eric i am impressed with your woodwork, the editing of the video, and the presentation of the product. not sure how much practice you got but you seem to have a gift of being natural with it. i can see you having a future in doing these things. keep it up man.
I just Started playing Ice Hockey 3 Months Ago in my late 30's... This will really help me practice at home. Thanks for the vid and I am very impressed at your skill level and confidence handling wood and Machinery at a young age! Keep up the Great work!
I am a former ice hockey player and a woodworker, and I have to say that not only is this creative, but you added a good safety tip! Great job Eric! Nice puck handling technique, too!
John Kaufmann Ok, that was actually impressive to watch. I was looking at hockey specific training when I came across this video by chance. Hockey aside, I was impressed at your workshop skills!! After I drilled through 2 planks of wood & into the palm of my friends' hand (yeah, ouch! but he never shed a tear or made a sound- so I keep going), I gave up on wood work. Much to the relief to those around me I'm sure. :-)
good job man, way to use your creativity and imagination to build something that companies want to charge you an arm and a leg for. Your gonna go places in life, rock on!
Hey Eric...great job! I have a 12-year old daughter who plays hockey for Edina. We are purchasing some used shooting tiles, and we will be making a couple of rebounders based on your video. Thank you!
english isn't my native tongue but this kid seems eloquent! great vid and great woodwork! for the rubber, tension could be balanced with another rubber at the back of the rebounder, and could even be raised in the front rubber.
I guess it's balance. If you have to much tension the puck might rebound to fast. But then again as you get more proficient you would want the puck to go faster.
Something I want to say if you have a melamine board use it as a shooting pad I used them until I got hockey tiles and they work so good especially with a cleaner and furniture polish but you can do that on any type of shooting pad/tiles
Nice work. Not sure if you still have the issue, but you could try just getting a weight to set on top, or some rubber feet to actually mount to the bottom of the rebounder to keep it from moving no matter what surface it's on.