this some great information but the fact that you need a dust collection unit and a shop vac is just simply not true. if you reduce the dust collection down, you still get the same cfm relative to the size of the hose. i have a port just for small tools and it works great.
I am using my father's Black & Decker drill from 1973 (orange and grey) and I like the chuck key. I can release the drill bit every time, something I often struggled to do with the cordless B&D hammer drill I bought 30 years ago. The black plastic sleeves on that could be very slippery for tired, sweaty hands. Plus my cordless drill batteries have given up and I can't get replacements, hence why I am now using his and it is so much better at drilling into masonry. Go chuck keys, yay!
As what most people would consider “an expert carpenter” I hardly ever use my impact driver. My Festool T18 is so smooth and powerful and the quick change system is amazing.
For me the shop vac was a non starter, too noisy and it would need many additional collector/ separator things to save the filters. I went with a 1 hp collector and scaled down my tooling which saved having to pay an electrician to up my power in my shop. One other interesting item was adding a modified Bucket Head vacuum between my table saw 2.5” outlet and the 4” dust hose.
I don't have enough clamps therefore my most used joint is butt joint renforced by two wood screws. It is pleasant to hear that this primitive style is probably strong enough.
If that woman is your wife she is an amazing actress 🤣 It was PERFECT, the fainting made me laugh harder than I thought I would, wasn't expecting it in a Staining wood video haha
I don't know why RU-vidrs dance around the main reason which is aesthetics. Yeah you'll mention it, but we all know that's the main reason. RU-vid is a visual platform and French cleats are relatively uncommon so look novel and cool. Adding shims also remove a source of strength for the cleats. The space in between wall screws can flex far more and weaken the connection. Not much, but some. Important to consider for people mounting cabinets using cleats.
I see that you are ripping and crosscutting on a standard table saw without a guard or even a riving knife and that you casually reach around and over the blade. I think that your priorities are screwed up. Safety, i.e. the attachment of your fingers, is far more important than than an attractive and slightly more useful miter saw station. Further, you entitle your video "The Miter Saw Station Everyone is Copying". Why do you think that people seeing your video wouldn't also copy your methods of table saw use?
Cool Build! You missed a good bet on the sliding miter saw, imo. You could have set up a stick on measuring tape and a marker calibrated for lengths between the stop block and the blade. So you could slide the saw to 36 1/4", bump your finished end to the right and cut 36 1/4" , similar to the scale on a table saw. Wouldn't work for very short or very long cuts, but for so many common lengths it would be pretty sweet and it would be so easy!
My husband and I have a small garage shop where all the benches and tools slide against the wall to make room to park cars, and I pull the big stuff like routing table and tablesaw outside so I have a leaf blower and shopvac .....why am I watching this? It's like a gods damned fishing show. XD
The issue where the bit stays stuck in the screw head, is solvable by using a quick release bit holder. The big brands like DeWalt have their own versions of it, but there is a good chance it is in one of the bit sets.
A french cleat are super fun and it wall was my first woodworking project, which should tell you how easy they are, just be careful as I didn't round over the edges of the cleats, and boy who would have thought wood could cut you like a knife! Also you can always improve your existing cleat wall holders as you skills get better so its a constant testing and learning project too :D
Zakladni problém odsávání, jsou absence hodnot ztratay externiho tlaku. Kazdy komponent vložený do systemu vytvari ztratu externiho tlaku a vyrobci tento důležitý udaj nikde neudávají. Proto je lepsi odsávání vyrobit z radialnich ventilátorů s vysokou hodnotou externiho tlaku sám a kompenzovat tak budoucí ztrátu externiho tlaku po vložení cyklonu.
PS: na tvé instalaci potrubí odsávání nevidím uzemnění, bez kterého hrozí dva problémy. Ulpívání prachu na vnitřní straně potrubí a co je horší, požár. Máš potrubí uzemněné ?
One thing we don’t want is for our cuts to go cattywampus. All seriousness aside, I may just stick with pegboard so I don’t have to fabricate all those brackets and doodads. Keep up the good work!
Honestly so far so good I like the thignees of the acrilic I got one but I do put more acrylic surrounding the original one to make stronger and the end I put couple small wheels well I give 10 out 10 you don’t have any design to start whit and comes good actually yes you need strong sucking power 👍
You appear to be making the classic mistake of talking about two different materials as though they were the same. Woodworking creates waste material - no question - but that material is in two forms. The first is relatively large and comes from machines like planers and routers, and is usually referred to as chips, while the second is very small indeed and comes from saws for example. It is called dust. Some of that dust is microscopic and will hang in the air of your workspace for a very long time. Breathing it in, is very bad for you... Removing both of these waste materials requires different types of extraction. There used to be a fantastic set of information concerning waste extraction written some time ago by a very experienced woodworker but I can't find the source. It is worth digging it out!
I bought my quick clamp ducting from Blast Gate Co., it was half the price of the stuff from Oneida. Just FYI for anyone that wants to save some money.
I will never understand why everybody uses stain directly out of a can. Why not at least thin it? Conditioner is just stupid. "A fool and his money". Just "pop the grain", and you will do the same thing.
Ditto on everything said...but I'm curious as to the green panels on the walls...look to small to be sound dampening or closed storage cabinets...too lazy to go thru all the comments to see if there's any mention so I'll just ask
one thing that i saw: with rabbet, miter, butt and box joints you CAN repair them with same peace of wood because it is mostly intact. When you reinforce rabbet and miter 1 wood split beyond repair. I am no woodworker, i just know how to screw 2 peaces of wood together (always pilot with holes...). From time to time i stumble upon videos like this where some Guy Who Knows do glue test and i am always amazed how good wood glues to wood.
Your findings echo my own, and are why I mostly don't even bother with pocket screws any more. For most joints, I just use my dowelmax. Otherwise, the construction screws.