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My First Dovetails & Workbench Trials 

Essential Craftsman
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I've thought about it for years, and here is my first attempt at Dovetail joints. Steep learning curve but I'll get it! Ken's Workbench here: • The Most Impressive Wo...
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30 апр 2024

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Комментарии : 134   
@adamcarpenter8549
@adamcarpenter8549 Месяц назад
Tip from a woodworker on difficult to calculate measurements: don't measure them. Scribe them off the actual piece, set up your stop block to cut to that line, test. Once it's right all your parts will be right using the same stop block setup. Measuring off the existing piece will mean it's always the right size and you don't have to calculate anything. Scribing is always more accurate than measuring. Also, give yourself grace, wood moves. Keep up the good work EC. Love from Montana.
@jerbear7952
@jerbear7952 Месяц назад
Nah sounds too easy. 😅
@MikelNaUsaCom
@MikelNaUsaCom Месяц назад
@@jerbear7952 best when you are making a one off in the backyard or garage by a human and not a robot.
@JustAChippie
@JustAChippie Месяц назад
Yeah in general you always want to avoid using a tape measure
@davearonow65
@davearonow65 Месяц назад
Measure once, cut twice.
@JustAChippie
@JustAChippie Месяц назад
@@davearonow65 scribe once cut once
@slimrosco
@slimrosco Месяц назад
Nice to hear Kenny getting so much love and recognition. Scott recognizes what a legend Kenny is and I’m glad he often gives him the love he deserves. We need some merch with an image of Kenny and his chair on it.
@jrk1666
@jrk1666 Месяц назад
Paul Sellers is the guy to watch for dovetails
@MikelNaUsaCom
@MikelNaUsaCom Месяц назад
After high school in the 70's, I spent a few decades wishing for a table saw. After buying my own house and freeing myself from debt and sending my kids off to live their own lives, I ended up buying a table saw. In a few short years, after actually doing some woodworking, I've found that I enjoy the journey of using chisels, plains, and hand saws more than using a table saw, router, bandsaw, plainer, jointer... not that I don't have the machines, but it's just quieter and I get closer to the woodworking, by using the hand tools... plus I learned I could make my own tools... that is my journey, glad to hear about your journey... keep up the good work!
@MikelNaUsaCom
@MikelNaUsaCom Месяц назад
planes?
@wallingj68
@wallingj68 Месяц назад
You might enjoy watching Paul Sellers here on RU-vid. I am in the same boat as you, except when it comes to ripping boards. I'll take a table saw any day because it seems that I can't saw a straight and plumb line to save my life!
@virusO1OOOOO1
@virusO1OOOOO1 Месяц назад
Such a wonderful thing to see a modern trademen learning old way crafts. Love it
@virusO1OOOOO1
@virusO1OOOOO1 Месяц назад
My Great Grandfather never turned down a single carpentry job, furniture, framing, all of it. From a time when Craftsman wasn't a brand it was an actual person 😂
@danthompson6378
@danthompson6378 Месяц назад
Jointer tip- the fence doesn’t have to be square. If you alternate which face rides against the fence the angles cancel each other out. Hope that made sense. Love your channel!
@skipper2285
@skipper2285 Месяц назад
The lesson learned was not so much that it wasn't square, but that Scott neglected to check a "new to him" used tool. Making it square is easy once you know you have to.
@viqtahkorir7622
@viqtahkorir7622 Месяц назад
I love how Kenny is always there... Keep up the good work
@paultennis9414
@paultennis9414 Месяц назад
Kenny is a great resource, but personally, I'd feel intimidated having someone of his caliber looking over my work.
@kendavis8046
@kendavis8046 Месяц назад
As a lifelong occasional wood-worker, I always look forward to your videos. And indeed, I picked up a couple of tools I needed at the time, a "vintage" (meaning made in America) Milwaukee Saws-all for $50, and a 12" De Walt surface planer that included new blades, and that one was $150. Both were project necessities at the time, and both served their purpose well, and they both remain in the arsenal should the itch to make some sawdust hit me yet again. My sole experience in hand-cut dove-tailing was a project I made for my father several decades ago. a small box with a Cribbage inlay on top, the box in walnut, the inlay in cherry and maple (and cocobolo for start and end.) My mother insisted that I take the box back when my father died, as my brother never picked up Cribbage. They were crappy dovetails, but it was a labor of love, and I hope that my son will own it when I pass on.
