@@NanoDeer I have to dabble with code at work, but it's very infrequent...so let met tell you, when I come back 6+ months later I am SO thankful for those comments I left myself because I'll never remember why I did something a certain way 😅
Fr lol, I’m perfectly fine with people not cussing at all, but there are a lot of UA-camrs who just cuss way too much because it’s funny I guess? But there's a point when the video isn't about baking and more about how many different cuss words they can get out
Theres definitely a cheat to comedy with using swearing as a crutch. A lot of tue best comedians either dont swear or try swear very little for that exact reason.
@@zaybud6515I don't know about you, but I and most people I know cuss a lot because it's just a part of our vocabulary. A habit, even. Not really something for fun.
I have a medium sized wood mallet I use for adjusting my wood bodied planes (and for other tasks). I prefer not to use a metal hammer for this. Someone above mentioned that German made planes have strike buttons on the rear of the plane - and I have some with both rear and top strike points.
Rex, I admire how much your personality shines through in your shorts. It's like full length video snark in 30 seconds. Also, I bought plans for your advanced joiners mallet and can't wait to get started. All I need is a nice piece of Ash. 😂
I was taught by a woodworker at a history museum that you don't want to hit the iron, you want to hit the front end instead. So the back end for shallower, the front end for deeper.
@@Dennis-ud2nh not on the button, but on the front. Opposite of how he knocks on the back to set it shallower - you're knocking the body relative to the iron.
Some years ago I was watching an old carpenter planing with wooden hand planes. Sometimes between some strokes he tapped the plane against the table adjusting the iron. No hammer. His moves and tapping were looking so natural and elegant you don't recognise the adjustments as such. There was absolutly no delay in his shavings. Having no screws he didn't spend time screwing e.g. when resharpening. Just a tap tap.
"Superman! Rex Krueger is back at the scene of the crime!" "... You mean Lex Luthor?" "Nope, that's the name he gave me." ".. What's he doing?" "We think he's fixing a cabinet with hand tools."
So I’ve been walking around the house looking for all the “Hey Dumbass” buttons to test out my new hammer. I don’t think ikea has adopted this idea yet …..
I have a Stanley wooden hand plane that *does* have an adjuster. The handle is cast metal, I am guessing zinc, and the mechanism seems to be identical to the Bailey #3 I have, except instead of the typical metal shoe it has a plate that mounts on a 28" long wooden block.
I just got this reel after helping my inlaws clean out their recently deceased parents house. Found a chest full of woodworking tools from the mid 1800s to mid 1900s. A bunch of Scioto/Ohio Tools planes and chisels. A few old Stanely Rule and Level No 35 and 26s. And 3 old saws. 2 old Richardson Bros dated to be most likely pre 1900 and a H Disston & Sons that had a medallion dated at 1877-78. All this dating done by me and google only really certain on the Disston because their medalions changed by the year. The chest is believed to have belonged to the father in laws grand father.
As a guy who hasn't used one yet, I have some dumb questions. If the blade is loose enough to do that, what keeps it from slipping back when you are using it? Also when tapped, what keeps it from coming out tilted unevenly?
Can someone explain to me why a metal hammer would be used for this application rather than a wooden mallet? I see it a fair bit but it seems counterintuitive so I’m curious.
I too leave "Hey Dumbass" reminds all over my shop 🤙
It’s better to be called a dumbass by your smartass reminders than to be a dumbass holding a jacked up project with stumpy nubs instead of fingers.
Reminders*************
I do the same thing programming. Little comments in my code that read, "don't touch me dumbass", etc
@@NanoDeer I have to dabble with code at work, but it's very infrequent...so let met tell you, when I come back 6+ months later I am SO thankful for those comments I left myself because I'll never remember why I did something a certain way 😅
This is the PERFECT amount of profanity lol
bad opinion
Fr lol, I’m perfectly fine with people not cussing at all, but there are a lot of UA-camrs who just cuss way too much because it’s funny I guess? But there's a point when the video isn't about baking and more about how many different cuss words they can get out
Theres definitely a cheat to comedy with using swearing as a crutch. A lot of tue best comedians either dont swear or try swear very little for that exact reason.
