Welcome to the channel! My name is Dave, from Klassen Woodworks We build custom cabinetry and other wood related products Anything and everything DIY furniture around the house Showing you How-To's, custom builds, tips, and reviews Our goal is to inspire and teach others the way of the trade! Hope you enjoy and consider subscribing! God Bless!
great video! we are a custom shop and have a big project with some rift white oak. of course the owners sample is also rift white oak but a very different color than ours so we assume bleaching is involved. did you use a 2 part wood bleach? when you sprayed it on did you then wipe it off?
Thank you! Ok very nice! Yes, we used a 2 part bleach kit. Forget the name brand but it was designed for wood. When it dries it somehow doesn't need a cleaning after to remove the acidity. Did not wipe it off, it flashes off pretty quickly. Will raise the grain slightly and some of the color from the wood will pool in spots and leave a yellow stain but that sands out easily afterwards. Hope this helps!
Everything is easy with 3/4" plywood with pocket screws and all, but it's way too heavy. Making the same out of 1/2" at least for drawers is a different story.
I was about to build Weekend Woodworker's cart, but this one changed my mind! I love the double storage up front and the slightly larger size. Appreciate you!
Thanks the scripture Did the wd 40 damage the sander? Also I have older central machinery 6” jointer item number 30289 a friend gave me and I can’t find a torsion spring for it. Everything else is good other than the process you did in the video I need to do. Thanks
Immediately stopped the video when he said "let's read from scripture" keep your religion to yourself. Not everyone on RU-vid is Christian. This is why people hate Christians. Stop shoving your religion down our throat. No other following does this. Ffs man this is a wood working video....
I did opposite got a cnc initially .the decision which I regret as I was very limited to its operations. Moreover software trainings , using formulas it was a whole lot of headache .
Not only can I cut and line bore faster than any CNC on my slider and Blum minipress, you save money and material because the smallest bit you will ever use on the CNC commercially is 1/4" and if you like your uppers being 12" deep there is no way you are getting 4 parts out of a sheet of material. I worked at a high end shop, they didn't question the 11" uppers the designer had drawn and we built and installed them but the customers plates wouldn't fit! Big bruhaha and we ended up bringing the hinges forward so the doors were like 3/8" off the cabinet, it was so messed up.
I priced all the stuff yesterday to do the skateboard wheel thing with the steel tube. 285.00, I said nope. Especially after I seen I could get 2 sets 60 inch draw slides with a 500lbs rating for 219.00 total on eBay.
At the time when I built this, only 60" sets I could find were $600+ a set. I have since made a 2nd drawer box system and used 60" slides from vevor at $200 CAD a set. WAY easier to work with. Only draw back was drawers were 74" deep on 60" slides so not full extension. In a truck bed where the tail gate comes down 20" and then drawers only slide out 60", it's tough to reach the back 1-2'.
@@KlassenWoodworks looks like you built this a couple years back when steel was cheaper. I was shocked at the price of the tubing and hardware. The skateboard bearings are not too bad. But nuts and bolts and steel tube is ridiculous now. Cheapest square tube I could find was -bout 45.00 a piece. What’s even crazier is the price of steel went up but slides went down, lol. I have a short bed truck. 6 foot bed. That last foot is going close to the cab is just going to be empty space. Two 60 inch by 23 in drawers is plenty for me. I’m just so tiered of having stuff crammed behind the seat and just rolling around in the back. Some organization will definitely reduce the headache. Thanks for the video, I think it was done very well, I don’t like it much when people ramble on during the videos. I’m like just get to the point. I noticed some comments about this not being a tutorial. Some folks I guess you have to walk them word for word through every step.
@myfalconry1976 Yeah it's wild. If you have a small local fab shop sometimes they'll sell at way better prices that big box. Sounds good like the slides will be the perfect fit for your setup. Ones I used had locks integrated into the slides. Yeah, everybody learns different that's for sure I'm just like you when it comes to absorbing information. Appreciate the feedback!
I'm absolutely, positively not a pocket hole guy, but it's a successful method of work for you. I appreciate the considerations for wood movement and the completeness of design detail that you started with. Congrats on the hybrid methods used and the practical collection of tools and jigs you've accumulated.
What kind of paint was that? I’m holding off building mine until I can find a good waterproof paint. I’ll have some electronics inside the boxes, so I want to make sure they’re waterproof
Use Redgaurd. It’s a shower waterproofing and it’s also used commercially for pools. Paints on red and dries pink. 2-3 good coats and it’s fully waterproof. Then paint whatever exterior grade paint colour you want. Did for mine and haven’t got a drop inside.
@@erickregnier1112 I ended up using flex seal. Knowing full well it probably doesn’t work. But rainy season in Florida currently, and somehow hasn’t let a drop through. I’ll have to remake the box a little bigger at some point, I’ll do it your way next. Thanks
I was so happy to find your video!!! I have struggled with a loose riving knife for about 6 months. I honestyly thought I would need to buy a new table saw. When I finally found your video I was able to fix it in about 3 minutes! Thanks so much for your help. It was huge!
You have an old General Jointer in the background on your final screen - that is exactly the jointer I have. Funny enough I just had to do some clean up maintenance on mine as well.
10:45 "I noticed its not sitting quite square" I could tell at 8:13 that was gonna be the case. you can see the pieces move as you are putting in the screw.
Nice work and explaining. Well done on the video and the work on the wall. Final product looked really good. I came here originally looking for tips on installing ship lap horizontally. I’m installing cedar shiplap on three niches in a bathroom. I noticed you didn’t use any glue. Is that just unnecessary?
Well thank you and glad it helped. I nailed through the face and into every stud and it's held up great. If I were to do it again, I'd probably use PL adhesive and only nail through the flange of each piece. Just avoid any touching up/nails holes.
How do you keep the bottom out of the water? If it's in the ed of truck and there is rain and the drains are plugged the bottom witll be in water and swell and start to separate. Thats the big question I have with these wood drawer builds. Great for nice weather or if you have a topper or other watertight cover.