. Take an old putty knife, the wider ones are better because they are a bit flimsier and bend easier. Take something and put a bit of a knife edge on the putty knife, not super sharp but enough. Then if you have a leather strop hone it a bit then use that to get the glue up. Its wide enough it shouldn't dig into the wood. I've used this trick a few times to get different substances off of projects I didn't want to tear up. The one I'm using is the 6 inch wide I had left over from remodeling my house when I bought it.
Why not cut your boards to rough length before jointing, gluing, etc.? You could have planed them to thickness as well after rough cutting to length, saving you that added expense. The circuit breaker popping is because your tablesaw using a 20 amp motor, which is why the plug wasn't the standard 15 amp plug. You're using a 20amp to 15amp adapter, but your wire and circuits are still only 15amp. Add in that your dust collector and lights are also maybe on the same circuit and overloads are inevitable.
Haven't read the comments, forgive any "repeat" ideas... but for the hot-glue removal, combine the "packing tape" concept from the other side, with the hot glue. Lay down a strip of packing tape, cut out an appropriate sized hole to let the resin through, then make the hot-glue dam on top of the tape (it may melt depending on heat setting and tape type, but it won't strongly adhere to the wood). Then for removal, simply peeling up the tape will remove the hot melt glue from the surface (basically blocking the glue from sticking into the wood pores). At least that's a thought, obviously need to test-trial on scrap first! Love the channel!
Nice hot glue trick. Is it maybe an idea to put tape in-between the glue and the wood? So that you don't have that brittle glue to remove because it's stuck on more structured tape. I'm curious if that works for you?
Awesome results, great videography. A small comment. It looked like you used the larger, ripping, teeth on your Japanese handsaw to cut crossgrain, and the smaller, crossgrain teeth, to rip, when you removed the small piece off of one board. A minor point, in a great project video. Thanks.
6:50pm, I’ve been looking for 2.8mm white lead that writes on walnut and haven’t found any. Would you share what you are using, it appears to work well.
I would say, end grain to end grain on your miters the dominos are in fact adding lots of strength by converting those into side grain to side grain glue-ups.
Haha 9:10 blue tape over the left window on your fence. Mine looks exactly the same after I cut a board two inches too narrow. One of my biggest complaints with the Harvey fence.
Nice! I have been kicking around some ideas for TV stand, or a Media Console as you refer to yours. I like it! I'm watching your video right around dinner time, think I'll head down to McDowells and get some of their famous Fresh Fries....see you on the next one!
I read somewhere that 84% of the glue used by DYIs is either squeezed out or just sits inside a loose mortice. Don't worry about glue starvation. The biggest cause of that is clamping too tightly. That's a whole 'nother topic that gets into the weeds. Worth the journey.
Why is it that I can only thumbs up this video the once? Bro!!! Brilliant piece, and I really love the cameos. Haha. Thank you for sharing your creative journey with the rest of us.
When you are ready to remove the hot glue try applying some isopropyl alcohol along the edges of the glue. It will slow loosen the glue and wick under it. You may need to apply more alcohol.
Try putting down blue tape and then hot glue over top of the blue tape. Now you peel up the blue tape off of the wood and not the hot glue. This will work for a deep poor resin that doesn't get super hot like the fast set resin does... So your mileage may vary.
Really good video. You said all those dominos were not for strength but alignment. I was just wondering why you didn’t use the tape folding method using reinforced packing tape. That is more efficient in both material and hassle, not to mention time. I’m just saying ….
I have the same problems with having enough power to keep the breaker on. I cheated and just setup a permanent power cord running from a 220 outlet on my house, out to my garage.
@25:22 You could have made a rabbet cut instead of using the nibble method, or a dado set. To make a good, clean, rabbet, you would want to make a jig to support your board.
