Hand tools only guy here: nothing shown here would have been impossible with hand tools if you put in the elbow grease, it is about what you build, not what you built it with. I'd suggest cutting the complaining down and going to the workshop and DOING
I think there's a bit more than $20k in tools there. His dad must be really trusting to let his son use his expensive tools like this. Too bad that top he built will soon start cracking apart at the seams, since he didn't allow for wood movement (seasonal expansion and contraction) on the breadboard ends.
Push stick and pushpads - well done (I am a retired furniture make / machinist / Carpenter and Joiner (with all my fingers and eyes)) keep them safe and keep using them!
Well said. Nearly lost two of my fingers. 50 + stitches. 5 hour operation, tendons and nerve repair. Two nights in hospital. Just because I was stupid enough to wear a pair of loose gloves using a panel saw. I've retired now, but always safety first. A pair of good quality of ear protection is also recommended. I now suffer from tinnitus. Some people never learn.
Pay no attention to 90% of these comments. They are simply jealous. I love the attention to detail! I will agree that the application of glue to the breadboard ends probably wasn't the wisest of choices but I love where this is headed. Good job; cant wait for part 2!
Great effort! Looks good as well. It’s good to see a young guy making stuff and yes, I am envious of his workshop! To the many ppl who have placed negative comments, there are a few other channels that deserve your attention long before this one!
I am retired but still have my shop and all the stationary tools. What I don't understand is how I turned out so much work and never had the tools these young fellows have?
I noticed that when you were using the tables saw you never allowed your hand to ride over the spinning blade. You would lift it and bring it over the blade, then replace it on the work at the other end as the piece runs through its travel. I have done the very same thing myself for years. A shop partner of mine - tragically - did NOT practice such safety a technique and had half his thumb shredded in a shaper! As he was pushing the wood through, there was a hidden void in the center of the piece WHERE HIS THIMB WAS and it collapsed in that spot, and when the shaper knives met the void his thumb . . . EEEEKKK! Good habit to practice.
Seemed a confused method of construction. If you have a domino why not use it to make the frame and attach the cross members, it would save screwing into end grain. Also agree with the comments regarding not allowing for expansion of the top.
Wow, toujours du travail du bois simple et raffiné, je serai curieux de connaître le produit que tu as utilisé pour changer le tanin du bois ça lui donne une belle couleur au plateau. bravo l'artist
Good afternoon, thank you for viewing. Here's the trick, I'll tell you all about Ammonia fuming oak. Woodworking. th-cam.com/video/iq9taf8uAqg/w-d-xo.html
Someone commented here that people are jealous. They are right, I’d love a nice big fully equipped workshop. But at 69 years old it wouldn’t get used properly. I like what you did but I may have done things a bit differently. 👍
Hater’s gonna hate. If you don’t like it, don’t watch it. Building your own shop furniture is one of the greatest ways to hone one’s skills. Nice build. Thank you for sharing.
Looks like the main point of this vid was to show how many different tools you can use on one (somewhat boring) project. Yes I’m jealous but goodness, talk about overkill.
Non ho capito che roba sia se non un piano di lavoro con una base (che immagino accoglierà qualcosa di speciale). Forse meritava far vedere tutto il progetto, che così perde abbastanza di interesse.
I wonder why you didn't make a nice mortise and tenon joint in the first part in plastic from screwing it together cold. A nice wood joint shows craftsmanship and then I don't mean lamellas or dovetails. And also with the top a nice groove and brass would not have been out of place was and is nicer than lamellas. I find this a shame to see. I am a carpenter and furniture maker myself. We use traditional wood joints.
"Der Traum eines jeden Handwerkers: Das möchten Sie auch in Ihrer Werkstatt haben!" Für wen ist das Video eigentlich gedacht? Ein Anfänger hat erst einmal Probleme, die ganzen Arbeitsschritte nachzuvollziehen, da es keinerlei Erläuterungen gibt, weder was das ganze werden soll (es sei denn, er liest erst einmal die Beschreibung), noch welche Materialien verwendet wurden. Keinerlei Bemaßungen, nichts! Warum wurde eine dunkle Paste auf dem hellen Holz verwendet und worum handelte es sich dabei? Was war das für eine Flüssigkeit in der Folie (das Ergebnis des Beizens sieht im Übrigen nicht besonders schön aus, da die Oberfläche zu fleckig wirkt. Auf welche Sachen muß man insgesamt bei den einzelnen Arbeitsschritten achten... und und und. Insgesamt ein didaktisch nicht sehr gelungenes Video. Man kann es sich ansehen und den Rest muß man sich dann erst einmal zusammendichten.