@@Hequinyou mean unnecessary
@@zaybud6515I don't know about you, but I and most people I know cuss a lot because it's just a part of our vocabulary. A habit, even. Not really something for fun.
How did he know my nickname 🤨 🤣
I was almost 10 years old before finding out name wasn't
"DAMN-IT ALLAN " . . . . 😮
@@allanblount2449 I can imagine you writing that as your name on a paper in school💀😂
The makers are probably friends with our dads lol
I lerned hard way that wooden mallet should be used on wooden parts. My wooden plane cracked while i was trying to adjust it..
Sad
At least a ball peen hammer, he went straight at it with the claw hammer
You can tell his has too lol
That’s what I was thinking and then I also noticed his has a crack in the front of it
I have a medium sized wood mallet I use for adjusting my wood bodied planes (and for other tasks). I prefer not to use a metal hammer for this.
Someone above mentioned that German made planes have strike buttons on the rear of the plane - and I have some with both rear and top strike points.
“ *Lightly* “
No
We have that one Irish guy to unconsciously teach us this
we really are just all watching the same woodworking shorts, huh?
Fr
Him and his love of ash.
@@hankrearden20 he would tap ash all day given the chance
Lmao I've gotta get back to the Irish
Rex, I admire how much your personality shines through in your shorts. It's like full length video snark in 30 seconds. Also, I bought plans for your advanced joiners mallet and can't wait to get started. All I need is a nice piece of Ash. 😂
Bro gets no sleep💀
Bros the vsauce of carpentry
The wooden planes in Germany actually specifically have the strike button made of metal on the backside of the plane
Can verify. Some have both top and rear.
I was taught by a woodworker at a history museum that you don't want to hit the iron, you want to hit the front end instead. So the back end for shallower, the front end for deeper.
But in this video he says that striking any of those areas makes it shallower
@@Dennis-ud2nh not on the button, but on the front. Opposite of how he knocks on the back to set it shallower - you're knocking the body relative to the iron.
Yeah nah, you're taught to hit the iron in German carpentey school and literature. If you look at old plane irons, the ends are absolute battered.
There's a video from Blackburn that shows you not to hit the iron! It is taught but it's a bad habit to hit the iron.
Some years ago I was watching an old carpenter planing with wooden hand planes. Sometimes between some strokes he tapped the plane against the table adjusting the iron. No hammer. His moves and tapping were looking so natural and elegant you don't recognise the adjustments as such. There was absolutly no delay in his shavings.
Having no screws he didn't spend time screwing e.g. when resharpening. Just a tap tap.
I can't tell if you love them or hate them😆
Yes. I think the answer is yes.
Adam ray is the hardest working man in comedy right now
Bro has the ultimate supervillain name
"Superman! Rex Krueger is back at the scene of the crime!"
"... You mean Lex Luthor?"
"Nope, that's the name he gave me."
".. What's he doing?"
"We think he's fixing a cabinet with hand tools."
whats crazy is that if i knew nothing and was told to hit it with a hammer, i would avoid the button.
This entire video was recorded specifically so he could say that last line.
Same energy as the weight loss guy calling us cunts!😂 love the stuff!
Dude this guy is like the John Cryer of Woodworking and I am here for it. Subscribed.
This guy gets me.
He knows I'm a dumbass.
bros got beef with the people he first learned from
Click bait title for shorts is something I'm actually in for, this was awesome
Instructions unclear i launched my plane across the shop with the force of thor
Dude write that in your plan with strike plates because that’s hilarious
I've been taking out my iron and adjusting it anew for every time I use mine. This is so helpfull. Thank you
This is the first im ever hearing of a "strike button" and now i wonder what other tools/objects have one
So I’ve been walking around the house looking for all the “Hey Dumbass” buttons to test out my new hammer. I don’t think ikea has adopted this idea yet …..
My wood planes are missing that button. I thought it was for a handle. Lol
I have a soviet handplane and its wooden but also has a nut you can twist to asjust the blade.
I have a Stanley wooden hand plane that *does* have an adjuster. The handle is cast metal, I am guessing zinc, and the mechanism seems to be identical to the Bailey #3 I have, except instead of the typical metal shoe it has a plate that mounts on a 28" long wooden block.