@robertwomack3419
@robertwomack3419 Месяц назад
65 year old master still humble and learning!!
@smartgorilla
@smartgorilla Месяц назад
old man replacement with a big heart. still waitng for the guttering to be fixed hehe
@AE-pv9vc
@AE-pv9vc Месяц назад
It is interesting to see a master framer go through the paces of learning woodworking precision and workflows. Makes me not feel so terrible when my tolerances aren't pristine...I just gotta keep at it. Thanks, Scott
@stephenayer8255
@stephenayer8255 Месяц назад
Scott if you want a fits first time method for dovetails all be it by hand check out Rob Cosman’s videos!
@bestbuilder1st
@bestbuilder1st Месяц назад
Or step it up one more notch and check out Paul Sellers
@krenwregget7667
@krenwregget7667 Месяц назад
I really love that you are diving into this project and expanding your skills and tools. There is pride in framing houses and building solid structure but furniture making is where the trade becomes craft and there is no better feeling that making something useful AND beautiful.
@LukeLong-oi4uc
@LukeLong-oi4uc Месяц назад
I love this channel. I’ve learned tons of things. You’re an excellent teacher. Thank you for producing such great content. Blessings!
@jaywethington1934
@jaywethington1934 Месяц назад
E.C. You're absolutely right about Porter Cable falling from grace. The best circular saw I've ever owned was a P.C. "left handed" circ saw. It finally got put into my home use tool box. Somehow the bed got bent and I haven't been able to locate a replacement. Keep up the good work!
@jasonhammond4640
@jasonhammond4640 Месяц назад
Dovetail router jigs are great. They're handy when doing a kitchen full of drawers. The real fun is dovetailing custom boxes where you can lay out and knife your lines, saw, and chisel by hand. This allows you to change up the sizes, the type of dovetail joints, and can make a project look spetacular.
@MAGAMAN
@MAGAMAN Месяц назад
The incra router table system allows this. You can whip out dovetails in minutes once you get the hang of it.
@jasonhammond4640
@jasonhammond4640 Месяц назад
@MAGAMAN Incra looks like a nice setup. For $500 (through Lee Valley) It gives you what, three different size dovetail bits so you can make the double dovetails. That still only gets you through DTs, half blind DTs, and sliding DTs. I think my Porter-Cable jig will only give you through DTs and half blinds in 1/4" or 1/2" tails. This means I could do only one size of double DTs with it. However, With a sharp DT saw (eastern or western) a sharp chisel and good layout you can cut out an infinite variety of dovetail joints and sizes that actually fit the size, proportion and layout of the box or project your working on. I have small tea boxes I've built that have DT pins as small as 3/16" and my workbench has lapped DTs as big as 2". Once you get the skill down, the sky is the limit.
@willyboj
@willyboj Месяц назад
Use painters tape to reduce bit tear out. Works great in almost any species, especially that white oak. I just made a white oak dovetailed box this week, and the tape allowed zero tear out. Hope it helps!
@georgemarkham1130
@georgemarkham1130 Месяц назад
I'd like to add that on your project with half lap joints that I use my radial arm saw with a set of dado blades and start out with the blades a little above halfway on the joint and keep lowering till I get it tweaked out to exactly what it takes I've been building cabinets and furniture for years with a lot of half lap joints and find out that this works well and if you have the radial saw you will find out that this works out very well keep up the great work I'm 75 and I'm still learning
@mdloops
@mdloops Месяц назад
It’s reassuring to hear that woodworking can be intimidating for even an experienced carpenter.
@tonyb4337
@tonyb4337 Месяц назад
I'm loving your journey of learning a new skill Scott. That stop block on the table saw fence is a great safety tip that could use its own explanation video. It's tempting to just use the fence but there's a significant risk of the part jamming and getting thrown across the workshop, potentially taking a few fingers with it.
@briantaylor9266
@briantaylor9266 Месяц назад
Agreed. However, in the example that Scott showed the stop block isn't 100% necessary in that there is no waste piece that will fall off and jam. But new woodworkers don't always recognize the difference between the scenarios, so using the stop block is good practice.
