Bonjour Monsieur Turner, comme d'habitude un superbe travail et une belle réalisation, de plus, vous semblez avoir trouvé un lieu idéal en pleine nature, un régal pour les yeux, un coin de paradis qui font du bien à regarder par ces tristes temps, bonne continuation et à bientôt.
Bonjour Monsieur Turner Je vous souhaite une belle et joyeuse année pleine de santé pour vous et vos proches avec des projets toujours aussi magnifiques, continuez à nous faire de belles vidéos et émerveiller nos yeux. A bientôt, ici encore en 2022 Cordialement.
I thought you were a manufacturer I have been watching your off grid house and shed build and I thought this guy has some ability not just a try as you go person cheers mate keep up the great work
Great builds! Sorry about the ding to the bottom line. It happens. You made some rock solid bases that'll out last us all and the look stunning! Good on ya, Scott!
Very nice work Scott.. If I were there, I'd help you pack up your shop.. I know that's a lot of work.. Hope to see you doing these projects in your new shop soon.. Scott take care and God Bless...
When working in my shop, I regularly think of your work Mr Turner... and then I dismantle everything I've done and start again. It's not about perfection, but it's got to be square/true, and neatly finished!
Very cool stuff, Scott. Underbidding a project can really take the fun out of it, eh! You spend a lot of your time realizing that you're labour is almost free! Ugh. LOL Anyway, lessons learned. I think we've all been there, and some of us, more than once! Hope your summer is going along nicely. Turns out my daughter is moving over there permanently now. Kids. Maybe I'll manage to take a trip down under one day. Cheers.
I'm the worlds worst salesman to boot. I can undercut myself like no other. Summer has arrived and I'm looking forward to winter :) If you're near my way drop in and say G'day.
Clad to see you back in the shed, you've inspired myself into making a bedroom suite based on what I've seen you do throughout your videos. When I'm, finished Id love to show you. Mixture of wood and metal Cheers from NZ
Beautiful work and several techniques taught along the way. Thank you for all you do, Scott, to teach all of us! Funny (or not) the table base I recently built as a subcontractor also turned out to yield more "Education Value" than income. Glad to see I'm in good company. All the best, Drew
Cheers Drew! One of the workshops that quoted for the same stainless steel table came in double my quote and I guess that's what you have to do for one off jobs. Price it higher than what you think it should be. Thanks for the support Brother!
@@ScottTurnerformeindustrious That was my big lesson. They're likely higher because they know what it will actually take to make it, and I'm lower because I'm missing something.
From the States Scott, I don’t know what to say, your a true craftsman. Your workmanship and how you solve problems is amazing. Your also a great instructor. Thanks so much for having the balls (sorry to be vulgar) to show off your designs and work. Everything I’ve seen that you’ve designed and built I would have in my own home and shop. Nice work my friend. Much love and respect ❤️🙏👍
I remember doing Spray Transfer welding in my MIG classes. I loved it. It laid down super smooth and it was so easy. Granted it was HOT! You had to have those machines cranked up to get into that range. Love both tables, and for your first time working with stainless, those welds were pretty good!
Bonjour scott toujours deux très belles réalisation je suis fan🤩 de la deuxième table basse j'aime beaucoup les soudures quand elle sont bien fait sans être meule sa donne un style ❤ avec un dessus en chêne elle serait super top bonne continuation vivement la prochaine video 🤗
super table, j'aime bien le design , avec une préférence pour le deuxième modèle, merci pour le partage 😉(great table, I like the design, with a preference for the second model, thanks for sharing)
Reminds me of the medieval tables of of old, made out of Oak, a kings table made out of steel, excellent work Scott. Looking forward to the big shift and the new set-up.
I have a special friend who is a welder/fabricator..(.mostly does work on fishing boats) so...watching your incredible skill and talent gives me knowledge about the craft and of course I share your videos with him. I enjoy watching you create! Thanks for this and good luck in the new space. (Moving sucks!...)
Beautiful work as always.if I may make a suggestion, drill a couple of drain holes in all the sealed areas. Unless they’re hermetically sealed they’re going to fill up with water. I’ve had a couple of pieces of outdoor furniture ruined either by holding the water and rusting or freezing and bursting the seams.
