This is a good example of what not to do. Never cut on a table saw freehand without a fence unless you think you just have too many fingers. Then don’t use a riving knife if you enjoy catching speeding wood with your face
No safety guards, no riving knife, no dowels, no guide fence for your saw, loose fitting clothes, no actual measurements, if i measure once ill measure at least seven times more. The end product was ok but it could be better, your lack of safety awareness will result in more fingers lost!!
It is a very good book for beginners as well as for those that are already into ru-vid.comUgkxTNB_zFBSnTo_O1PqfVUwgi7ityw0JlKt A very good basic ebook to keep as a reference too. I like it and the way the subject matter is presented. It has humor and that helps with the reading.
Hey! Everyone is complaining about the lack of safety and the guy's missing finger tips. But what everyone doesn't realize is these are bespoke works of art, and the artist has infused them with his very self! You too, may get one of these, if you purchase one, with pieces of the artist embedded in the wood and then you can say... he really gives himself to his work! 😃😃
This channel is called woodworking smart! Really? Putting a cupped board on the tablesaw is super smart. Pushing a small board thru the router is another genius idea
Ok so before I stopped the video I learned: 1. Throw wood off your giagntic stack like you are digging somebody out trapped underneath. 2. Don't measure just eyeball 3. Use a flexible straightedge twice and big as need for maximum deflection 4. Parallel lines can be achieved by moving the straight edge in a controlled slide 5. Freehand all cuts on the table saw 6. Use your big ass jointer / planer combo you inherited from your great grandfathers warehouse. 7. Reach for your offcut before blade stops b cause it saves time Finally: Stop watching because you have seen all you need to see, you are ready to be a woodworking Jedi. Seriously though with a different title I would have given you mad props for what you made and how you made it without all the overthinking. Great job! Tips though? How narrowly avoid injury every step of the way.
hahaha many comments here critiquing this guy and his not-at-all apropos click-bait title, but yours is the best/funniest. he should have named this vid, ''tips everyone should know NOT TO DO''...
And regardless all points you've listed, he managed make a quite square thing which is definitely a sign of a Master 😂. But I support every your point.
This is hilarious! I won't pick apart what he's doing but I will say that I would not do a single thing the way he did it. Especially how he just glued those slats in and expects them to stay. The whole video is a joke
Un trabajo rápido, sin escoplo y espiga, se va perdiendo lo tradicional, lo bien hecho, ya no es como los carpinteros de antes, ahora es más importante la rapidez de entregar y lo monetario sin importar la durabilidad del mueble
I cringe when I see someone working in a wood shop with open toed shoes. It tends to make me believe that they actually have no clue what they are doing.
You know, Jesus probably wore open sandals while he was woodworking People don't take all the safety precautions at home, and often in their small business. Safety costs time and money, it's got no real bearing on talent. This was a fairly simple build, but I mostly just wanted to critique the westernised criticism of this clearly very English gentleman. Maybe steel toe caps are expensive over there
Больше скажу, там ламели похоже тупо из-под пилы. Даже не шкурены , рейсмуса не видели. Все сделано халтурно. Ещё и петли лаком покрыл. Сучки пораскалывались по всей тумбочке. Короче, под редко используемый инструмент в гараже сойдёт
That nail trick is actually kind of clever, but everything else is just.. oof.. Safety apparently isn't a thing, and those slats/louvres would fall out in a year max in any climate, that has temperature changes, since wood contracts and expands. You should spray the wood before you apply hardware.
I wish I had All that wood for Diy projects craftsman work Shop projects craftsman style work worthy i would make it ame a good senseable permanent solution millioner in 30days.
E una presa in giro xche i listelli non possono stare di punta incollati bene,si staccheranno dopo poco,il mio lavoro e il falegname ciao dall Italia 🇮🇹
Ya todo es comercial, el verdadero trabajo es a puro pegamento , ni modo todo lo hacen por cobrar más rápido, la carpintería es un arte, no es un oficio
@3:40 Best [finger] Tips Ever: you can see he lost his middle and ring finger tips in the past. So if you buy wood ready made you get to keep your finger tips
Está muy bueno...pero pregunto..ví que le echó colbón al canto de los dos largueros, por parejo, osea q entre los espacios de las tablitas también quedó untado...¿Se lo quitó o lo dejo así? Pues si lo deja así, no sería un buen acabado.
Wow... so many things done wrong. Maybe you would find this type of product in Walmart. How many fingers can be found strewn around the shop? Glue squeeze-out not cleaned up? I'm sure those slats fall loose in no time. Do the job right, or don't waste your time. Fun to watch. I was just waiting for the table saw to give the guy a kickback gut punch.
Amigo mío muy lindo este ofició Quiero pedirle un favor Vien grande ne se sito las Medidas y pulgadas de las madera Liston y el palo de los lados Bale desde Chile gracias Es pero sus Respuesta sulla gracias
No le veo donde esta lo extremada y efectiva tricks a esto , esto es normal lo que pude aprender es n o meter las manos tan cerca de al cuchilla de la meza como lo hacen en este video . no creo esta fue ;la intencion del video.
they removed the riving knife, fence and guard from the cabinet saw, dust collection does not exist. standing behind a piece of lumber while it is being milled is xtremely dangerous. kickback can kill you. kickback is very likely to happen when the riving knife is removed etc etc.. this is so wrong on so many levels. hands should be a minimum of 10 cm away from sawblade. this would be illegal in germany. somebody could imitate it and loose his fingers. you also should not glue end grain to long grain, even screws dont give enough stability. he should have used dowels instead of screws. the slats will probably fall off one after the other.
Simple might be right, but Useful is a stretch. How is it useful to rip a piece of wood on a table saw without a fence? Might as well use a hand saw. Also ... nice looking louvred doors/shutters, but what about that big strip of glue where the louvres are (aren't?) You can see it especially while you're spraying it. Should it not have been wiped clean during assembly - or maybe the end of individual louvres should be the only place that there's glue? The Glue On The Whole piece idea is faster, but you sacrifice clean lines. Opinion only. Is there a practical reason you did it that way?
I don't like woodwork done in a hurry without any care about precision and details. And please use protections on your machinery unless you want someone to feed you for the rest of your life
I really like that sophisticatedly curved ruler and hardcore "screw driver" (I use to use such impact wrench to replace wheels in my car). And of course the way he drew parallel lines.
What a dangerous game,.. shit,.. sometimes there´s tension in the wood and it starts closing at the end of the blade,.. without riving knife it starts coming with high speed into your face,.. even without making any mistake,.. take care of you my friend
This is just a suggestion, you might want to edit your video in way to give a shorter version of each step it takes to build your project. You don’t need to show the entire segment of you hammering every nail. Know what I mean?
OMG, yeah watching someone use a table saw with NO FENCE, NO MITER GAUGE and the blade ALL THE WAY UP.... too much anxiety for me to continue.... BAD EXAMPLE OF HOW TO DO THAT