Great work Eric, it's been a while. That build is something you should be proud of! To make it a bit easier on yourself consider opening your garage door when needed and also I find it helpful to use a small amount of denatured alcohol to help release the hot glue from the wood. 👍
Аbout the automatic fuse disconnection - install a fuse in your workshop and it will trip when there is an overload from the tools and you will be able to turn it on when it happens again. And you can also try to install soft start on the tools with high current consumption at startup Good luck
So, probably a dumb question, but I’m just learning, and I see it as the only dumb question, is the one not asked. So, as for the question, why only moderate clamping pressure when gluing two boards together?
Instead of the hot glue dam, how about plumbers putty, make a little rope/snake and loop it around the void, and lightly press it onto the wood. If it holds back water, it'll surely hold back epoxy.
I have to give a thumbs up to woodworkers who dare to post their work, because of course it invites all sorts of endless backseat driving comments from the Peanut Gallery. I enjoy wood projects but am certainly no expert, so I always learn something from videos like this. Thanks!
as another woodworker in Columbus I’m pretty sure I know exactly where you paid a ton of money for banana lumber hahaha. the people who work there are great but I basically just buy exotic offcuts there.
Another nice video… I looked thru / at several of your links and (spot) listened to your video a couple times and I am still trying to figure out what “hard wax finish” you are using. I never seen a ‘mix it up’ version. What brand are you using? After magnifying the UA-cam video as much as, I could the label on the can looked like "Desting," however an internet machine search showed this was (likely) "Vesting:" the "V" on the can looked like a "D"-another weird font. So, this appears to be more like a Rubio MonoCoat product: a decent, but spendy finish. Vesting also has very expensive UV light device to "instantly" cure the finish, rather than wait hours-days for it to harden. Or one can do it the old fashioned way, like Spencely. What is surprising is that it looks rather thick when it was applied, but it is a "sprayable" product. However, Spencely's orbital sander technique works well.
Swear on God the other day I was thinking I bet Eric's making so.ething pretty Dope & gonna drop a video pretty soon. Then Boom Shacka Lacka a 51+ min. cinematic banger featuring Freedom Cleets!! Hoping all is well my friend, Dirty Jersey out!!
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DOUBLE-SIDED TAPE or STICKY PUTTY to test fit before securing the screws.
“Don’t need to buy some super fancy tool to get the job done” says the guy with all the Festool stuff ….😂
i was gona say the same thing lol
I put clear shipping tape on the wood, then squirt the hot glue on that. I also fold over the end of the tape, so there's a tab to pull for removal.
I do that any time I know I'll be removing any kind of tape.
You mean to put tape in a circle around the wood, same shape as hot glue levee and not cover the hole right? Since if we cover the hole the epoxy won't flow through the tape.
Yes.
@@throngcleaver thanks for the clarification. This is like a super clever pro hack.
Boards too long? How about opening the garage door ???
If I recall, the garage is at his apartment complex so traffic would be an issue.
My thought too. Ideally, move the saw forward to have enough room behind it so wood won't hit the back wall, and open the garage door so you have room in front.
It would have to be pretty heavy traffic to not find plenty of time to stick a board out the door for a minute or less. And most garages have a drive area that you turn into to get to your garage. They don't butt right onto the street. I suspect the traffic issue would be minimal.
Other things to consider:
Temperature change
Weather currently in progress
Lighting
Sound
I don’t think it’s as simple as we would hope.
@@GaryStewart2020 That would not have any significant effect if you only opened the door when you needed it open (less than a minute for one board, a few minutes for several), and did not plan to do this if it was raining.
A little denatured alcohol will help release the hot glue from the wood. I find this helps with minimizing any tear out during removal
I see that on paintless dent repairs (for cars) all the time.
Came here to say (well, ask) the same thing - on smooth surfaces I'd use Isopropyl Alchohol (or Isopropanol, depending on where you are) and I assume the same would work on wood.. or does the alcohol affect the wood itself?
Wow, that is one beautiful project. The only issue I can see with it, is when you open the doors up you are going to be constantly down on your knees to put stuff into those nicely made compartments, because the doors are going to completely block your view being the cabinet is mounted so low to the floor. I think I would have opted to have those doors swing down.