@quinnsmith2955
@quinnsmith2955 Месяц назад
you can't go wrong on those old Porter-Cable 690 routers they are the best
@jakejuan327
@jakejuan327 Месяц назад
A suggestion, make the height of the planer rollaround such that when the boards are exiting the planer you can use your workbench as the outfeed table. In other words, the roll around is lower then the height of your bench. One of the things I discovered AFTER I made my benches and roll arounds. It was just dumb luck that my table saw height and work bench height are equal. Makes things quite convenient.
@memyselfandeye1234
@memyselfandeye1234 Месяц назад
Very nice .... L00K up Paul Sellers on there... peace
@eoinkeane
@eoinkeane Месяц назад
Made my first attempt at dovetails by hand using Paul Sellers' method. Baby steps, but I'd recommend everyone to try to learn to make them with hand tools - a *sharp* marking knife, a few *sharp* chisels, a *sharp* dovetail saw, and practice. More satisfying that tuning a jig, which is needed for mass production only, I feel.
@mpride1911
@mpride1911 Месяц назад
I have that same Grizzly jointer. I installed a carbide cutter head and it's fantastic.
@weasel3330
@weasel3330 Месяц назад
I’m jealous you’re using such fantastic resources on a router workbench. I’d have saved those boards for a family creation to pass down. We’ll never get that wood again.
@ohyeahforsure
@ohyeahforsure Месяц назад
Referential measurements and trading your pencil out for a marking knife are game changers! Good luck with the journey and enjoy the process!
@BlackHart9000
@BlackHart9000 Месяц назад
Part of those pipe clamps look like they use galvanized pipe - the zinc coating is slick and will cause issues with the dogs biting in. I had good luck roughing up the pipe with a belt sander to give the clamping dogs a place to bite. Look into the Bessey Revo style bar clamps and the various knock-offs. You won't need a rack full of them, but 4 - 6 of them 36"+ long are game changers for certain applications.
@coustran007
@coustran007 Месяц назад
I loved the phrase "I sprained my wrist reaching for my wallet." Not one I'd heard before. I'm guessing that means you were so eager to make the deal you hurt yourself doing it?
@landonlandon5533
@landonlandon5533 Месяц назад
My dresser has Knapp joints. They were only made for 30 years from 1870-1900. I had no idea how old it really was.
@misinformationwithrandy
@misinformationwithrandy Месяц назад
I have hand cut dovetails over and over and I haven't got it yet. The router jigs are pretty nice. Thanks for sharing.
@davidstewart1153
@davidstewart1153 Месяц назад
Search everywhere for a good old wood vise. You'll want a patternmaker's vise because they look so cool, and if you find one, great. But even ordinary vises are perfectly usable as long as they work. Same story for everything, you can get something new that looks like a vise and doesn't work, something new that appears to cost a fortune or something old that has always worked.
@dandsliger
@dandsliger Месяц назад
I remember learning to cut half laps and it can be an exercise in frustration. Slight variants in the width and thickness of the material can throw off the fit. It’s great to watch you learn these skills and share your struggles, and successes with us!
@billbool7743
@billbool7743 Месяц назад
Hi Scott, I hope the router is variable speed as you will need that for large bits. Also check Lock Mitre bits if you haven't already.
@rickroberts2198
@rickroberts2198 Месяц назад
The best furniture makers I know can make glued up lumber look seamless, color and grain, from different trees. They pay little or no attention to end grain orientation. Your glue up looks great!
@BrittCHelmsSr
@BrittCHelmsSr Месяц назад
Can't wait to follow along on this adventure. Great idea to test on the scaled down table.
@henrysara7716
@henrysara7716 Месяц назад
Thank you Scott, learning keep us young.
@alanr745
@alanr745 Месяц назад
Thank you for the update Scott. One thought I had when you were talking about the 2-3/4 and 2-1/4 dimensions was relative dimensioning. It’s applicable when joints need to fit and your overall dimensions are not affected. It’ll save you from crazy fractions by just getting “half” with a tri-square or caliper based on the part’s thickness. No math, just dimensioning based on final desired outcome. It’ll save you from many headaches. 😉
@vanuren3345
@vanuren3345 Месяц назад
Scott I have a space set aside and will begin the construction and assembly of my own woodshop this spring. Over the past 6 years or so I've managed to collect tools that were on sale or from FB Marketplace or even been blessed to receive some donations from friends an friends of friends. I look forward to following along on your builds and seeing if an 2 old carpenters (you & me) can make things happen of quality. Keep up the good work my friend!
