BAILEY WOODWORKS: We just make stuff and do mostly wood turning projects. Sometimes we do flatwork, not very well, but we are learning!
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The finish on that is gorgeous! I'm not sure I've ever seen Yew turned before, and I have no idea how difficult it is to work with, but you certainly made it look easy! Beautiful, simple top❤
@mrPauljacob yes, basically. I am sure there are others who know the science, but it seals the outside and raises the grain. If you go back and lightly sand it makes it so smooth.
@mrPauljacob I like the shellac based sanding sealer. Also it dries very fast so you can keep the project going. Zinsser makes a really good sanding sealer. Bullseye, Seal Coat.
We did not have any special jigs at work. I would grind it once with a hollow grind. Then I would use my ultra fine Arkansas stone to get a very sharp cutting edge using kerosene, Most of the time it would be 6 months before I needed to grind again. My chisels were used when I bought them and still have plenty of steel left. And I used them daily. Most all are Buck Brothers.
No you are not wrong. The owner of the shop I served my apprenticeship only used water. I used water on any new stone I had but the stone I got was also from a retired patternmaker and he had used oil on it. So best to stay with that. I still have that stone and use it on my plane blades and spoke shape blades.
@toddatglencovewoodworks she is so fun! She likes everything I make! Of course, she can't talk yet so it's up for interpretation... but I think she likes it!
That was fun, even if it did make me a bit dizzy a few times! I don't think I've ever seen the mandrel thingummy you used to make the wheels - is there a name for that? Thanks Chris, I enjoyed that.
Thanks Mark! Yes, It is a little disorienting, but it is going to take me a few weeks to edit the 5.5 hours of footage so I thought I would just speed it all up and see what happens! I made the wheels on a pen mandrel. I had some kebob sticks that were slightly smaller than the mandrel I have so they made good axles.
@@JohnDoe-qg6hm thanks for the suggestion. I struggle with what length to make them. I personally like longer videos. It is good to hear comments to help improve my channel experience! Thanks for watching!
@@BAILEYWOODWORKS Not sure but i think add revenue goes up after 10 mins ! Nobody minds 1 or 2 adds on a longer video ! Annoying on shorter videos off course !
Always glad to see someone working on old model aircraft designs. Just curious what kind of wood you are using as it looks heavy. :) The biggest concern in freeflight model making is weight management and choosing the right wood for the right job. We actually calculate the density and use specific grain types as well. Good luck!
@@BAILEYWOODWORKS I’m truly sorry. I must seem very rude. I’m sure others enjoy the music. In any case, your woodturning was interesting and instructive and your vase came out beautifully.
@DancingFox6 no worries! I am always on the fence with adding music or not. In full transparency, if there is music there probably was some bad audio or you could hear my breathing. I really hate hearing breathing during videos. No rudeness assumed at all. I really do appreciate sincere feedback!
Metal? Like on brass and aluminum? Or how about magnesium or titanium? Silver, gold or platinum? Zinc, nickel or chromium? METAL is a very broad term, but only FERROUS metals (iron, steel and its alloys) are affected by a magnet.
@@washellwash1802and that's because electrical current is generated by moving magnetic fields and electrical currents also produce magnetic fields opposite of the magnetic fields that made the current. The stronger the current, the stronger that counter magnetic field is, so metals that are great at conducting electricity can produce a greater effect than one that isn't as great. The result is the better the metal is at conducting electricity, the bigger counter field they can produce, which in turn has a stronger effect on the magnet (which will eventually stall / find a balance without outside force to push it along) For a real wild bit - most electrical generators at power plants use electricity to make electricity. They produce the magnetic field needed to generate by firing up an electromagnet in the generator called the excitation coils / field. This actually helps the plant produce more electricity more efficiently (aka more Kws out, less fuel in) as the operators at the plant can fine tune the generator to be optimal, no matter the demands of the grid. A select few power plants have whats called "Black start" capability, or the ability to produce electricity without external power and from a dead stop, and they're mostly used to jump-start the grid after a blackout. Why not every plant you may ask? Because it's ridiculously expensive to build and maintain such plants, and not all forms of power generation is compatible with the concept. In short, magnets and electricity are weird.
Brother man this was good practice when I ran a machine lathe for battleship gun turrets. I would make pins and shafts for automotive parts the lathe came from a sunk battle ship during Pearl harbor. The shop owners’s father was a big shot in the airforce or something.
@toddatglencovewoodworks I am using pine. Since it is the first one I don't want to spend the money on Balsa. Later when I get the techniques a little better I may make a full size model with balsa wood.
I ve been a model airplane builder for 70 years, designing and constructing all sorts of aircraft. Without a doubt you've chosen a gorgeous design to build. Enjoy yourself!
@sdad46 that is a very impressive amount of time! Congratulations for sticking with it! I am starting to understand though. It is something you can get 'hooked' on! Thanks for watching!
These have been around a while. Fun to do, but I don't think I ever sold one. Hard part is to keep all the curves the same. Good to see that you concaved the top rim a little bit. I was doing mine flat and some one told me to concave it a bit and it looked a LOT better. You can power sand them, but you have to be careful to not round over the twist lines which destroys the look.
@robohippy yes, I agree with all of that. I concaved the top by accident because there was a nick in the wood. I did smooth the lines some, and regret it. But this is just a practice piece with pine. I agree about not selling.. I don't sell stuff, but I think there are items that are much funner to make than display. If you know what I mean...
@ThePapa1947 thanks for watching Gary! I actually used one of your offcenter videos for some hints, but the offset part, I can't find. If you find it, let me know the title. There are some things I would have done different, if I knew a different way!
@@ApacheJay156 it could be the fence.. to add to that, I had the same problem. Even very thin stuff. I asked someone and they said make sure the blade back rollers, top and bottom, are set a paper's thickness from the back of the blade and both exactly the same. And, put a new blade on. I did both of those and have had very good luck. I have been ripping 2x4s the hard way lately very straight.