Rookie error Scotty, you should know to always price the material out ;) hahaha Hopefully you get some photos of the finished builds on the socials, those legs are epic bits of design :D
@@ScottTurnerformeindustrious I'm all in. I really like your aesthetic. Growing up in and around Lorain, Ohio, a Rustbelt steel town, your stuff resonates with me.
When drilling Staino, VERY sharp tools, lowest speed possible, and high preasure. You are effectively scraping away the metal. Welds are not too shabby, for a cane toad. :-)
Tough gig that stainless, you should try welding it with a stick, it has a surprise for you, after you finish a run, you're standing back admiring it, when suddenly the slag decides it no longer wants to be where it is and launches itself at you at light speed, scared the crap out of me the first time it happened.
@@ScottTurnerformeindustrious Rods are pretty expensive as well, luckily I have a supplier that will sell me loose sticks in the qty I want, so I don't have to buy a whole pack
Should have made the stainless base in gal and hoped they don’t know the difference. Those little fixture clamps are genius have to make some for my table.
Love the black one, and I'm not sure why/how I think of these enhancements - maybe just the Australian-ness of the whole Scott Turner Experience - but I always think of them - anyway - have you ever thought of putting some frozen shrimp and a business card into the tubes before you weld them closed?
Another amazing job Scott! Love your designs. You definitely figured out how to lay a nice weld down too! (Reminds me of that bit where your daughter asked if your trip to NY taught you how to lay down a weld lol) Hope ya'll have a great Christmas!
You need more volts to get spray transfer, you were running dip transfer by the sound of it. Still adequate for what you're doing though. Get yourself a backing pad for your angle grinder for the finishing work, they work better than a flap disk and get your welds ground down a lot flatter with a better finish.
Thank you EAS. Yes it was till poping. I had the volts pretty much maxed out on this small machine but it does the job. Thanks for the tip on the angle grinder.
Scott, SS TIG joints looked too hot, usually left over from mild steel work where arc amperage is higher overall. SS should end up colored blue to golden yellow maybe some oranges but not dark gray. This is where a pulsed amperage power supply can be very handy- autogenous welding of SS is very effective in small fillets and butts of the thickness shown, nice design of the SS base. Fairly in expensive to use passivization gel or even electrolytic passivization to make a very uniform final finish on SS. Neat design on arc frame too! If I've designed in butt welds that will be finished by removing the weld crown; I am in the habit of deeper weld allowance bevels. Hope your customers will do your the courtesy of sending pics with the tops on?
Nice job as always. Stainless is indeed expensive - last time I ordered 316 sheet I was 4 times the price of mild steel (which is also twice what it was pre-Covid): All the best for the workshop move, hope it all goes smoothly.
New to your channel and just having a look around. Hope you haven't had to answer this before but why did you switch to tig to weld the two circular end caps? Nice work.
Thank you! I used TIG as it's much more delicate and controllable. If I used MIG the bead would have been much more pronounced. When welding furniture pieces you become much more strategic about your welds in terms of appearance.
Wicked stuff dude. I'm new to the channel and slightly addicted, thanks for the inspiration. Quick question, what disc/grades do you use to clean over your steel before you finish it?
Hi scott just wondering if the commission table hieght finish of 30" do leave a clearance of 1" for the balancer under? I mean the bolt under the legs of table to make it level..
Yes, if I'm putting something under like a caster wheel, adjuster or a soft cushion I would allow for that in the finished height. I hope that is what you mean?
My boss at work has had Prices on Stainless and Copper driven into his head lately. We are doing an "OMG, We Gotta do this NOW" from on high come down, but no money (of course). What budget available a large part is being eaten by Copper pipe (2" x near 1000 feet and 1.5" for a few hundred feet) and some Stainless but some of that will be salvaged from a poorly designed attempt at another form of stupidity for a similar project. Stainless is so high, the added labor of cutting out the current new and unused stuff for some shorter runs is offsetting. As is typical of our situation, if they'd have done it right at the first go, we'd be spending about 25% less