I am glad to hear that you have found this book to be very informative and helpful for your woodworking project ru-vid.comUgkxbnOKZBE4evMO5V2vroHeCjq6d_MV6wJO It sounds like you are well prepared and confident to build furniture for your house. I commend you and your friend for your enthusiasm and willingness to learn new things from this book. I hope you enjoy your woodworking journey and create some beautiful pieces.
@@FlameMage2 the tape measure making a circle was one. I have a very quick way to remove protruded stripped screws - easier than the rubber band method...
So...you drive nails into your workbench to use as a stop block? Genius indeed! I did like the incredibly novel idea of using a pliers to pull a dowel out of a hole though- pure genius.
idk it looked pretty useful after its made sizing down sandpaper sheets is now a two step process. A petty difference yet more efficient than using scissors or buy specially sized sheets in-store. That alongside the woodblock hand sander hack is a beast of a combo for a cheap man such as myself.
Thats the think with woodwoorking. You spend alot of time making 1 thing that will help you make another thing even faster. Doing what he did is alot faster than cutting it, and would save you time in the future.
@@thenuclearpotato4394 if youre trying to save time cutting sandpaper then youre doing it wrong. Thats not being a woodworker, thats being stupid making tools that already exist, and are way, way cheaper.
That was pretty cool. I'll have to try that. The only other one of any use to me was dulling the point of the nail so as not to split the board, but some one already taught me that a long time ago. It does work.
Some great tips in there, but instead of ripping your sandpaper, you could just fold it into your desired size, crease it hard, and tear it on the crease. Works every time.
It depends on the project, of course. I wouldn't want any load-bearing supports to use this. There are already "feet" you can put on legs to make a night stand/coffee table sit level that you can adjust heights. Why re-invent the wheel with an uglier solution?
Some nice techniques. I've been installing screw eyes and screw hooks that way for decades. Works like a charm, especially for the larger ones. I also use a screw eye and S hook to operate scissor jacks with a drill.
3:19 you could even make the left block moveable with a metal slide (or two) with a screwable nut or something that lets you easily fix it, so you can adjust the width you want to tear your sand paper with. Potentially you could also add a mechanism with a small lever, to lift the blade a little so it's easier to put the sand paper in and then tighten it to keep it steady.
At 0:18, don't use a dowel. A better result is obtained if you use a special drill bit that can produce a circular plug, it usually comes with a correctly matching countersink bit. You make the plug from the scrap wood you have screwed. Glue plug and insert so the grain and colour matches the adjacent wood. Jeff in UK
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I think the next one with the chisel to hide a screw was supposed to be the alternative. Not sure though and I bet 9/10 times that chisel doesn’t cut a place like that.