@kenrosemann6996
@kenrosemann6996 Месяц назад
When routing across the grain, as when routing the half-lap joints you described about 8 minutes into the video, be sure to put a sacrificial piece of wood on the side of the piece where the router finishes, or you'll get tear-out (especially with grainy species like oak) along the edge of the board. Alternatively, you could rough-cut with table saw and then just get a smooth finish pass with the router. If not removing as much wood, won't get (much) tear out. Ken Jordan may have an alternate approach to eliminate tear out, but will certainly know how to show you what I'm referring to.
@michaelking2160
@michaelking2160 Месяц назад
Just a little suggestion from an old timer. Subject: Clamps "Pipe clamps" come from a time when radial arm saws ruled the world. When this kind of clamp is put under pressure, the iron pipe starts to distort or bend. this results in distorting the actual clamping pads so they are no longer in parallel but rather "opening up." the result is that clamping pressure will then cause the wood panel will start ot distort out of flat. I want to strongly suggest that a panel in the process of being glued up must remain flat even when the clamps are fully tensioned. Otherwise, any distortion in the panel will remain in place even after the glue has dried. Finally, in regards to gluing up the half-laps. Best clamp for the purpose is a "F" style with a jaw depth of 3". Also, to keep from marring the top surfaces, created little sacrificial wood pads that , when in place , prevent any clamp denting. Have fun and bravo to you for being willing to get into the woodworking weeds.s
@prototype3a
@prototype3a Месяц назад
It really is sort of amazing the subtle differences between poorly made router bits and excellent ones. I basically only buy Whiteside bits at this point. I've also been looking into getting a Leigh jig. Leaning towards a Super16. I think it would do everything I need. I've heard that you can get cleaner cuts on the Leigh jig by simply adding painters' tape to the board and failing that, use a sacrificial board. Personally, for the dovetail cuts, I'd setup a second router with a straight cutting bit to do a first pass and then use the router with the dovetail bit.
@tombirmingham7354
@tombirmingham7354 Месяц назад
Go Scott! Good luck with the bench. Love your videos.
@walterplummer3808
@walterplummer3808 Месяц назад
Been waiting for this series since you first mentioned it. It is going to be great. Thanks
@samsinterests
@samsinterests Месяц назад
Can’t wait for more
@tonyn3123
@tonyn3123 Месяц назад
MicroJig offers a 1/2 jig that I have used successfully. It helps set a blade/bit height very close to 1/2 the thickness of the surface it is on. Perfect for half-laps. While using mine, I have only had to make minute adjustments to get the height perfect. I haven't used it extensively, but I have seen others that use it a lot and swear by it. Regarding routers; my sons tell me I don't change router bits, I just change routers. In my opinion, they are like clamps. You can't have too many. lol
@jasonwilcox2661
@jasonwilcox2661 Месяц назад
Cannot wait friend!! Kenny keep this good man going!!!
@tereisias
@tereisias Месяц назад
Keep up the good work!
@Hoaxer51
@Hoaxer51 Месяц назад
Finally! Lol I’ve been waiting patiently for series to start, I’m sure it will be great. It’s off to a good start with some sound advice, see you on the next one!
@garychaiken808
@garychaiken808 Месяц назад
Great job. Thank you 😊
@adamtheheavyequipmentmechanic
@adamtheheavyequipmentmechanic Месяц назад
I gotta say thanks for making these videos, its nice sitting down for lunch and watching a video that makes me feel like building or honing my skills. No politics boring news or excessive sales of junk just nice shop talk and productive educational content. I wonder what brand of tobacco ken smokes.
@nickmagma7745
@nickmagma7745 Месяц назад
Finally the workbench build is starting! I was hoping you would learn to hand cut the dovetails but I understand you don´t want to or can´t invest the time. Looking forward to the next video!