That's a Transitional Plane. Lots of cool history there
my grandad was a master carpenter but he quit when power tools became common and went into teaching woodwork to high school kids
Now I know that isn’t a broken off knob.
When did Steve-o learn woodshop
I love your nice positive voice calling me a dumbass. Very funny 😄
The dumbass part got me
Oh fuck, I didn't notice the loop, very good!
Here's your sign!
Blessings abundant Sir and season's greetings
Crawford out 🙏🏻🔥⚒️🧙🏼♂️
Jeez. Didnt need to be insulted by my plane
I just got this reel after helping my inlaws clean out their recently deceased parents house. Found a chest full of woodworking tools from the mid 1800s to mid 1900s. A bunch of Scioto/Ohio Tools planes and chisels. A few old Stanely Rule and Level No 35 and 26s. And 3 old saws. 2 old Richardson Bros dated to be most likely pre 1900 and a H Disston & Sons that had a medallion dated at 1877-78. All this dating done by me and google only really certain on the Disston because their medalions changed by the year. The chest is believed to have belonged to the father in laws grand father.
As a guy who hasn't used one yet, I have some dumb questions. If the blade is loose enough to do that, what keeps it from slipping back when you are using it? Also when tapped, what keeps it from coming out tilted unevenly?
The blade is kept in place by friction from the plain itself. Normal use does not exert enough force to significantly shift the blade.
I feel personally attacked, and I have no clue what the fuck he is holding in his hand
Wouldn’t the wood dot concentrate the hammer strike to a point? Thats smart af
me who just hits the metal part from the bottom
😂 I'm thinking a rubber mallet should be fine.
me about to fucken smash the end of the iron with a sledge:
"striking the toe is more sensitive" your are correct.
Miss an opportunity to say "back that iron off" like Juvenile
Bro is turning into mega mind
I love your channel😂
You look like the Louis Rossmann of Carpenters
dude is helpful and informative but looks like The Serial Killer Next door idk why
Can someone explain to me why a metal hammer would be used for this application rather than a wooden mallet? I see it a fair bit but it seems counterintuitive so I’m curious.
Percussive adjustment
Will that crack increase over time with hitting it? Serious inquiry.
Sorry but bros jawline is magnificently carved.
Ah yes, I've also noticed when I strike my toe it's more sensitive.
I work for a general contractor you would be surprised how many times per day I say hey dumbass to myself
Ok Sir now finish my table
tinish my fable
Thanks for the smile brother.
I should make one of these
He somehow looks a bit alike with Alan from 2 and a half men
I can’t explain it… but he looks like Steve-o
dot forgot tumb inside to hold the blade whit the chunk of wood so it wont drop on the groundn axcidently eand make dent
Is there nothing Johnny Sins can't do?
Wow such an awesome presentation of a topic i don't care at all about
Lovely!
What's kind of wood is that gray block at the end of that handle?
Good tip.👍👍👍
What about that crack there huh
As he said in the video “Hey dumbass!” That happens to tools over time they get old and wear out.
His head disturbs me
I have no idea what that object is
Thats a Raubank
*lightly*
Yep that’s me.
Would you recommend a wooden plane or a metal one? Im going to start getting into carpentry, and i have a metal one, but ive always been a purist
Wooden hand planes also needs wooden hammer
Does it fly?
Kids aren’t listening THATS WHAT HAMMERS ARE FOR!
He looks like David goggins if he was white
I see it
im starting to think bald people with too shiny of a head arent real.
Anything that can be fixed with a hammer is the best
albino david goggins
Looks like he plained his head
What's a handplane?
Ofcourse you hit it there. Thats why the metal button is there
The plain I have has a peice of metal screwed onto a plank does that count as wooden
Or use a wooden mallet
I have to do that with my normal plane its that bad
one of my mentors for a highschool club liked to say that your payload electronics should be in PHD mode
Push Here Dummy
but when it have a horn..you can't do it
So…it’s hammer time?
Bro use a mallet not a metal hammer
I love wooden planes!
I feel targeted lmao
What is a wooden hand plane?
How does one make one?😂
He sounds like that ai voice
planes made in Poland have even mettal button on back of plane to hit :)
...ok next question what the hell is thst supposed to be
Mallet. Not a hanmer. Wrong tool
I, a certified dumbass; approve this message