Good afternoon friends!!! My name is Alexander, on my channel you will see many interesting solutions for creating a tool with your own hands at home! Subscribe to the channel, it will be interesting! INSTAGRAM / master___sh
0:12 Never use the fence when doing these cross cuts, or: 1: use fence for cross cut, 2: get smacked in face, 3: find mirror and pry wood from face, inspect damage.😊
Nice video and fantastic problem solving! Woodworking, be it fine instruments or large structures is all about coming up with jigs and tracing shapes! Some more views and you can crowd-fun an actual turning lathe =)
Аккуратная работа и креативные идеи! Правда смотрел и думал - имея такие инструменты, можно было и станки токарные и шлифовальные недостающие купить 😂 но как пример когда нужно срочно какую-то приблуду - отлично.
Здравствуйте!🤝с наступаюшим новым годом вас!здоровья,радости,успеха!море позитива,развития каналу,много подписчиков!и конечно новогодний,жирный лайк 👍!🎉🎉🎉
Once again Master Sh you hit it out of the ball park!! All excellent idea's!! One concern though, you are not very careful around the tablesaw. When making the runners to sit in the miter track, you grabbed the piece of wood at the back of the blade while it was still spinning. Your jacket cuff could have easily gotten caught in the blade, pulling your hand and wrist into the spinning blade. You could lose a finger, use of your hand or cut a main vein in your wrist. We love your videos, and want you to keep making them, but please, use safe practices around your machinery. We don't want anything to happen to you. After 50 years of woodworking, I have seen some horrible accidents from men who are not as careful as they should be. Take care Sir.
Hello, thank you so much for your concern! I'm trying to be more careful! And after your comment, I will be even more vigilant! Once again, many thanks for the kindness and happiness to your loved ones!
Great advice, of which I feel will be greatly accepted by this talented man. Being safety conscious is huge with table saws, as I learned the hard way, when I attempted a sketchy technique on the table saw. Fortunately only cut the end of one finger off, down to the first joint, and sheared the ends on the others. Brave and stupid. I'm an EMT, and quite engineer-minded, with an extreme high tolerance for pain, so I'm prepared to suffer the consequences, lol. Following that mishap, I created some nice push sticks, as it taught me a valuable lesson, as well as a heightened respect for this very dangerous piece of woodworking equipment.
das sieht immer so leicht aus passt immer und immer sehr genau nun lieber alexander wünsche ich dir und deiner familie einen guten rutsch , ein gesundes glückliches neues jahr liebe grüße sendet dir waldemar aus deutschland
I agree with the last comment about unsafe practices. Using a sander without dust collection and on MDF is just madness. To those who wished this guy good health, he is going to have to be very lucky. It won't be long before he loses a few fingers, and he is certainly going to have lung problems.
Cutting long boards using the fence is a big no no. Doing it with your hands is just wishing the board will flip and pull your hand across a blade raised much higher than it has to be.
I like to show these videos to my construction students on how to NOT use a table saw. Never ever stand in line with the blade and always push the wood between the blade and the fence. It is what push sticks are for. This guy will someday suffer a bad kickback accident one day. Don’t use a table saw like this kids.
@@MA-SH The speed of the video doesn't change my perception of the danger, as I've been the victim of my own creative mishaps, lol. The table saw almost claimed the fingers on one of my hands, with one cut completely off, to the first joint on my index finger. It was a daring attempt, and proved by the consequences. I would hate for you to get your hand caught between that fence and the blade, so PLEASE do yourself and your viewers a service by using a push stick. My own advancement and knowledge of woodworking has given me a great appreciation of the art and craft, of which I enjoy immensely. I'm an EMT also, so I'm fully prepared to suffer the consequences of shortcuts and irrational thinking. I've taught my own three US Marine sons the art of woodworking.
1. the tapered leg jig is ok, but straight dowel jigs are inexpensive and work well, i dont see the need to fabricate a big clumsy jig for it 2. no one needs a drum sander without dust collection 3. i realize MDF is popular because of a couple favorable qualities, but on balance it sucks: (a) it puts toxic formaldehyde into your indoor air just sitting there (b) it puts very fine toxic dust into your air when you machine it, and (c) it wrecks every cutting edge that touches it especially painful to see a router taken to it use high quality plywood or solid wood and make better stuff
Moin. Ich verstehe nicht, was der Mann da ab 8:35 mit der Oberfräse macht. Ich sehe keinen Anschlag und kann nicht erkennen, was für einen Fräser (Kugellager?) er benutzt. Könnt ihr helfen?
Hallo, ich kann Ihnen helfen) Dies ist ein gewöhnlicher Fräser ohne Lager, ich mache es ohne Anschlag, indem ich mich auf meine Erfahrung und Vision verlasse 👀
Сначала надо показывать готовое изделие, и для чего оно, и только потом медленно и долго процесс изготовления. А то приходится смотреть на двойной скорости.
Neat ideas, but surprised you have all 10 fingers left. That table saw is going to get you eventually if you keep running your hands so close to the blade. And kickback is a bitch.
Video starts with a sure fire method to cut off fingers quickly. Please do not watch or follow anything in this video. Not everyone who creates these videos actually have any real practical woodworking skills
@@MA-SH If you look at the comments, you’ll see I’m not the only one to notice. You do NOT work safely. Many on youtube don’t. I used to be the buyer in a woodworking tool store and I can’t tell you how many guys came in missing parts, or guys I knew lost parts after I met them. I just hope you don’t become one of them, because you need to learn basic table saw safety.
Encore des doigts qui vont finir dans la lame si vous suivez ce "tuto". Le travail du bois nécessite des précautions de sécurité qui ne sont pas prises dans cette vidéo amateur. Attention à vous et prenez conseils auprès d'un professionnel si vous souhaitez vous former. Au passage, la fabrication d'un tour à bois "maison" offrira bien plus de possibilités de tournage et ne sera pas plus compliquée.
That first one is so stupid. By the time you spend the money and time . . . You could simply go to the store and buy what you need! I stopped watching at number 2 . . . Too painful to watch any more!
If you see something unsafe, you should use this as an educational opportunity to protect the maker and viewers instead of just making vague accusations. In general it was well thought out and safe. Two points though: you didn't use a push stick on that narrow cut at 0:33 seconds. You created a missile just waiting to kickback. Also no emergency shut off on the drill/drum sander can be dangerous if some hair or clothing got caught up in it. Just some food for thought!