@BigJohnson1566
@BigJohnson1566 Месяц назад
My best advice, invest in a good air filtration system your lungs will thank you. I now run a Jet afs -1000 hanging system, I was surprised at just how much fine particle dust I was inhaling. I coughed for 4 months straight until I figured out why. Thanks for your content.
@PaulMikna
@PaulMikna Месяц назад
I like how you do a test run on the dovetails before going onto the real thing.... As a handyman, I always try to practice a new technique/process at home before I take it out to a customer's just so it's not my 1st time and so I'm not stumbling around at their home!
@terrygleeson8480
@terrygleeson8480 Месяц назад
Hi Scott, I have recently retired as a cabinetmaker/ Antique restorer/ educator after 48 years at the bench. If i didn’t live on the other side of the Pacific Ocean in Sydney I’d offer too give you one on one instruction on making dovetailed drawers correctly. can i first advise you get rid of the dovetailing machine and do it by hand. It’s quieter, more satisfying and you’ll get a better quality joint with more surface area contact for the glue where it matters. Can i recommend you watch Rob Cosman on dovetailing drawers. He learned this marking method from the late Alan Peters who could easily lay claim to being one of the best designer makers of the twentieth century. You, myself and Rob are probably the same age so he’ll be taking in a language that both you and i can understand. i do have issues with the bench design but they are personal preferences developed over nearly five decades in the trade. so continue as planed. Kind Regards, Terry Gleeson.
@arubaguy2733
@arubaguy2733 Месяц назад
We bought several pieces of Amish-built oak furniture and the dovetail joinery used on the drawers is absolutely perfect, as is the rest of the construction, real wood (not ply or manufactured) even where it will never be seen, and lovely finishes. Fit and finish is A1. I would love to see their shop and processes. The only commercial parts used are ball-bearing drawer slides and hinges. Some of the cabinet knobs are turned wood, others are simple, yet elegant wrought-iron.
@americanangler94559
@americanangler94559 Месяц назад
Good episode
@Mechman0925
@Mechman0925 26 дней назад
Not knocking your choices although in the industry the phrase " Friends dont let friends buy Grizzley" has been around for decades although they have improved. Love your show!
@n164bj
@n164bj Месяц назад
Oh no I can't watch you anymore, jig cut dovetails 😢 Only hand cut are good. Or that's what the internet says. But when I cut them it takes a while to read the jig setup instructions. 😂 Need to use it more so i dont have to learn it from scratch. Once I figure I out they go fast and they work great. Looks like your shop is coming together nicely.
@TheBigdoggg33
@TheBigdoggg33 Месяц назад
The Bob Ross of carpentry!! 🫡
@briantaylor9266
@briantaylor9266 Месяц назад
I think Scott is rapidly learning the difference between a carpenter and a woodworker! The tolerances are an order of magnitude different when your doing 'fine woodworking'. I lean to the woodworking end of the spectrum, and my most frequently used measurement device is digital calipers. I often say that woodworkers make lousy carpenters, because they're way too fussy. The (very skilled) carpenter that is currently replacing siding on my house agrees with me every time I try to help him 🙂
@AlanTheBeast100
@AlanTheBeast100 Месяц назад
All those clamps for that price was a steal!
@randykane474
@randykane474 Месяц назад
Great video as judged by this new to woodcraft learner. I bought a Saw Stop 3 hp cabinet saw and am making workshop cabinets to learn. I look forward to watching more. For hand dovetails I like to watch Rob Cosman in Canada as his charity deals with combat wounded veterans learning woodcraft.
@keithcarr4256
@keithcarr4256 Месяц назад
I'm a framing Carpenter too had a real woodworker tell me I had to throw away my big carpenters pencil to do woodworking LoL and he was right it's hard to get it in your head that a 1/16th doesn't matter keep up the great videos
@tristanconnolly5675
@tristanconnolly5675 Месяц назад
Nice.
@waterchickenwoodworxbydanb42
@waterchickenwoodworxbydanb42 Месяц назад
I always make my box just a bit bigger than what it needs to be that way you can cut and get you half pins perfect with going crazy trying to figure out the math.
