DAMN IT. Scott asked how me Sin City it ends and I just said the guy kills himself and might be kind of dark for a woodworking video. But your line would have been perfect.
Dads. My fathers love for cars and having a dirt track stock car in the garage is the reason I, as woman, took to fast cars and being able to change my own oil and pay attention to maintenance.
Hi I work for Oregon State University and I manage the Peavy Arboretum in the McDonald Forest, We have a great space for your table. Firefigther Memorial Shelter: The Firefighter Memorial Shelter and surrounding pines are dedicated to all who work to protect our forest resources. The Willamette Valley ponderosa pines surrounding the shelter commemorate the nine young Oregon firefighters who died fighting the South Canyon Fire in Colorado in 1994
I come from germany and love to watch your videos in english. But since you said to try it out - I listend to part of it in german. It is quite amusing to hear your voice in german, haha. Nice for people who can't understand english... But I will keep it in english. Keep it up!
The AI is really good! I tried the German out as well and it even gave you a bit of an American accent! (I wonder if that’s a natural consequence of the sampling that the software uses). But it’s quite good, but I’ll still stick with English as well.
would say the same, the small parts I tried the German translation, it sounds good, a bit choppy but definitly good enough to get everything you say. But as the others, I will still prefere the english version
I’m the executive director of a non-profit in Forest Grove, Oregon and we are building a village for people transitioning out of homelessness and engaging a recovery journey. It sounds like there are a number of other awesome spots for your table, but we’d love to feature it in our placemaking design for the village. It would serve as a meeting and meal spot for village participants for the next decades. I can share our site plans if you are interested in considering. We are starting the build now, and expect to be complete by June 2025. Your generosity to donate the table is humbling. I trust it will find the best home. My wife and I enjoy your videos, craftsmanship, and sense of humor. Thanks for the inspiration.
"Relatively small shop" not that I am complaining but I work out of an 8 by 8 shed that only stores my tools and lumber, I actually do all the work outside with a single outlet. I also happen to love your videos.
I'm in a 12' × 24' and it sucks!!!! And my beautiful wife tries to help me, BECAUSE IT'S ALL 4 HER!!! All she says is SWEETHEART YOU NEED A BIGGER SHOP!! GOD I LOVE HER❤😂
I’ve found from working under similar circumstances, that it makes me a better woodworker, more than better tools do. It forces you to be innovative and find creative solutions for issues only a super small shop has. Those skills carry through to make you better when your shop and tools do finally match your skill set. (I could touch two walls at once in my first shop… I’m 5’ 6”)
Right there with you have a 7×8 shoop and a driveway. Only thing that stops me is the Florida weather. Just glad I have something where I can make a thing.
Around 30:18 to probably 32:25 I didn’t understand a thing you said but I had a hearty laugh hearing all the various languages you can now speak in. That’s some crazy cool stuff
I’m from Georgia but recently visited family friends in Bend, Oregon. Was so thrilled to hear our friend being successful working at Neighbor Impact with their food bank in the Bend area. Could be super symbolic. “When you have more than you need, build a longer table, not higher fence.” Happy to provide you with the connection if you believe it to be a good home for this. Love your stuff, Cam.
I love this suggestion for your table's home. I second this idea. Love the work... more gifting projects like this please. Here's a "throw your hat over the wall" idea... coordinate with builders across the world so that a meaningful build: table, sign, something I can't think of is built and donated. First thought was a long table like this at every state capitol. Then I thought, why limit to state capitols. I propose every country. And like the Voyager has the golden record with clues to humanity, you can include a placard dedicating the gift to sharing, friendship, or whatever message inspires you.
I shopped at Goby last Saturday and admired your table. I think it's large enough in their cavernous shop to stop people in their tracks: very impressive! It reminded me of a picnic table for giants. After seeing it in person, watching the build and your commentary was special. Terrific piece of work.
31:18 Dude the Hindi translation is onpoint!, It perfectly mimics the Hinglish we speak here on the daily (mostly because we don't speak pure Hindi, rather we add in a ton of words from English), it didn't sound like someone was "trying to do an accent" to me at all, it was like I'm listening to just another guy from around here. Keep up the good work and really appreciate the initiative to make your videos more accessible to non-English speakers. Love from India! 🇮🇳
Appalachian State university would love to display your piece. With all the destruction from the storms the community needs a hint of beauty reappearing in the area.