Well, you're a young guy and maybe you won't be accessing those compartments too often.
Best regards, Ted Long Island, NY
Exactly what I was thinking.
Or choose drawers, even more convenient...
I was just about to stick up for Bourbon when he popped on screen lol. Nice
Same!
Same 😂
If you spray some denatured alcohol on the hot glue it makes it release easier in many cases.
Almost any type of alcohol will do.
I often use hot melt glue to mount woodturning blanks. When I am done turning, I spray some denatured alcohol (99%) on the glue, let it sit for a moment, and then I peel the glue off with a putty knife. The alcohol evaporates quickly, does not leave a residue, and does not raise the wood grain. ✔✔✔
Also, acetone or denatured alcohol will clean up wet epoxy "smears" -- as will white vinegar. Scrape off the excess epoxy and wipe up the remainder with one of these solvents and a clean cloth.
BTW: A Stanley #80 cabinet scraper works well for removing glue and epoxy -- and it is easier on the hands than a card scraper.
Or just use acrylic decorators caulk instead of hot glue.
I've never tried this. How strong is it and how easy is it to remove?@@andrewmccann6311
Another one is using compressed air upside-down to freeze the hot glue and it pops right up. 7:48
Getting the hot glue up: Try a paint scraper. Pull type. It’s like a card scraper. Blade is four sided. Easily rotated and sharpened.
I always enjoy your videos, they are true to how some of us struggle in small workshops with limited equipment yet achieve great results. keep up the great work!!
Yeah, I got me one of those battery adapters. I've got nothing but milwaukee tools and batteries. But then I saw a Dewalt hammer drill (normally $250) on sale for $80. And I needed a hammer drill. But I refuse to have to buy a bunch of different batteries for different brands of tools. But with that battery adapter, it's not an issue. And it totally works like a champ! Thank you for showing that!
Just FYI, don't use the adapter to charge the batteries on a different brand charger. It will destroy the battery and not hold a charge anymore. They come with a warning about it, but I was ignorant and had to try it myself...😢
I'm amazed by the amount your able to do in that workspace. When you move to a large shop at some point the sky will be the limit. Great work. Care to share your fav local supplier for rough lumber? Im on the sw side of Cbus. Keep it up !
I would recommend getting the Accuburr burnisher to sharpen your scrapers. Easy to use and works perfectly.
Really good and in depth video, really nice cabinet. Just seems a bit awkward to open the panel from the bottom of the cabinet is so low to the ground
Lots of good techniques in there Mr. Spencley. Keep the good stuff coming.
11:8 Best trick of my life when making lines. After making a point with a pen, keep pen in point and grab the square and move it toward the pen. That way you make a line on the point instead of square+pen messing with your alignment.
after seeing half a dozen Festool tools, seeing the $10 HF Warrior heat gun made me smile. Does Festool not sell a $1000 version?
Wow! The end result looked awesome! You worked hard on this and it shows. Great job and thank you for sharing your experience.
For the kreg hinge jig, I always clamp my shop vac hose close while I drill out the recess. Works perfectly.
Fastest edge joining alignment I've used is splines. Set up a router with a slot cutter and plane your scrap pieces to be the spine material. Have a wide variety of edge joining options, biscuit joiner( permanently retired), Domino (mostly collects dust), edge to edge, etc... splining is the fastest and most precise.
A few things to help out.
- Hot glue releases fairly easily using denatured alcohol. ISA works too, but not quite as well.
- Sharpening a card scraper is really no big deal. Once you get the hang of it, you can do it in about 5 minutes or less. I LOVE using a card scraper. If done right, no sanding needed after. File off old bevel while card scraper is held in a clamp. Next, put card scraper on a known flat surface, I use a chunk of granite, and use hardened steel rod to draw out the sharpened edge. Then use the same rod to ease the sharp edge over into a bur. It literally takes a few minutes.