@HandymanHultman
@HandymanHultman Месяц назад
Let's just hop Kenny gets his percent on the plans🙏
@pgober58
@pgober58 Месяц назад
Framers!! lol
@steved8272
@steved8272 Месяц назад
You can save yourself a lifetime of panel glue-up headaches by sticking a cheap little 4 inch machinists square to your new jointer with a magnet. Those fences always creep just the tiniest bit, and I can't tell you how many times I've kicked myself for not checking (always after the glue is dry, of course!)
@tomshirley8028
@tomshirley8028 Месяц назад
It is fun to watch a carpenter transition to furniture making. You found some great tools on your bargain search. From what I can see those are pipe clamps not bar clamps. A small point but there is a difference and the two perform differently.
@matthewwright57
@matthewwright57 Месяц назад
Man this is a lot of fun. Dont discount how useful a bandsaw is for so much of woodworking.
@OURICO45
@OURICO45 Месяц назад
I think your next video should be about the deer antlers hang on the wall and some nice hunting story .
@jerbear7952
@jerbear7952 Месяц назад
If you are cheating at all its having a friend like Kenny. I've had one of my own. Its like playing on easy mode. :)
@SP-nx8qx
@SP-nx8qx Месяц назад
Ah, beautiful. Welcome to the woodworking world where you will spend one or two decades finetuning your dust extraction system :)
@michaeldalton8374
@michaeldalton8374 Месяц назад
When the time comes for a hand saw (and that time WILL come), go with the Japanese saws. They cut on the pull and make a mockery of American saws.
@willdogsdroid
@willdogsdroid Месяц назад
5:37 My mind is childish ... I couldn't stop laughing!
@ronkruchten5867
@ronkruchten5867 Месяц назад
The best dust collection systems are in a separate room or lean-to, so the fine dust gets sucked completely out of the workshop. Blow it right into an enclosed trailer if you can so you can just hitch it to the Kubota, haul it out into a field and dump it. Be aware that large amounts of fine sanding dust are not only a respiratory and fire hazard but an EXPLOSION hazard as well. Especially if you dump it into a burning fire.
@thisiswes666
@thisiswes666 Месяц назад
I am super excited about you entering the woodworking world! Also insanely jealous of your bar clamp purchase -_- the money spent on clamps outweighs every piece of machinery i own...
@willamettehops
@willamettehops Месяц назад
Looks good but what about the gate? I drive by your place on my way home and keep looking for the new gate!
@indisputablefacts8507
@indisputablefacts8507 Месяц назад
Whenever Norm Abrams finished a dovetail joint with his router jig, he'd slide them together and say "Perfect result, every time!" The only time I got perfect results is on test boards. It's all to the good, though, as I find I rather more enjoy hand-cutting them. I still screw up plenty, but at least I know where and how I screwed up, so there's a whole lot less profanity and a whole lot more "I'll get better next time."
@jacobfaso5517
@jacobfaso5517 Месяц назад
I’ve been woodworking for 10 years… he’s already better than me 😂
@JohnnySportsfan
@JohnnySportsfan Месяц назад
Holy shit you got a good deal on those clamps..
@NSResponder
@NSResponder Месяц назад
BTW, something else I see on gov planet pretty often is metal. Aluminum plate, steel plate, square tubing, most of it going for less than the cost to ship it.
@jcoul1sc
@jcoul1sc Месяц назад
Is porter cable a stanley now?
@steve6139
@steve6139 Месяц назад
Cut to the eventual chase of dust collection and invest in a fixed setup with ductwork and a larger dust collector. Moving a portable unit or hose from machine to machine will get old real quick and you'll eventually find an excuse not to use it.
@joelnowland2196
@joelnowland2196 Месяц назад
Like a lot of tools/machinery get the most powerful, biggest, heaviest you can afford. A dust collector is the same, Get the most CFM you can.
@dusty7264
@dusty7264 Месяц назад
Yes you should be alternating the grain on your glue ups.
@MAGAMAN
@MAGAMAN Месяц назад
Not everyone agrees. Alternating doesn't cancel out the warping, it just makes it warp in multiple directions causing a wavy pattern that is harder to fix than a single warp direction.
@dusty7264
@dusty7264 Месяц назад
@@MAGAMAN for the last thirty years it’s the way I do glue ups for the custom furniture, I sign every piece I build and it comes with a lifetime warranty, I haven’t had a dining room table returned yet. You also need to hand select the wood you are using.
