At 5:23 and again at 5:40 a cat ( ? ) sticks his/her paw under the door (back left) and pokes around a bit. Made me LOL! Also, a great clear, concise explanation that someone who is not an electronics whiz (me) can understand.
Had a weird experience many years ago. Was playing a cheap electric guitar (unshielded) through a cheap effects box. Was late at night. I stopped playing and heard someone talking in French! Thought I was losing it! I touched the strings, grounding them, and the voice stopped! Took my hand off the strings and he started talking again. Realized I wasn't losing it...was picking up shortwave or ham radio, either from Canada or France! Very strange!
Dude, that was a quality lecture. Clarity given with explanations that made sense. Others don't really understand why RF is caught by your guitar. Just run your mobile phone over the pickups.
Say I use aluminum foil on the cavity & pickguard and run a screw into the cavity & then wire that to the volume pot (ground), do I need to run a wire to the pickguard, or if the volume pot is in contact with the pickguard, will that suffice? Thanks!
So this is why i hear my cell phone through the amp when i get a message or call interesting. I have watched a few of your videos and you are a highly intelligent person. Good work man
Great explanation of how a Faraday cage works or "should " work. I've tried to explain this to my customers. Unfortunately most don't grasp the concept that they can't make a complete cage by only shielding the pickup cavities. Thanks and Merry Christmas.
Hi, thanks for your video very well explained. I have a question: So we "catch" the emi and send them to the ground (typically from the shield to the tremolo) but does this shield ground needs to be connected with the ground of the jack or it is a separate thing ?
I always use shielding tape with a conductive adhesive. But... if you are using shielding tape without conductive adhesive, instead of soldering every seam, you could fold the tape over so the copper is touching the next piece and then put a narrow strip of shielding tape over the seam to secure it and you would have conductivity. Just sayin'.
So no need to shield the control cavity.. but I guess I need to do it so I can connect the pickguard to the ground which is the metal part around the bridge pickup. btw what about the input jack cavity? based on what you are saying it does not need to be shielded
So it isn’t really necessary to shield the cavity? I’m about to shield my strat this weekend. If I can save myself some time I want to, but I don’t want to cut corners.
Noise Gate pedals work well. There's a great video here on You Tube showing SRV in the studio and he was expressing great discontent about the loud interference / 60 cycle hum (probably include the lights in with it) and they put a noise gate in and he was back to wailing ! ! Get these pedals dialed in right and they're a charm. Leave it at home when gigging and get lynched ! ! :)
@@beetsq1968 The shit sound will still be there when the gate opens. You're just making it so you don't perceive it. It's still going to color your tone on a recording and I can definitely hear it when mixing a guitar track. Same thing with a shitty treated room and the bass frequencies. They become almost unusable.
Dylan, thanks for the video. I am a complete electronics noob. What I am trying to figure out is how to shield my cheap Tele copy. I have watched two of your videos about shielding (including this one), but I am stuck on how to ground the shield. In this video, you are connecting the control cavity to the pickguard, which has shielding on the backside, and you state that you are grounding the circuit when you put the control cavity lid back on. What about the bridge pickup? Does it need to be connected to the pickguard (e.g., via a connecting piece of copper tape like between the control cavity and pickguard) so that it is part of the circuit? Sorry for the dumb question, but there is a lot of disinformation and I am looking to do my shielding job properly. Thanks.
You don't need to solder the seam if the glue on your shield tape isn't conductive. Just fold the tape in (Adhesive side to adhesive side) at a seam making sure it overlaps and the conductive side is touching on both pieces and then put a tiny piece of tape to hold that join. Saves you trouble of soldering on tape.
If I use copper tape with conductive adhesive do I even need to bother with soldering a ground to it? Can I not just strip the grounding wire and just tape it in place on that end? Hell, for that matter do I even need to solder the other end? Just tape it to the grounding point? (I’ll solder it to my grounding point, just curious to know)
Some tape comes with conductive adhesive on the back, some does not. When using the conductive type I find no need to solder it. By having the tape touching the metal switches and backside of pots they are now connected to ground and are part of the shield. I always check my work with a multi meter to make certain all connections are legit and complete.