Cam, your dad sounds like a lot like my dad, which means he's awesome! I lost my Pop last December, and he was the epitome of "I'll figure it out." And for the 39 years he was in my life, he "figured it out" more times than I can count. Thank you for paying homage to good dads. They're priceless.
I always counted on my Dad figuring it out. It never even occurred to me that he wouldn’t. My hubby and I were the general contractors on our previous home to save some $. We did much of the work ourselves and you realize pretty quickly how much you don’t know.😆 This was 30 yrs. ago, so.. pre-YT University. But, we did figure it out.. with a lot of help from my Dad. He’s been gone almost 20 years now and I still miss him everyday. So sorry for your loss. Having a wonderful Dad is a lifelong gift.
I am 18 from Australia and just started a Wood machinist apprenticeship ~1 month ago. I started it on a whim because I dropped out of school due to issues during COVID, I am so glad I did though because I am enjoying it greatly although its very stressful. Thanks for these videos they are very entertaining and its good to see somebody more experienced working with timber.
I chuckled when you talked about the Fir being the 2nd hardest wood "think about it" Your work is always great and the commentary and humor makes it so much more enjoyable to watch. Awesome job and thank you!
Softwoods like pine are horrible to work with for fine work, your tools need to be sharper and it's more prone to tearout and cutting / chiselling endgrain can be a nightmare.
@@rafezetter8003 - could not agree with you more on fir. Possibly pine. Built five solid closets using both materials. The tear out can only be prevented by using chisels to prep the wood for the cuts (I used 2x3.5 beams to get a solid structure) . If you 'break' the top structure of the wood meaby 1/7 of an inch, you can get away with a nice cut.
It's the difference in hardness between the early wood and late wood that is the issue. The early wood is like Styrofoam, and the late wood is like iron. When the chisel encounters the late wood, instead of cutting through it, the early wood behind it just crushes. Makes precise chiseling a nightmare. I find soaking the end-grain in denatured alcohol makes the process better, but still pretty miserable. The first time I ever tried chiselling a mortise in anything was when I built my Roubo workbench from Douglas Fir. I had a brand new set of Narex chisels, finely sharped to the internet recommended 25°, proceeded to place the edge onto quarter sawn grain- gave it one whack with the mallet, and immediately dented the perfect grain imprint into the edge of my chisel. that late wood is hard. Hardwoods have a more "homogeneous" hardness throughout. Walnut cuts like butter in comparison.
I am a fluent Russian and English speaker based in the USA. I write in both languages for a living, with English being my primary language. The translation is excellent, much better than I was expecting. The speech itself sounds a bit like a voiceover, which is also expected. On a scale from 1 to 10, Russian is 8+, which is quite amazing, considering how complex Russian is. Thank you for the great content and a sense of humor and irony; this is the most endearing part of your videos.
It is surprisingly good. Russian is my native language so I can notice all the weird bits, but it doesn't feel too bad listening to AI generated voice.
Main problem in russian translation - stress in some words. About 87% translation is perfect. But when talking about prices - here problems. 2k dollars is insane for translation)))
Hey Cam. Just a quick note to say: I really appreciate your candor, honesty, and frankness in your storytelling. Good, bad, otherwise, you put it all there and it makes for really good videos. Really love your work. I watch your stuff as much for your style as I do for your actual builds.
Oh how times have changed. Sixty or so years ago our favorite scout project was making benches. One of the dads had a shop we could work in. Our benches were basic but functional. We never had a problem finding places (schools, parks etc) to take them and we could get community projects signed off. Ours were nothing like your heirloom quality and it's so sad that places weren't fighting to get yours. . .
Cam, I'm just realizing now, after watching your videos for years, that your random ramblings are the most entertaining part of what you're putting out. Don't change, man! ❤
Gotta love how he takes shots at himself and really doesn't take himself seriously. "The fan of the week" at the end of the videos is always entertaining as well.
