I live in Dallas, love your channel, love your work, you motivated me to get into carpentry when your channel started. I'm in the IT field but i enjoyed learning and doing small projects for a house i was working on at that time. Anywhoo, would love to volunteer and help you out in any which way while Im unemployed. I may as well do something good for someone. If you need someone to watch after your van at a job, whatever, i would like to help.
Richard, you remain a voice of maturity and reason--always even-keeled. As such, I'm certain people take away more than just great finish work from your videos! Keep up the great work man--and as usual, thanks for being so generous with your willingness to teach, it's appreciated 👍✌🤙🖖
I've learned so much from watching your channel. I'm learning more about carpentry as well as learning about an awesome person. Thanks for always being "real."
I just installed my wood floor and my neighbor was kind enough to lend me his Chop Saw. I watched a few safety videos and I still have all my fingers but I really respect the power of that machine. One thing I learned is never remove material until the blad totally- I mean totally stops. I did rush one cut and had a small kickback. All material needs to be supported; you grab the work AND the fence and stay well outside of the danger zone- so about 6+ inches away from the spinning blade. Using a clamp, when possible is a great idea that helped me a lot. Connect a vacuum cleaner was good to but it kept falling off when I raised the machine- I attached the non bendable, hard part because I did not have flexible tube to use. I wore safety glasses, hearing protection, a N95 mask, etc. Still, it is a machine one needs to greatly respect. It can take off a limb real quick. Make sure your safety guard is working correctly as well and the machine is very stable and secured.
This is lowkey a funny discrepancy but it really shows how americans love thier freedom to a point that they dont always get the best outcome. americans are just used to companies cheaping out and chalking it up to you get to choose. where europeans get to reap the benefits of companies putting in the work we should expect.
okay i totally understand why they wanted it down because of the 5% of those comments, as they're not rlly getting anything out of this so it makes sense. Im incredibly proud of ur response and how professional and mature you took this on.
Hey brother, that’s u fortunate, I always love your material but still will regardless. Btw is this video also shot with the Sony A3…? Always a great quality, thanks for making these videos!
I can imagine neighbors complaining about performing commercial carpentry production from his home garage. Work like this would be prohibited in many residential areas, especially by virtually any HOA.
Joe rogan never looks at the comments, STOP looking at the comments don't worry bro, good or bad attention it's always good attention . Don't look at the comments
buy a commercial building then rent it back to your business. can't explain exactly how it works but it's about taxes. Eventually you own the building and can sell it or lease and have a revenue stream in your retirement. Seems like it would hard to get your money back on a shop built own your own property, they seem expensive to build.
I used a lot of your videos to learn trim, how to send invoices, tricks and etc. Now 5 years later i''m happy to have a million dollars trim company trimming high-end beach homes.
Backing. It was caused by lack of the backing. The miter saw had juuuuuust enough flex in the gap with the brass, as solid and unyielding as it would seem to cause this. I know- it happened to me cutting some aluminum a few months ago which took a month for my finger to recover from the backwards over-bend the saw forced my finger to do. Once I created a new zero cut from scrap plywood for different angles to have 100% backing up to the cut line on the different 45's, moving it each time for the different angles, it removed all the error that had been plaguing me on the extruded aluminum cutting.
I really don't think your boss is bothered by the comments section. I think that's the excuse. Cause you know you can disable the comments if you want 🙂
I’m a painter and before I found this channel we really had the mindset “do your best, caulk the rest” but Richard’s channel really made us take a step back and learn to take pride in what we do and how we do it.
Interesting move... I used to do custom cabinetry and THEN moved on to trimming new homes. I had to learn a ton new skills, buy more tools, and made more money. Never heard of somebody going from trim to cabinets. At least in my area that would be a massive downgrade. Like going from painting cars to cleaning them.