Hi I'm Neil and I like to make and create. This can be anything from woodwork/metalwork to photography/drawing or any other form of creation that motivates me.
My Videos are for entertainment and not meant as tutorials.
My personal email can be found below.
For real mail:
PaskMakes P.O BOX 768 Yandina Queensland 4561 Australia
Thanks, mate and greetings from Pennsylvania USA. You're saving me a lot of time and money. I feel like I owe you something. I'll be making content of my own to demonstrate what I'm building and selling. Maybe when things work out, I'll build and send one just for you (a portable barbi for your shrimp lol) assuming you're an Aussie
16:32 you could have pulled the hinge pin and rolled up some of the original box material to make it the second half of the hinge. Everything else was hand made, might as well have hinges too!
A great job, but sadly very, very labor-intensive. Additionally, a whole range of machines were used here that not every DIY enthusiast has in their hobby workshop. In view of the time invested, I wonder whether it wouldn't be cheaper to outsource the work to a joinery with a CNC moulding machine. ******************************************************* Eine tolle Arbeit, nur leider sehr, sehr arbeitsintensiv. Außerdem kam hier eine ganze Reihe von Maschinen zum Einsatz, die nicht jeder Heimwerker in seiner Hobbywerkstatt herumstehen hat. Angesichts der investierten Arbeitszeit stellt sich mir die Frage, ob es nicht günstiger wäre, die Arbeit an eine Schreinerei mit CNC-Fräsmaschine zu vergeben.
Not drop forging, just material removal with a little bit of hand forging. The only thing that might be considered drop forging would be the hole made in the handle and name. As for the high carbon on the jaws. Seems like a lot of work for something that is not practical. High carbon is hard, but the jaws of wrenches need to have some flex. If high carbon steel was good for wrenches, that's what would be used.
Not sure what that cost you in time and materials but the value you added to the saw for someone who uses one on a regular basis is priceless. Great work
Love it. Just out of curiosity, because I've no room to ever have one, what holds the work piece in your surface grinder? It just seems to be lying on the bed and yet it doesn't go flying across your workshop.
Am I the only one who was shocked that he held the part with his bare hands while heating it up in the induction forge? I'd think the whole part would get really hot.
Legitimately surprised the word "Metho" hadn't automatically de-mon'd or age-gate this video, considering the pain JayEmm On Cars suffered when some old man he interviewed about Monza said _Lesmos_ and some hyper-progressive left-threaded wingnut moderating content for this platform mistook it as an insult to Lesbians.
This is the best construction process video I've seen. So many of this type are overly long so that the presenter can blab nonstop. I don't need to see every complete step, just like I don't need to hear every minute detail of the wife's entire day. Beautiful guitar, thanks for sharing. Best wishes
this is great, if you're in a situation without this tool in the future though, i was taught at tafe to face the vice backwards with the vice resting against the pillar. works well enough to break the drill bit and keep you out of trouble.