Hi. Great video, thanks. I did some tree work in Portland 20+ years ago. Great town, great beer, great cycling and great approach to public noise! Now live in France and teach English. The differences in English pronunciation between countries is part of the joy of language - don't ever apologise! 'Proper' English bores need to look up the great vowel change between the 15th and 18th centuries to understand how the slow changes in pronunciation give us the frustrating but fabulous language we now enjoy....
I don't care how long it takes you to bring out a video. Just sitting there watching you yapper over a long video where you create something beautiful out of wood (NOT DENIM) is so satisfying and relaxing.
I'm a joiner and whilst I do love it, I dont really wanna watch it on YT when I'm chilling out. But you guys make great videos. The fact I'll sit thru 45mins of someone doing what I do everyday, but still be entertained... That's testament to really well made videos! Good shit guys! Love you work
I was just talking to my family about who watches my videos. They said it must be mostly all woodworkers and I said I wasn’t sure how many people that do this every day would want to watch someone else do it. So good to know I have one anyway!
I don't know how often you take ideas from the comments, but I would love to see a copper/brass walnut table. Burls art already made one, but I would love to see how you would tackle it. I was rewatching some of your old videos, and I saw the giant roll of copper you bought for the cabinet you made - if you still have the copper, this could be a really good use for it
Hey Cam, I've been following you for god know how many years and this is my first time commenting here. This video just made me realise you're my all time favourite youtube channel, I think you're the most authentic and honest person I've ever seen on the internet. You always were, all those years and you still are. It's just amazing because lately I feel like its a quality rarely seen these days. There's a lot of honest creators here on youtube but no one is close to the pure honesty you give us. Please never change, unless you want to ;). Thank you for all those years of inspiration in my own projects, lunch times and falling asleep to you yapping around. Lots of love, keep up the amazing videos! Thank you for everything!🖤 (forgive english)
I love that u admit to not knowing everything all the time, and explain the how and why u chose to do things the way u did. It shows that there's not always a precise and perfect way to do things. I love ur work man keep it up. Inspirational AF.
детская мебель другая по эргономике, ведь дети быстро растут, универсальная мебель будет порождать конфликты и иерархию, ведь кому то будет удобно, а остальным нет, но стол только один и он занимает слишком много пространства. Дети только учатся разрешать конфликты . Такой мега стол станет отдушиной для вымещения детского недовольства, стол будет разрисован, исчиркан и испачкан и в итоге будет сломан.
i actually did half lap joints for the gate for my fence this summer, did the same thing you're doing but on a smaller scale with a mitersaw. worked perfectly
Hey Cam, I speak Hindi and I've listened for a few mins on Hindi audio and I must say I'm pretty impressed. The accent is spot on and sounds super casual. Definitely want more people to start enjoying your content!
I wish I could say that I was surprised that a government agency would not take advantage of your offer, but it 100% tracks. That has got to be, hands down, one of the greatest park bench projects I have ever seen in my life, anywhere in the world, and I've been around. Absolutely phenomenal work.
As someone who works at a homeless shelter, I know a lot of shelters have outdoor spaces that would love something like this. Mine has a daycare, and we’d love a nice table like this to let the kids eat lunch at. You may ask around.
I love the way you talk about your Dad in this video. I just lost mine unexpectedly, so all things "Dad" related really get me, but your story of "I'll just figure it out" really hits home with my about my own father who would just "figure out" how to plow the road with a tractor or how to bring down a giant tree, or fix a water pump or whatever (and he was a computer guy by trade who just happened to by 15 acres in Montana without knowing what to do with it!). And being the father of 2 sons (16 and 22) that is one of the best lessons I think I can impart to them. And yes, they spend too much time in sleeping and playing video games, but in the past few years, due in no small part to your videos, I have started my own wood working journery to get myself of the couch. My younger son and I just finished turning boards from my dad's old hay wagon into an electric guitar. We watched RU-vid videos and just "figured it out"... I am very far from the wood worker you are Cam, but your videos keep my looking forward and trying things. And when you have the occassional screw up, it reminds me to not be too hard on myself for ALL of mine! Thanks for all you do and all you share!
