... отличный получился лобзиковый станочек, только скорость нужно было бы побольше сделать, а то до самой пенсии пилить будешь, молодец, здоровья тебе и удачи во всём, новых творческих успехов!!!
Nice! But thats a Scroll saw bro. Might want to edit the title before the trolls come out and start teasing you because they're immature little children. Anyways great work bro! I love it. Thanks for sharing.
Hey there my friend.. This is awesome.. It's a pity u couldn't get a faster motor bcos u'd have a real proper saw then.. I love the ingenuity of ur build all the same though so I'm saluting u from Dublin, IRELAND my brother.. Keep the great builds coming.. U may have inspired me to build my own as well now bro.. Thanks..
It's a really good project. Nice workmanship displayed. Since you are in Vietnam I can't have this at a cost. Is it possible for you to pack neatly and send it to me. I will pay the cost of it.
By all means, leave it!!! Save your Money and your time and get a proper band saw, and If it be a User one, bearing a trustworthy maker's name. As a Carpenter you should know, that no wood nor any wood joint will withstand the forces exerted within a reciprocating saw in the long run. This here is no geniality but sheer charlatanery. Useless and at worst lethal.
Great video. I see 85 dislikes. My question is how can anybody dislike a useful, instructional video. It blows my mind. Anyway continue with this type of videos, i already subscribed to your channel. Cheers ❤️❤️❤️
If you lived in a developed country, where you can just go to the giant hardware stores and buy all the tools he builds off the shelf for cheap, this channel would be really confusing. But if you lived some where out of the way, and all you have is the local small hardware store with basic tools, this channel is an encyclopedia of how to get things done.
@@asdfdfggfd First Ou need a shed full of expensive tools and machinery. Where do you get Thema? Just down the road? Where you have access to such a channel full of suicide manuals you also have access to all the world's market places, where literally each and everything ist readily available ...
@@Baetzibaer I am able to get welder, angle grinder and hammer even in remote areas of Caribbean and Central America. I doubt my ability to get a more sophisticated device like a band saw in these areas. Hand tool is the cut off.
Cảm ơn bạn đã chia. Chúc bạn luôn thành công nhé... chào buổi chiều vui vẻ và đầy sức khỏe rất mong được đồng hành cùng bạn.. đã ghé xem và bật chuông like 👍👉🔔
""Muito bommmm,,, Projetinho ,facil e simples vai me ajudar muito,,Fico muito feliz,, Por ter pessoas taõ bacanas que compastilhaõ os seus projetos com outras"""",,,,, Obrigado!!!!!
Don't think it matters much, the tricky part is finding a motor with the right long ratio gearing, as most small single phase AC motors run at somewhere in the range of 750 - 3600 rpm dependent on number of poles and mains frequency. With that tall a gearing the saw wont need much power to run, may like a couple of hundred watts. Having seen this makes me wonder if a light duty hobby oriented version couldn't very easily be made with a 12V windshield wiper motor, a DC motor regulator with current limit protection (look into RC hobby) and maybe, just maybe, a 24V dc supply to let it run at a bit higher speeds than originally intended. Would also make the speed adjustable.
Not a 'Band saw' but a very inventive scroll saw. Great work! (Band saw is when the saw itself is one big loop like a metallic elastic band and transported by 2 rotating wheels/disks).
Vòng tua hơi chậm.làm cho cắt chậm ko mịn và chỉ lọng đc gỗ ván mỏng. Với lại dùng day thanh trượt vòng bi nhỏ tiếp xúc rãnh mỏng.nếu dùng liên tục thì sẽ gây ra hao mòn nhanh hỏng
The first welding torch was a MIG gun (Metal Inert Gas) also called Gas Metal Arc Welding (GMAW). To me, it appeared that he was using Flux Core Wire, without the gas bottle, but hard to tell from the video. The second torch was an Arc Welder, or Stick.
@@markgelatt896 thanks for adding that clarification. The next question is why switch from one to the other; is it because of different metal types? What would you suggest for a work-around, since I own a stick welder but no access to a MIG.