I"ve seen this dream on this channel before. Loads of cabinets and footstools. When I see another footstool I don't even watch anymore. I really like your main channel. This one is pointless. Sorry.
Yeah, I’ll pass on this because you show $30,000 in tools that I don’t have and cannot duplicate what you did. And why would you want to drill, hammer, screw and do all other sorts of stuff on that nicely, stained top? Just a waste of time and effort if you ask me.
PART 2 - th-cam.com/video/8jBvurJ1T74/w-d-xo.html
The "dream" is not the cabinet it`s the $20k in tools used to make a $100 cabinet!
Hand tools only guy here: nothing shown here would have been impossible with hand tools if you put in the elbow grease, it is about what you build, not what you built it with. I'd suggest cutting the complaining down and going to the workshop and DOING
💯
I think there's a bit more than $20k in tools there. His dad must be really trusting to let his son use his expensive tools like this. Too bad that top he built will soon start cracking apart at the seams, since he didn't allow for wood movement (seasonal expansion and contraction) on the breadboard ends.
Well, replace the name brand stuff with Chinese and Japanese names and it's about $2k.
That tack hammer ,skil saw and router sets u back 150 dollars
Push stick and pushpads - well done (I am a retired furniture make / machinist / Carpenter and Joiner (with all my fingers and eyes)) keep them safe and keep using them!
Well said. Nearly lost two of my fingers. 50 + stitches. 5 hour operation, tendons and nerve repair. Two nights in hospital. Just because I was stupid enough to wear a pair of loose gloves using a panel saw. I've retired now, but always safety first. A pair of good quality of ear protection is also recommended. I now suffer from tinnitus. Some people never learn.
I like the piece so far, but waiting to see where the dream comes in. Holding on for part 2...
Pay no attention to 90% of these comments. They are simply jealous. I love the attention to detail! I will agree that the application of glue to the breadboard ends probably wasn't the wisest of choices but I love where this is headed. Good job; cant wait for part 2!
Great effort! Looks good as well. It’s good to see a young guy making stuff and yes, I am envious of his workshop!
To the many ppl who have placed negative comments, there are a few other channels that deserve your attention long before this one!
I am retired but still have my shop and all the stationary tools. What I don't understand is how I turned out so much work and never had the tools these young fellows have?
Very cool can’t wait to see it finished. Thanks for sharing
What's so dreamy about this? I want my 16:42 back.
Ha. Me too. Glad I skipped ahead.
The "breadboard" edges of the top will likely fail because cross grail wood movement was not considered in the design.
Excelente trabalho, continue sempre assim.
Orgulho para qualquer pai.
Planer snipe, the struggle is real brothers, the actual workshop dream is you fix it before it even happens! Good effort kid and keep 'em coming.
Perhaps I'm lucky but after buying a used PT260, I followed all the advice & so far, snipe hasn't been something I've seen.
The real dream is finding straight lumber.
I noticed that when you were using the tables saw you never allowed your hand to ride over the spinning blade. You would lift it and bring it over the blade, then replace it on the work at the other end as the piece runs through its travel.
I have done the very same thing myself for years.
A shop partner of mine - tragically - did NOT practice such safety a technique and had half his thumb shredded in a shaper!
As he was pushing the wood through, there was a hidden void in the center of the piece WHERE HIS THIMB WAS and it collapsed in that spot, and when the shaper knives met the void his thumb . . . EEEEKKK!
Good habit to practice.
Seemed a confused method of construction. If you have a domino why not use it to make the frame and attach the cross members, it would save screwing into end grain. Also agree with the comments regarding not allowing for expansion of the top.
Interesting… the tabletop. Doesn’t glueing long grain to short grain on the sides split the wood or cause other problems on the long run? 🤔
Sounds great but I don’t have a jointer, planer or a drum sander or a workshop big enough to put them in. Cannot relate.
Me ha encantado campeón Felicitaciones
Thật tuyệt vời, tôi yêu công việc của bạn 🎉🎉🎉
Wow, toujours du travail du bois simple et raffiné, je serai curieux de connaître le produit que tu as utilisé pour changer le tanin du bois ça lui donne une belle couleur au plateau. bravo l'artist
I want to buy this kid a brad nailer. :)
I'd say he's got 50 to 60 k of tools but no pin gun🎉😅
Nice work! Ignore the jealous trolls.
It's ugly! That's all there's to it !
What product did you use for the darkening of the wood?