My dad grew up in Bend and is currently living in Terrebonne. I went to COCC and lived in the area off and on. I’m Oregon born and raised and absolutely in love with my beautiful state. I love hearing about other local Oregonians family history! Awesome work and video as always ☺️♥️🌲
Brazilian fan here. I genuinely was surprised with how close to your voice tone the ai voice got. It added a country accent from Minas gerais and são Paulo (southeast region of Brazil) that matched perfectly. Greetings from Brazil 🇧🇷
Sotaque paulista muito forte kkkk (I'm from the far south of Brazil and there was definitely a regional accent, but that makes it sound better, I think! I speak a little Russian too, and while the voice doesn't sound as much like you, the Russian itself sounds pretty good!
O que já notei em vários vídeos é que, durante uma ou mais frases, algumas palavras saem com sotaque de português de Portugal, como se um nativo de Portugal estivesse falando.
Jove the Johny Sinns woodworking videos! But this audio thing just blew my mind. I speak Russian and it's quite impressive how it's almost your voice and it's of a really good quality.
Greetings from Georgia from a Russian, thank you for including my language in the list for translations at this difficult time for the whole world. I've always liked doing something with my own hands, so it's a pure pleasure to watch you do such high-quality large-scale and unusual things. The Russian translation is really good, there are small oddities, but 95% of everything is clear and very quickly forget that it is just an auto translation. Thank you and good luck. Всем мира и добра
Holy fucking shit, Russian just sounds amazing. My English is very good and I'm not gonna use it. But I think it's even better than Yandex video translation
Cam, your work is superb! All the ones I've seen. I've watched over two dozen of your videos in a couple days. Your attitude towards the work you do reminds me a lot of me.... In my opinion, every person who creates something with their own hands should be a perfectionist. Otherwise it is not worth taking the job. Especially if it is a creative work. Thank you very much for your labor! When watching your and Sam's videos, I feel a real emotional pleasure. I really like the way you create and the way you present the video material! I live in Russia and of course I don't pretend to any of your shenanigans, but I think that watching your work is already a great gift for me.... I look forward to the next videos of your works. I wish you good and generous customers and the best material for making your beautiful tables!!!!
“Saw!” Love it! Table looks amazing, no surprises, and your monologuing, I’m sure I speak for everyone when I say I could listen to it all day. Combined with impressive timer work, easily one of my favourite subscriptions on YT. Thanks for the video!👍 Have you considered donating it to a local hospital? If it has an outside space, I’m sure patients and relatives would be able to put it to good use?
Great content as allways . Man as a 70 year old woodworker in England it is impossible to get walnut of your quality even your offcuts would keep me working for the rest of my days wish i lived closer .
Try looking at woodworkers source from the states. I think they ship overseas. High quality lumber and it’s hand picked to meet or exceed your expectations.
I don't think you need to worry about the Hindi track, it sounds very good and natural like we speak in India day to day. I was very surprised about the quality though, it even got all the technical and difficult translations correct.
Hola Cam, vengo siguiendo tu canal hace tiempo ya, pero ahora con el doble al Español he podido disfrutar muchos más tus vídeos y tomas tus consejos con más precisión. La traducción es buena.Gracias y saludos desde Cuba🇨🇺
I really love the product placement that Foureyes, blacktail, and Jon the big guy. It is so nice to see you guys supporting each other. I actually bought a few things from Jon Maleki's recent video.
Pls don’t stress yourself. Good work need time. In our time we don’t have time but it’s so good things to make like in old days. That helps your mental health
There are Moose lodges in Portland. Give it to them, if they are anything like their east coast lodges I’m sure they sit out back during the nice weather enjoy themselves. That table would get a lot of use.
Awesome work as always! Small tip when you cut the beams with the chainsaw. To prevent any splits when the wood falls cut few inches from down to up and after continue with the cut from up. This is how I manage to cut any wood without any chipping. ❤
Your Russian AI voice and translation are very good) I used to watch you also translating your voice with the help of our local Russian AI, but now it has become much better. Keep going! Thank you for the content!
I think the Japanese gardens in Portland would be a perfect place for it. Gives a nod to the tools and their timber construction, plus it has outdoor spaces that would be able to host the table and be used every day.
I have been in and around the Entertainment industry my entire life...and if it came down to it and it was my life or put something together with a hammer and nail...I'd be dunzo. I know absolutely zero when it comes to woodworking, making things with my hands, etc. If I have to put up a shelf, I call a friend. But sweet hot damn it if I'm not enthralled every time you roll out a video. You make this stuff fascinating and so fun to watch. Some of my favorite content on RU-vid. It is QUITE noticeable in my feed when it's been a few weeks since you've posted. Keep up the great work, man.
