Good work is always very time consuming! I hope your customers realise how much love, care and effort you are putting into these projects and are remunerating you properly? Lovely work Sir! 👍👍👍🇬🇧👍
I am a very amateur woodworker with ambitions way beyond my skill level. I find your videos wonderful to watch. I have two observations. 1. Never worry about the length of them. The more detailed and hence longer the better in my opinion. Second something you said in this video was absolutely true. We are not paying to see your work. So we have nothing to complain about anyway. Good to see a bit of honesty.
Been going through your videos. Hard to find good content on making entrance way doors. Im about to tackle that job for my house, nothing on the scale of complexity & detail as this door, but certainly a task nevertheless. FYI, I found a company in my area that makes fabric aerogel. Lots of different industries adopting this new material. Insulation is super important for Canadian winters, and with this aerogel fabric I can get R11.7 out of 1.5" thickness of insulation. Im sure there's higher performing aerogels out there, but for those not in the know, to get R10 using rigid foam board you need a 2" thick piece.
Hopefully the machines don’t give much more trouble- the door is really starting to look close to completion. I know the finishing can take almost as long as everything else especially when you are producing such a fine finish in the paint work
Another rough old job MDF with hard wood eh Ollie. Your attention to detail is second to none and I have just watch a ‘New Yorkshire Workshop’ video. Recon it a drawn between you two
Lovely job, Oliver. I have to make a couple of outdoor table tops for my son. Can you advise what timber to use? I need some slats 60cm long by 30mm thick 🌞
I wish Medite would colour the core of their Tricoya so that when you have offcuts stacked up you can clearly still see it's tricoya rather than standard Medite. Seems a no brainer to me.Think Lathams sell insulated Tricoya panels but they are horrifically expensive.
@@BradshawJoinery lol, I mostly use Medite MRMDF of sometimes Hidrofugo but that looks like the same colour. You'd think they would colour the core, fire rated has a red core. Not rocket science is it.. All the best Adrian.
Brilliant attention to detail. I hope you are being paid handsomely by the hour.. and not a fixed price!!!. But.. my main question is regarding the painting of the sample frame parts and the tricoya panels. Did you seal them with primer first or does that paint you used not need an undercoat??
@@BradshawJoinery thanks buddy 🤣. I am using assisted airless with heated hose for the joinery and furniture. I like the spray width on 311 so will give that a go. Lukasz
Sorry if I missed it but how come your going straight in with top coat and skipping the primer? From what I’ve seen on their tech docs the Mighton/stuy exterior paint is 2x primer, one top coat? Hoping I can take a few shortcuts 😛
i spoke to their tech and my main concern for customer was durability of the dark colour chipping at primer level on this one. They said it was possible to use topcoat straight onto timber, but the frame isnt going to get weather. its 3m back from rain. not sure i would trust on a exposed frame but experiments will be made. Its not a shortcut either, hard work! haha but deffo seems more durable against chipping down to a white primer under the dark green
Mmmmmm ice cream sandwich😅. Is that the final shade of green for the job? Looks like Goeorgian or Brunswick green that was commonly used on period houses
Will the tricoya be ok to make shaker doors and drawer fronts out of for a unit that sits outside in direct rain? Built a Kamado BBQ unit this year and the panels and doors have moved so much they look awful. Sub standard materials I think. I extend movement but the drawers moved so much you couldn’t open them. Does the tricoya move much?
i spoke to their tech and my main concern for customer was durability of the dark colour chipping at primer level on this one. They said it was possible to use topcoat straight onto timber, but the frame isnt going to get weather. its 3m back from rain. not sure i would trust on a exposed frame but experiments will be made. Its not a shortcut either, hard work! haha
The Tricoya is certainly a terrific material, but the PRICE!!! (Even with trade discounts!) 5 sheets of 12mm, well over £3,000! 😢 I’m hoping someone is going to tell me that I am being robbed and tell where to get it much cheaper!
Yeah thats silly. The price of Tricoya and Accoya always worked out the same per m3 roughly. The price you have paid there is equivalent to £17,000 per m3. Tricoya is around £4500 last time i bought.
I have to ask why you didnt "lay off" the primer coats? visible brush marks... Edit: nvm. Have to be honest, Car body sprayer wouldn't think much of your technique, starting spraying in the middle of the item so you get a build up there, uneven passes etc.