When glueing up the edges, I always rotate the grain on every board to prevent potential bow. One board will have a (smile😊) direction at each end, and the next one should have a (frown ☹️) direction. I learned this from my father who built a chair for Henry Kissinger, so I thought he might have a point.
An interesting thought for an epoxy dam - use a bowling ball plug dam. People plug their bowling balls with epoxy to redrill them all the time. To keep the resin in without spilling all over, companies make these plug dams that adhere to the surface of the ball and they just peel up when done. They come in ovals or circles and a bunch of different sizes. Just look up bowling plug dam and voila.
Are you not allowed to open the garage door when you're planing? I don't actually need to, but I usually do just so the whole neighborhood can bask in the sounds.
For the freedom cleats it's not a bad idea to also put a keyhole on the left and right side of your cabinet so that you can have a locking bar shoved in. This way it slides in underneath the part that's attached to the wall and prevents the cabinet from being lifted upward and just popping off the wall.
Saw you video on what Instagram did, awesome attitude, good videos, this is my third video of yours I’m watching. Keep pushing forward, be stubborn, will your way through it, God bless you.
First thing I thought of when you mentioned "your patented hip thrust" was Jason from Bourbon Moth and a few seconds later he shows up. Gotta love the woodworking creators community. Love your videos, keep up the good work!!
Same 😂- Though he was bout ta steal the “domino hip thrust”-
Absolutely beautiful and love all the details of how you built this. However, < incoming! >I gotta say that it is odd to me that the cabinet doors are basically at knee height and you made them open up instead of down - seems very awkward to me.
You can use plasticine modelling clay to make a dam. it's easy to apply, just roll it out and then it comes off really easily. You can also reuse most of it so it's economical too.
I noticed how clean the back of the boards were with the epoxy filler just using packing tape. You might consider filling holes that go all the way through the board from the back using the packing tape on the top side of the board. You may need to be more careful in filling the holes and leaving slack in the tape to ensure the epoxy stands proud of the top surface to be "scraped" flush. Then you can use the tape method on the backside as well, and voila, no more hot glue.
Tip for getting the hot glue off easier. Take an old putty knife, the wider ones are better because they are a bit flimsier and bend easier. Take something and put a bit of a knife edge on the putty knife, not super sharp but enough. Then if you have a leather strop hone it a bit then use that to get the glue up. Its wide enough it shouldn't dig into the wood. I've used this trick a few times to get different substances off of projects I didn't want to tear up. The one I'm using is the 6 inch wide I had left over from remodeling my house when I bought it.
What about putting some masking tape around the knot holes, then putting the hot glue dam on top of the tape, should peel off nicely?
we used to use about 30 degrees. Another thing we did was to plane off the sharp tip just in case any debris fell into the wall cleat.
Why not cut your boards to rough length before jointing, gluing, etc.? You could have planed them to thickness as well after rough cutting to length, saving you that added expense.
The circuit breaker popping is because your tablesaw using a 20 amp motor, which is why the plug wasn't the standard 15 amp plug. You're using a 20amp to 15amp adapter, but your wire and circuits are still only 15amp. Add in that your dust collector and lights are also maybe on the same circuit and overloads are inevitable.
Haven't read the comments, forgive any "repeat" ideas... but for the hot-glue removal, combine the "packing tape" concept from the other side, with the hot glue. Lay down a strip of packing tape, cut out an appropriate sized hole to let the resin through, then make the hot-glue dam on top of the tape (it may melt depending on heat setting and tape type, but it won't strongly adhere to the wood). Then for removal, simply peeling up the tape will remove the hot melt glue from the surface (basically blocking the glue from sticking into the wood pores). At least that's a thought, obviously need to test-trial on scrap first!
Love the channel!
Nice hot glue trick. Is it maybe an idea to put tape in-between the glue and the wood? So that you don't have that brittle glue to remove because it's stuck on more structured tape. I'm curious if that works for you?
your a great inspiration to all of us who have small spaces. who thank we cant do big projects. love the channel
To get the hot glue off, just use a heat gun, then when it’s warm, just use a razor blade at a super shallow angle and the glue pops off.