I grew up in Germany and it's my first language, but I have been in the US for 12 years so I'm fluent in both. Your German audio translation is really spot on actually. I only listened for a minute because I left Germany for a reason, but it sounds authentic!
Hey! I randomly came across one of your videos out of curiosity, and now I’ve been hooked on RU-vid and your channel for three days straight. I have to say, your content is some of the best I’ve seen-both informative and entertaining. Watching all the way from Ukraine, it's impressive to see how far your work reaches. You’ve got fans even over here! Thanks so much for what you do! I highly recommend everyone checks out your channel
Вау, дружище, ты начал делать то, что могут делать только настоящие Столяра!😊 Уже хорошо! Так держать! Удачи тебе! Кстати, русский перевод вполне 👌 вполне сносный!
I really love the product placement that Foureyes, blacktail, and Jon the big guy. It is so nice to see you guys supporting each other. I actually bought a few things from Jon Maleki's recent video.
I’m not a wood worker but have been watching your videos for some time cos I absolutely admire your workmanship, creativity and style. My first degree is engineering so I love crafting things and solving problems. You asked about audio track in Hindi, I tried it and it’s really good. This is how most of the Hindi and Urdu is spoken these days… it’s mingled with English words. I’m a native Urdu speaker, can tell you that the audio track is actually a mix of Urdu, Hindi and English. Well done on another great video and that too in 8 languages!
I can't believe the parks didn't want that piece of art, it would add to any decor, I would gladly have that in my yard. Been far too long without content.
Yeah, that really shocked me. I can't imagine offering a table like this for free and being turned down, or just straight ignored. Hopefully he finds a suitable place for it where it can be appreciated.
@@daveklein2826 I assume they are referring to the one named after his grandfather which did outright say they didn't want it, but that's just from context clues.
Bonjour de Belgique Cam, depuis que je regarde tes vidéos, je l'ai toujours mis en français, c'est un accent un peu Canadien, mais très agréable à entendre. J'ai lu un commentaire qui explique aimer ta franchise, ton humour, ton humilité et je le rejoins entièrement. J'attends toujours tes vidéos avec impatience, merci beaucoup pour ton contenu toujours super intéressant et super agréablement filmé par ton acolyte qui t'est devenu indispensable. Merci d'être là et longue vie à ta chaine 🙂.
Hey, love the amazing craftsmanship in this table-it’s absolutely stunning! 👏 I actually have connections at a few hospitals in both Oregon and Washington state, and I think this piece could bring a lot of joy and serenity to a medical facility. If you’re still looking for a place to donate, I’d be happy to help make the connection. Your work would definitely make a meaningful impact in such a setting!
I'm from brazil, so I speak Portuguese, but also learned english since I'm little kid. The translation is amazing, it has a bit of accent but good Portuguese. Love your videos and been watching you for so long. Very nice to hear your voice also in Portuguese now.
That beautiful and sturdy table would look perfect at Timberline Lodge, which has historical artisan woodworking, metal crafting elements, and traditional construction details throughout. Thousands of visitors could use it each year, and it fits the immense scale of the lodge. Great project and video!
Hello. French viewer here. The French audio is good. It's a Quebec accent which could sound particular for some. Love the details on this table❤ I'm jealous of all your tools 😮
The accent isn't always a Quebec accent too. Sometimes it switches to a french accent. Some other times to an primarly english speaker speaking in french sort of like people from ontario.
Fun to watch!! The overall physical size of the project is really awesome. And just like your dad, you figured it out. Well done. We’ll be watching for your nephew in the Olympics.
If you were in Canada, I would suggest donating it to Jasper Alberta. Since the fires this summer nearly wiped out the entire town, and part of the national park. Would be awesome to see a big, natural wood, hand made, picnic table in the Jasper National Park.