Good afternoon, thank you for viewing. Here's the trick, I'll tell you all about
Ammonia fuming oak. Woodworking. th-cam.com/video/iq9taf8uAqg/w-d-xo.html
Someone commented here that people are jealous. They are right, I’d love a nice big fully equipped workshop. But at 69 years old it wouldn’t get used properly. I like what you did but I may have done things a bit differently. 👍
BIG mistake when you glued the "breadboard" ends to your top. This does not allow for seasonal expansion of the wood. It will fail.
Absolutely!
No big deal, if you can afford that kind of equipment, you can control the seasonal weather changes!
Well so far, I don’t want it. 😂
Андрію Вітаю тебе з новим потрібним предметом! Цикаво,що це буде.
Дуже дякую вам за перегляд.
2 частина буде на наступний тиждень.
Hi. Can you tell me whose riving knife/dust shroud you are using on your Powermatic table saw? Thanks.
You should ask his dad.
What kind of Dream is that ?
Looks like a "Nightmare" to me !
Крутезні відео!!!!
Дякую за перегляд.
Lot of time wasted showing him tightening clamps and no time shown making the base.
At some point after 11:59 you cut off the excess side beams but it's not in the clip, how did you do that?
Hater’s gonna hate. If you don’t like it, don’t watch it. Building your own shop furniture is one of the greatest ways to hone one’s skills. Nice build. Thank you for sharing.
Amateur
Lot of effort for a table.
Cool. Now do it with what the majority of hobbyists have in their garage...
What guard is that on your table saw?
An AI one.
Looks like the main point of this vid was to show how many different tools you can use on one (somewhat boring) project. Yes I’m jealous but goodness, talk about overkill.
You made a table. Not going to bother with part 2.
Hola está genial nos podrías dar tus medidas
Wh no brad nailer?
забавно, когда предлагают нечто те, у кого есть помещение и специнструмент. как это реализовать в трехкомнатной квартире?
Забавно, коли уважно не читають назву відео.
@@easymake414, а нахрена? у нас в России так не принято. мы инструкций не читаем. 😀
Ясно🤦♂️
Non ho capito che roba sia se non un piano di lavoro con una base (che immagino accoglierà qualcosa di speciale). Forse meritava far vedere tutto il progetto, che così perde abbastanza di interesse.
So what is everyones dream you didn't say shit and showed me 40 tools most woodworkers own, holy shit it must the 3" square.
I wonder why you didn't make a nice mortise and tenon joint in the first part in plastic from screwing it together cold. A nice wood joint shows craftsmanship and then I don't mean lamellas or dovetails. And also with the top a nice groove and brass would not have been out of place was and is nicer than lamellas. I find this a shame to see. I am a carpenter and furniture maker myself. We use traditional wood joints.
pourquoi de la peinture ?????
И что это за фигня 🤔
What is this?
I'm glad that I jumped to the comments before I devoted almost 17 minutes of my life to watching this entire video.
Ne yaptığın belli değil hiç bir açıklama yok alt yazı yok Like'de yok .
I don't think I want it in my shop. My CNC wouldn't fit on it. And that much work is not required to make a table for a CNC machine.
"Der Traum eines jeden Handwerkers: Das möchten Sie auch in Ihrer Werkstatt haben!"
Für wen ist das Video eigentlich gedacht? Ein Anfänger hat erst einmal Probleme, die ganzen Arbeitsschritte nachzuvollziehen, da es keinerlei Erläuterungen gibt, weder was das ganze werden soll (es sei denn, er liest erst einmal die Beschreibung), noch welche Materialien verwendet wurden. Keinerlei Bemaßungen, nichts!
Warum wurde eine dunkle Paste auf dem hellen Holz verwendet und worum handelte es sich dabei? Was war das für eine Flüssigkeit in der Folie (das Ergebnis des Beizens sieht im Übrigen nicht besonders schön aus, da die Oberfläche zu fleckig wirkt. Auf welche Sachen muß man insgesamt bei den einzelnen Arbeitsschritten achten... und und und.
Insgesamt ein didaktisch nicht sehr gelungenes Video. Man kann es sich ansehen und den Rest muß man sich dann erst einmal zusammendichten.
Пишите адекватные названия роликов
5 min into the video and i see mistake #1 gluing in a panel, $1,00.00 dolars in tool and no door panel bit for his routor,
I"ve seen this dream on this channel before. Loads of cabinets and footstools. When I see another footstool I don't even watch anymore. I really like your main channel. This one is pointless. Sorry.
Yeah, I’ll pass on this because you show $30,000 in tools that I don’t have and cannot duplicate what you did. And why would you want to drill, hammer, screw and do all other sorts of stuff on that nicely, stained top? Just a waste of time and effort if you ask me.