Try isopropyl alcohol to release the hot glue. It worked great on solid surface coutertop, but I haven't tried it on wood yet.
Awesome results, great videography.
A small comment. It looked like you used the larger, ripping, teeth on your Japanese handsaw to cut crossgrain, and the smaller, crossgrain teeth, to rip, when you removed the small piece off of one board. A minor point, in a great project video.
Thanks.
6:50pm, I’ve been looking for 2.8mm white lead that writes on walnut and haven’t found any. Would you share what you are using, it appears to work well.
Wow! Well produced full course on modern woodworking techniques. Subscribed.
I would say, end grain to end grain on your miters the dominos are in fact adding lots of strength by converting those into side grain to side grain glue-ups.
for filling the holes I was thinking put the packing tape down cut the tape 1/2 around the defects then put the hot glue on top of the packing tape.
Haha 9:10 blue tape over the left window on your fence. Mine looks exactly the same after I cut a board two inches too narrow. One of my biggest complaints with the Harvey fence.
Nice! I have been kicking around some ideas for TV stand, or a Media Console as you refer to yours. I like it! I'm watching your video right around dinner time, think I'll head down to McDowells and get some of their famous Fresh Fries....see you on the next one!
I read somewhere that 84% of the glue used by DYIs is either squeezed out or just sits inside a loose mortice. Don't worry about glue starvation. The biggest cause of that is clamping too tightly. That's a whole 'nother topic that gets into the weeds. Worth the journey.
Thanks for the insight on a beautiful-looking floating shelf, great job!
Quick bit of masking tape between the wood surface and hot glue allows you to just lift of the tape and take the glue with it
Why is it that I can only thumbs up this video the once?
Bro!!! Brilliant piece, and I really love the cameos. Haha.
Thank you for sharing your creative journey with the rest of us.
When you are ready to remove the hot glue try applying some isopropyl alcohol along the edges of the glue. It will slow loosen the glue and wick under it. You may need to apply more alcohol.
Try isopropyl alcohol to remove hot glue. I can't say if it works on wood but it definitely works on other surfaces.
Try putting down blue tape and then hot glue over top of the blue tape. Now you peel up the blue tape off of the wood and not the hot glue. This will work for a deep poor resin that doesn't get super hot like the fast set resin does... So your mileage may vary.
Really good video. You said all those dominos were not for strength but alignment. I was just wondering why you didn’t use the tape folding method using reinforced packing tape. That is more efficient in both material and hassle, not to mention time. I’m just saying ….
I just use a bolt to hold two clamps together. The jig makes sense but i imagine its over done
I have the same problems with having enough power to keep the breaker on. I cheated and just setup a permanent power cord running from a 220 outlet on my house, out to my garage.
Hi, nice work you are doing there!
Did you try with plasticine instead of hot glue to build those dams?
Great job on the cabinet! Love those dovetails too - they're tricky.
@25:22 You could have made a rabbet cut instead of using the nibble method, or a dado set. To make a good, clean, rabbet, you would want to make a jig to support your board.
When the hand-tool bug gets you those HF chisels will become your beater set so your good set stays nice.
Question: you said the saw blade was just sharpened. What kinds can be sharpened and where did you get it sharpened?
The chapter headings 🤣🤣 Does anyone else come here just for the ASMR voiceover? No? Just me? Oh.
Great work Eric, it's been a while. That build is something you should be proud of! To make it a bit easier on yourself consider opening your garage door when needed and also I find it helpful to use a small amount of denatured alcohol to help release the hot glue from the wood. 👍
The door flip up, no? Seems an odd choice given how low it's mounted? Beuaitful work though, came out looking fabulous.
Just an idea but could you put painter’s tape around the void and put the hot glue on that instead of directly on the wood?
Аbout the automatic fuse disconnection - install a fuse in your workshop and it will trip when there is an overload from the tools and you will be able to turn it on when it happens again. And you can also try to install soft start on the tools with high current consumption at startup
Good luck
Almost triggered by patented hip thrust. Don't mess with mothman😂
Great job!! That turned out amazing 😍😍😍. Love all the tips and cameos!