If i might add, if you connect all dots to ground individually , you create ground loops that act as antennas and will amplify noise. (bad) Apropos to Dylan : I'd like to request for a video showing how to make the quite expensive illitch noise canceling coil oneself. Thanks for the content
7:30 to 7:46 I'm a bit confused here. If you shield the neck pickup cavity and it is somehow connected to your main ground (which would ground that area), why would it not act as a shield?
who said he wouldn't have shielded it as well. The thing is he shielded the whole pickguard together with the cover. This way it acts as a big antenna, which is even better than only grounding the cover
Question from an inexperienced guy coming. If you used closed pick up covers shielded them and some how grounded them. Would the pick ups still work? Shield the backplate, shield and hard tail the bridge hole, that would make it a fully closed farraday cage? Man that seems like a lot a work lol!
Hi Dylan! Awesome channel, thanks so much. Premium alternative to work at my dayjob. Now on topic: I use kitchen foil for shielding and because I don't like messy stuff, I'll painstakingly cut it to shape and carefully glue it in, etc. Which on a Strat or Jaguar cavity is always a hell of job, but never mind. Now about the grounding: should I drive a screw into the foil and solder a wire from it to the ground, or is it sufficient that the foil in the cavity makes contact with the foil on the back of the scratchplate, which itself makes contact with the chassis of every pot bolted onto it? After all, every pot is already grounded.
I have two questions: 1: the switch on my new loaded pickup guard is much bigger than the old one. I had to route out my guitar, then covered the exposed wood with copper tape. I think the switch may be touching it though, because it’s crackles and hums REALLY loud and the sound comes through pretty muted. Is that the problem? 2: after taking everything apart and putting it together, I’m not sure if I reinstalled the wire that connects to bridge in the back correctly. I have one end attached to the metal plate that the springs attach to, and the other end wired to one of the ports on the loaded pick guard that says “ground”. Did I do it wrong?
Here is a trick for all of your shielding foils. Buy some copper shielding tape with the conductive adhesive and use small pieces to connect aluminum foils pieces together and also for copper foil that does not have conductive adhesive. Easier to put a small piece of conductive adhesive copper tape instead of soldering two adjoining copper foils pieces. This way you can buy cheaper non-conductive adhesive copper foil tape or cheaper aluminum foil tape and only use the expensive conductive adhesive tape for completing the continuity, including pieces to come out of the cavity to contact the pickguard, if applicable.
Sorry if u went over this, but if I want to shield ONLY the new pickguard this is on it's way to me for my Tele , how do you ground that? Not sure yet if I've decided on copper or aluminum foil.
Hi. I have a fender strat that have static noise when I touch the Pickguard. Either than that the guitar is very quite. How can I fix the static problem ? Thx
Can you demonstrate the improvement? I've watched several of your videos, and I don't see this proven to help. I've also seen contradicting information in your videos, such as shielding the cavity in this, you said not to in other videos. Other people are saying no shielding helps.
Hi, 1st of all i wanna thank u for ths video, very helful & informative. I hav a fender telecaster deluxe. Based on ths video, does it mean shielding d entire pickguard wud b enough fr my tele deluxe? Coz d pickguard of d deluxe covers all of d cavities..thanks n advance fr ur response
4 ปีที่แล้ว
Hi! Great explenantion. I was wondering if I need to do this on strat with stack noiseless pickups?
Simple, straight to the point i like it and learnt what I needed to know. BIG👍 -The cats foot under the door is a nice Comic Relief, and not at all distracting😄
hello, I have been following your videos for some time and with interest. I don't think there are better ones on the net. I would like to ask you if on my strat with mini humbuker in single format it makes sense to do the shielding. for single coils I understand how it works but not for humbukers. i know humbukers cut 60hz but not RFI, is that correct? thank you
Yes, if it's grounded. An easy way to ground it is to extend a bit of your pickup (or control) shielding and sandwich it between the pickguard and body. This assumes that the cavity shield is grounded. Another way is if the metal casings of your controls are attached to the pickguard and have contact with the aluminum.
Hey Dylan It's Jeff Here ..I was wondering why I need to solder every seam they seem to be touching as they overlap ,, I am a little Confused am I missing something ??? Thanks, but now I may have to re look at some of my jobs now ??
Even Humbuckers can create noise, but if you're not having issues then why worry about it? It won't hurt to add shielding as long as it's all connected/grounded properly.
To 'skyproclaimsit' ..... yup ... saw the cat, wonderful. To Dylan ..... Thanks for that, and all of your clear, concise, uploads. This one especially. JB.