I’m 52 hoping to end the rat race by 60 with above $1M. I know money is a liability to be exchanged for assets with real value like real estate (properties for rent) stocks (dividends) bonds (interest) But, what is it with bitcoin? I hear a lot about it and I'd love to diversify my portfolio.
look at the charts, bitcoin has outperformed every stock and banking product ever developed even after multiple pullbacks over the last decade. not a financial advisor but I know what i'm saying
I went from no money to lnvest with to busting my A** off on Uber eats for four months to raise about $20k to start trading with Evelyn Infurna. I am at $128k right now and LOVING that you have to bring this up here
Mr you helped me just when i needed it! It was over the table height dilemma. I had done the same thing so thank you for keeping that in there! Really appreciate your videos! Cheers!
My Dad had a physical disability that made home improvement projects even more challenging than otherwise they would have been. He would always say that you will figure out how to do what you "NEED" to get done. It's about how much you want it.
It's sweet to see RU-vidrs supporting each. I see foureyes mechanical pencil and maleckis shop shades. Wish I could afford either but thought it was great to feature.
When you talked about your dad saying he'd just 'figure it out' it reminded me of my little brother. My father started a mechanical contracting business when we were boys; schools, hospitals, apartment buildings...stuff like that. Eventually, he retired and I took over, later my little brother also joined me in the office. One day some of the guys called from a job site and told my brother about a problem they were having that they couldn't figure out. My brother turned to me and asked me who we could call for an answer and I had to break it to him. "Us. We are who gets called. There is no one else. We will have to just figure it out." He looked at me slightly alarmed as he realized that all the decisions he had been requesting from the office for the past while had been made by me. "Every time? We have to solve every problem?" I just nodded. Sometimes you just have to figure it out. It becomes a mindset. Not that you know everything, just that you do not automatically look for someone else when a problem arises, before at least taking a shot yourself. As for a tool with a high WAR rating, it is actually a metal working tool but a metal brake is virtually irreplaceable when trying to make accurate or crisp bends in metal.
@@Beardwhip it’s actually quite a bit harder then both with a janka hardness rating of 3220 and hickory and white oak are 1820 and 1360. It’s hardness is why it’s used as a cover for end grains on things like rifle stocks.
Cam, your videos are incredibly inspiring! Thank you for sharing your experience. I keep my sandpaper in Plastic Folders for Documents, labeled according to grit. They are kind of made for this as they come in different sizes and allow you to organize your storage in different ways.
Always love seeing your videos , very educative, I'm really blessed only God knows how much I praise him, getting $100k bi weekly and I’m retired now. I’ve got a good cash and can also support my family
Indian guy from TX, fluent in Hindi. The Hindi translation is surprisingly accurate and not offensive at all. Most commonly spoken Hindi today is a mix of Hindi and English that is colloquially referred to as Hinglish at times and it would sound weird if the accent between the Hindi and English words was switching back and forth. So, it is actually preferred that you sound the way that the AI makes you sound. It is bang on. I also happen to work in AI and I am familiar with how these models are trained and it would be really difficult to get a pure Hindi voice translator and most people would still prefer this version. P.S. I don't normally comment on RU-vid videos but you're one of my favorite content creators and an absolute inspiration. Keep doing you. You deserve all the success that your work is getting, and more.
Removing the waste from a housing joint (your kerf cutting) is extremely satisfying. My kids make me do cuts in waste timber just so they can hammer it out! Btw, loving the joinery in the videos. More please!
From one Cam to another, I don't even have an interest in trying woodworking myself, yet I still get excited every time I see there's a new video. Love your work and always enjoying seeing these unique projects!
Thats a fancy bin to sort and storage sandpaper! I use a couple of dead file boxes and hang folders, and keep a small frame holder for the folders on a more accessible location for the grits I am currently using more often.
"Yeah, think about it" best part of the video! That has to be one of my favorite things I've heard on your channel. When you explained it on the stair case video i was cracking up! As always, love your work Cam!
Good morning, It’s really great that you put a language translator in your videos. It’s really great! I am French and even if the translation is not perfect in French I can understand your videos. If you can tell other RU-vidrs to do the same thing as you, that would be perfect! I would like Black Forest Company to face like you! Thanks a lot See you soon Michael
Смотрю вас из России, хочу отметить прекрасный звук… благодарю за столь приятный контент, приятно слышать очень подробный обзор работы, мы можем учится на чужих ошибках) удачи