This is all good, BUT why do the doors open upward if the shelf is so low?
So, probably a dumb question, but I’m just learning, and I see it as the only dumb question, is the one not asked.
So, as for the question, why only moderate clamping pressure when gluing two boards together?
Instead of the hot glue dam, how about plumbers putty, make a little rope/snake and loop it around the void, and lightly press it onto the wood. If it holds back water, it'll surely hold back epoxy.
I have to give a thumbs up to woodworkers who dare to post their work, because of course it invites all sorts of endless backseat driving comments from the Peanut Gallery. I enjoy wood projects but am certainly no expert, so I always learn something from videos like this. Thanks!
Why don’t you use some painters tape underneath the hot glue?
(It’s only my untested (perhaps dumb 🤷♂️) idea
I would color the epoxy to match the surrounding wood, not black.
That turned out beautiful. Thank you.
as another woodworker in Columbus I’m pretty sure I know exactly where you paid a ton of money for banana lumber hahaha. the people who work there are great but I basically just buy exotic offcuts there.
drinking game: take a drink every time Eric says 'perfect' or 'perfectly'.
Great video! Lots of good techniques and cameos. Keep up the great work.
Another nice video… I looked thru / at several of your links and (spot) listened to your video a couple times and I am still trying to figure out what “hard wax finish” you are using. I never seen a ‘mix it up’ version. What brand are you using?
After magnifying the UA-cam video as much as, I could the label on the can looked like "Desting," however an internet machine search showed this was (likely) "Vesting:" the "V" on the can looked like a "D"-another weird font. So, this appears to be more like a Rubio MonoCoat product: a decent, but spendy finish. Vesting also has very expensive UV light device to "instantly" cure the finish, rather than wait hours-days for it to harden. Or one can do it the old fashioned way, like Spencely. What is surprising is that it looks rather thick when it was applied, but it is a "sprayable" product. However, Spencely's orbital sander technique works well.
What happened to the battery power source you said could eliminate your power and breaker issues?
Be nice to Doug! Be NICE TO DOUG!! 😂😂😂
I don't know what it does to the wood or resin, but 91% IPA will loosen dried hot glue.
You could try a styptic pencil or powder to help against those bleeds if wearing the latex gloves is annoying
Blue painters tape under your hot glue. Put the tape down add your hot glue cut the tape out of the center.
Freedom cleat!! Hahaha!! 🤣🤣😂😂
If you aren't going to open the garage door to be out of your way, then stop complaining about it.
It's actually a portal to the twilight zone.
Eric sorry I haven’t been around to support the channel I was deployed for 7 months. Just wanted to pop in and remind you GO BIG BLUE!!!!!!!😊
Swear on God the other day I was thinking I bet Eric's making so.ething pretty Dope & gonna drop a video pretty soon. Then Boom Shacka Lacka a 51+ min. cinematic banger featuring Freedom Cleets!! Hoping all is well my friend, Dirty Jersey out!!
I see that Woodwerks price tag on that walnut 🙂
Hi from Columbus!
I seriously thought my screen turned off when you tripped the breaker
Can you use silicone instead of hot glue?
Ive waited SOOO long to see this video. Finallyyyyyy!
Am I allowed to make something out of wood other than Walnut with tools other than Festool? I don’t want to get fined.
use blue tape under your hot glue dams, and you got easy removal
Had to like and subscribe because Jason randomly appearing made me spit out my coffee
Try using dental sticky wax to build that dam...comes off relatively easily.
I bought the Dewalt palm router..buy the plunge base and it is even better
Warm that epoxy and glue with a heat gun. It'll soften it and make it easier to remove.
Some tape around the knot and hot melt glue over that. You have plenty of green tape, I see.
Hot glue releases easily with alcohol. Well… I know it works on painted surfaces. Never tried it on wood, but should be the same principle.