@briantaylor9266
@briantaylor9266 Месяц назад
... or if you're going high end, use rift or quarter sawn stock!
@dusty7264
@dusty7264 Месяц назад
@@briantaylor9266 true, and for some furniture I hand lay veneer. I use a traditional European bench with tail vices and bench dogs I made in out of Maple I have the maple side grain up, kinda like butcher block.
@tMatt5M
@tMatt5M Месяц назад
Unless one has a true fetish for fancy joinery, dovetails are really way more trouble than they are worth.
@tode5675
@tode5675 Месяц назад
PorterCable could use the wrath of the internet! For over 4 decades I've used their routers/sanders and specialty tools, Now I'm saving worn out parts to try and keep my stuff going because the new offerings from everybody suck. Switches from the 691 router fit the 503 belt sander if this will help anybody else?
@prototype3a
@prototype3a Месяц назад
Yep. When Dewalt took them over they decided to make P-C one of their junk-grade sub-brands. P-C 690 and P-C 758x were legendary. I have a Bosch ROS65 sander that I generally love and I can't understand why Bosch chose to discontinue it.
@dunep6465
@dunep6465 Месяц назад
Scott: He who dies with the most tools wins... 🤣
@GarrethandPipa
@GarrethandPipa Месяц назад
I just can't believe you never had to do a dovetail.... say a drawer. Just seems so strange I did my first dovetail in Jr High. Your just 4 years older than I am and we had to do all kinds of archaic joints.
@WalterRiggs
@WalterRiggs Месяц назад
Speaking for myself: I want to see the whole build process as if it were another spec house.
@bobireland1256
@bobireland1256 Месяц назад
Ah yes, experience!!! That and, in my case, mistakes make all the difference in the end. Woodworker?! HA! Woodbutcher is a more appropriate moniker for me although I did manage to make a tolerable bed and headboard which has lasted a bit more than 20 years. If I ever attempted dovetails they would turn out more like pigtails. Truth in advertising. Pray maintain speed and course!
@smartgorilla
@smartgorilla Месяц назад
amazing finds there. this is recycling at its best. rather not buy new new here
@lonewolfeman
@lonewolfeman Месяц назад
practi8ce bench- lol
@itsphillyduhh8392
@itsphillyduhh8392 Месяц назад
who said an old dog can't learn new tricks
@dbevit
@dbevit Месяц назад
Using the metric system would be easier
@jamesengland7461
@jamesengland7461 Месяц назад
Using inches is a much better big- picture choice for an American because the whole system is based on inches. Measurement is just a language.
@selectooldave
@selectooldave Месяц назад
Learn to cut dovetails without jigs. Once you learn, it doesn't take too much time at all.
@John-yf8qh
@John-yf8qh Месяц назад
Hello again Scott! I know you’ve got a certain feel - a mechanic sympathy and instinctively know what feels correct when using tools etc. However, if they’re your first two attempts at dovetails then you have absolutely NO business being so critical of yourself, jig or no jig!! I definitely remember my first time…. Though that’s a different story for a different day!! :) :) Sorry, this is the very last channel that deserves to have such crass ‘jokes’ but I couldn’t resist. I also remember my first dovetail (and my first dovetails that WORKED!), though the were hand-cut, they were so far out that you could’ve parked The Titanic in the gaps. I don’t mind telling you that it took me a great deal more than two attempts to get them as good as you did here. I’m no carpenter though, as wood is SO unforgiving. Metal, all the way, METAL!!! :) :) I hope you and the family are all well and that you’ve got lots of crops planted and are waiting with cheerful anticipation of what is to come - with fruit & veg, of course, but also in a more general sense.
@timziegler9358
@timziegler9358 Месяц назад
Sir, why don't you cut the dovetails, for you bench, by hand? It isn't that hard! Like all things in life, many make the process of cutting dovetails difficult when it isn't! God bless you.
@davearonow65
@davearonow65 Месяц назад
Dovetails are overrated. I prefer cocktails. Thing about cocktails is that the more you drink when you are operating your sharp dangerous power machinery, the less you care about what your joints look like. If you are doing it correctly, you shouldn't even be able to pronounce the word "joint" by the time you're done. Always happy to help. Hit me up for other shop tips any time.
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