New subscriber here! I love your skill level and your organization skills lol. Glad I found you scrolling through the shorts today. You're a beast with some wood! Can't wait to continue watching your creations and learning along the way
Nice! I made a shelf just like this before just a little tip for others....if you don’t want to have any screws on top/ the top and bottom are more visible than his here, what I did was put some slim shims over the bracket and then tapped the shelf on so it fit tight. It hasn’t moved in about five years so I’d say it worked
Thanks! That's a cool idea, will have to keep that in mind for lower shelves in the future. This shelf is above eye level, so you can't see the screws at all.
Glad to see you! I am a young design engineer from St. Petersburg, Russia. In our country, working with such equipment and tools, I'm afraid of this word, is a luxury. ..besides, the education system itself and the actual training of specialists are far from perfect. I am ready, with your help, to lead the directions of interest in this environment. Respond !
Glad to see you! I am a young design engineer from St. Petersburg, Russia. In our country, working with such equipment and tools, I'm afraid of this word, is a luxury. ..besides, the education system itself and the actual training of specialists are far from perfect. I am ready, with your help, to lead the directions of interest in this environment. Respond !
Cracking work but over done it on top screws.. one small screw in each corner...but it's your shelf! Your projects! Your screws....so you screw away! Respect from a wood ticker
Can even add a French cleat style mount to the wall. Or if you need the support because it’s a deeper shelf & need this same style mount then you can add a lip to the end of the brackets & a recess to the inside top of the shelf to lock it into place, to remove just lift up then out.
Till someone falls and grabs it for support then pulls it of. Not saying its going to happen but it could. Could probably throw even a dab of wood glue somewhere just in case.
I do the same except I use a Brad nailer but I guess screws would be good if you wanted to be able to take it down later or something without damaging it great job it looks beautiful bro
Search for "building an invisible monitor" from "DIY Perks" an English DIY'er who concealed his ultra-wide screen monitor under his own floating shelf. (Wish I could quote his name*, but if I go away to find it in my history I'll lose this one because it's an annoying "short" that RU-vid gives you none of the normal facilities for, such as Save or even showing any description from the poster, which is just infuriatingly shit.) *Edit: I found his channel, then someone liked this comment so this video appeared in my message list and I could return to it easily! Oh RU-vid, why can't you make things simpler not harder...
@Jack Clark I understand what you mean but he's done some beautiful work there I think it was a shame just to put screws in the top... it's only my opinion
@@tonygalloway3704, I made cartop carriers for my Jeep, of two 1 × 3s across. Teardrop shape 1 × 5s on each end, with one 2 × 4 gusset on each end. No metal fasteners, but an eye hook thru each end centered. Used West System epoxy. Carried a canoe 800 miles each way, and a few hundred miles in heavy wind. Then many years of occasional light carry. Never any problem. It was a test, the canoe had extra securing lines.
I did. The parts of the video showing pushing the wood through the saw are edited to cut down on the time of the video. You don't use a push stick while the wood is still sticking off the front of the saw table. That's a recipe for disaster.
@@ToolsToday Glad to see you! I am a young design engineer from St. Petersburg, Russia. In our country, working with such equipment and tools, I'm afraid of this word, is a luxury. ..besides, the education system itself and the actual training of specialists are far from perfect. I am ready, with your help, to lead the directions of interest in this environment. Respond !
Yes, search #ttfloatingshelf on Instagram to see the full video, I will see if I can edit the full video for RU-vid as well. Basically I just used the pocket screws to attach the 2x4 supports to the longer 2x4 that attaches to the wall.
Glad to see you! I am a young design engineer from St. Petersburg, Russia. In our country, working with such equipment and tools, I'm afraid of this word, is a luxury. ..besides, the education system itself and the actual training of specialists are far from perfect. I am ready, with your help, to lead the directions of interest in this environment. Respond !
My fingers were never actually all that close to the blade, camera angles have a way of making it appear closer than they were. Also, I did use a push stick feeding it through but that was edited out due to length of the video, plus it's a disaster waiting to happen to use a push stick while the wood is still hanging off the front of the saw. You can watch the full video here, if you're interested. instagram.com/p/B5TeIVOApyK/
@@ToolsToday you still don't look very confident with the table saw. Never put your fingers in the path of the blade btw. If you do slip for whatever reason there the fingers go
There was no forward pressure from my hand in the direction of the blade. That's why my fingers moved not my hand. If it slipped my hand would have hit the fence, not the blade. I'm very confident with the saw and have a healthy respect and understanding of what the saw can do to me. If all else fails, this is also a SawStop table saw, so if my finger touched the blade, the blade would be stopped almost instantly, drop below the table and leave me with just a scratch.
@@ToolsToday what about at 00:03 and 00:14 and your not always gonna have the luxury of your fancy sawstop. Seem's like a weird stance to emedietly throw out the expensive safty feature
That's awesome, though the number of screws and them being on top made me sad. Could you consider incorporating wedges into the next one? You could make them a feature, coming out the bottom.
Thank you! The painters tape created a hinge to hold all of the pieces together so that the miters glued up easily. It is easy to remove after the glue is dry as well.