As far as I am aware, when you plug your guitar into an amp the earth goes through the chord into the amp and then to ground through your house wiring. Most people seem to run a wire from the shielding and solder it to the rear surface of a pot. The pots have an earth going to the jack.
What is this home and garden copper tape? I've been trying to find a cheaper alternative to buying shielding tape a little at a time. Good video, I subscribed, will be learning a lot from you, the cat wants in
I was playing in an old church building that had been made into a civic center. I clicked on my crybaby and everyone heard Wild Cherry's Play That funky music from a local oldies station coming through the mains loud and fairly clear. Unfortunately it happened during sound check😟not many witnesses, it would've been epic if it happened with a full house
I thought cockroaches started creeping in under the door! 😂. OK. Back to focus...RFI vs EMI vs cat paw vs grounded Faraday cages vs mouses under the door. OK I get it.
Love your videos some years back while playing bass we stopped in between songs and I could hear car number five I need you to pick somebody up Come through my bass amplifier…lol to funny Everybody just Laughed…
Having issues with microphonic type of noise which seems to be generated by having an anodised Pickguard. Guitar is a fender ultra luxe strat, small area on guard of bare metal around switch and controls only. Humbucker is fine but noiseless neck and middle pups are unusable with live volume and high gain. Any help would be much appreciated!
Hi Dylan m great video thank you, do me a favour and try to watch the video, there some really so hilarious, if you look at the bottom of the door , certainly the cat is asking the viewers to subscribe and like 👍😀
LOL....CAT PAW under the door...is SOOO funny...ok back to the vid
Hahahahahhah
Hahaha
Jesus christ! Man i didnt sleep yesterday and I thought I was tripping balls... lol
I noticed that too
I just watched today. The cat’s paw... pure gold!
5:21.. a cat paw comes out from under the bedroom door. Hahahahahahaha!!!
Ok.. back to sheilding! ;)
At 5:23 and again at 5:40 a cat ( ? ) sticks his/her paw under the door (back left) and pokes around a bit. Made me LOL! Also, a great clear, concise explanation that someone who is not an electronics whiz (me) can understand.
Kitty cat paw coming under the door at 5:22 -- priceless cuteness.
Wow. 5 years old but new to me and the best explanation I've ever heard. Thanks!
Great explanation of shielding. Also loved the cat trying to get in halfway through.
Had a weird experience many years ago. Was playing a cheap electric guitar (unshielded) through a cheap effects box. Was late at night. I stopped playing and heard someone talking in French! Thought I was losing it! I touched the strings, grounding them, and the voice stopped! Took my hand off the strings and he started talking again. Realized I wasn't losing it...was picking up shortwave or ham radio, either from Canada or France! Very strange!
I used to get that all the time back in the day.
Hahahahahaha:-)
Oohh
Dude, that was a quality lecture. Clarity given with explanations that made sense. Others don't really understand why RF is caught by your guitar. Just run your mobile phone over the pickups.
Say I use aluminum foil on the cavity & pickguard and run a screw into the cavity & then wire that to the volume pot (ground), do I need to run a wire to the pickguard, or if the volume pot is in contact with the pickguard, will that suffice? Thanks!
So this is why i hear my cell phone through the amp when i get a message or call interesting. I have watched a few of your videos and you are a highly intelligent person. Good work man
Great explanation of how a Faraday cage works or "should " work.
I've tried to explain this to my customers. Unfortunately most don't grasp the concept that they can't make a complete cage
by only shielding the pickup cavities.
Thanks and Merry Christmas.
Hi, thanks for your video very well explained. I have a question:
So we "catch" the emi and send them to the ground (typically from the shield to the tremolo) but does this shield ground needs to be connected with the ground of the jack or it is a separate thing ?
That's my question too.
I always use shielding tape with a conductive adhesive. But... if you are using shielding tape without conductive adhesive, instead of soldering every seam, you could fold the tape over so the copper is touching the next piece and then put a narrow strip of shielding tape over the seam to secure it and you would have conductivity. Just sayin'.
Great idea
So no need to shield the control cavity.. but I guess I need to do it so I can connect the pickguard to the ground which is the metal part around the bridge pickup. btw what about the input jack cavity? based on what you are saying it does not need to be shielded
So it isn’t really necessary to shield the cavity? I’m about to shield my strat this weekend. If I can save myself some time I want to, but I don’t want to cut corners.
Noise Gate pedals work well. There's a great video here on You Tube showing SRV in the studio and he was expressing great discontent about the loud interference / 60 cycle hum (probably include the lights in with it) and they put a noise gate in and he was back to wailing ! ! Get these pedals dialed in right and they're a charm. Leave it at home when gigging and get lynched ! ! :)
Noise gates are great but your guitar should start off with a good sound anyway. The noise gate should be a complement, not a crutch
@@beetsq1968 The shit sound will still be there when the gate opens. You're just making it so you don't perceive it. It's still going to color your tone on a recording and I can definitely hear it when mixing a guitar track. Same thing with a shitty treated room and the bass frequencies. They become almost unusable.
Dylan, thanks for the video. I am a complete electronics noob. What I am trying to figure out is how to shield my cheap Tele copy. I have watched two of your videos about shielding (including this one), but I am stuck on how to ground the shield. In this video, you are connecting the control cavity to the pickguard, which has shielding on the backside, and you state that you are grounding the circuit when you put the control cavity lid back on. What about the bridge pickup? Does it need to be connected to the pickguard (e.g., via a connecting piece of copper tape like between the control cavity and pickguard) so that it is part of the circuit? Sorry for the dumb question, but there is a lot of disinformation and I am looking to do my shielding job properly. Thanks.
Should I solder a wire from the copper shield to a ground on the pots?
Cool ! Thanks man
You don't need to solder the seam if the glue on your shield tape isn't conductive. Just fold the tape in (Adhesive side to adhesive side) at a seam making sure it overlaps and the conductive side is touching on both pieces and then put a tiny piece of tape to hold that join. Saves you trouble of soldering on tape.
The problem is the lack of reliability. We have tried that and it does sorta work, but not reliable enough to endorse as a practice.
If I use copper tape with conductive adhesive do I even need to bother with soldering a ground to it? Can I not just strip the grounding wire and just tape it in place on that end? Hell, for that matter do I even need to solder the other end? Just tape it to the grounding point? (I’ll solder it to my grounding point, just curious to know)
Excellent video. Lots of well conveyed information. Also anyone else notice the cat reaching under the door at 5:26 lol
Came here to comment the same thing! From there never heard a word he said....🤣
Thanks. Great way to present the science and technology.
“Just like sound or light.” It is light, actually, just not at a visible frequency.
I learned a lot from this video. Thank you.
What happens if you don’t shield the back of the pick guard?
I like the theory and approach.
"A dot of solder" under the copper shield is the ground? Or do I need to connect wires to all those dots as a network to a ground?
Some tape comes with conductive adhesive on the back, some does not. When using the conductive type I find no need to solder it. By having the tape touching the metal switches and backside of pots they are now connected to ground and are part of the shield. I always check my work with a multi meter to make certain all connections are legit and complete.
If i might add, if you connect all dots to ground individually , you create ground loops that act as antennas and will amplify noise. (bad)
Apropos to Dylan : I'd like to request for a video showing how to make the quite expensive illitch noise canceling coil oneself.
Thanks for the content
I really enjoy your videos, I'm building a telecaster and shielding is coming up, great advice.
7:30 to 7:46 I'm a bit confused here. If you shield the neck pickup cavity and it is somehow connected to your main ground (which would ground that area), why would it not act as a shield?
who said he wouldn't have shielded it as well. The thing is he shielded the whole pickguard together with the cover. This way it acts as a big antenna, which is even better than only grounding the cover
5:40 the cat is trying to chime in on the topic at hand lmao
Did you guys see the cat paw under the door at about 6:00 lmaooo
Was that a cat showing the arms under the door just behind you at 5:27 ? hahaha. Hey, great video !
Question from an inexperienced guy coming. If you used closed pick up covers shielded them and some how grounded them. Would the pick ups still work? Shield the backplate, shield and hard tail the bridge hole, that would make it a fully closed farraday cage? Man that seems like a lot a work lol!
If you shield the pickups cavity you don't need to shield the claw cavity
Could you just overlap the shielding tape a bit where the pickup mounting screws and be good? The tape would be covered by the pickup rings.
Hi Dylan! Awesome channel, thanks so much. Premium alternative to work at my dayjob. Now on topic: I use kitchen foil for shielding and because I don't like messy stuff, I'll painstakingly cut it to shape and carefully glue it in, etc. Which on a Strat or Jaguar cavity is always a hell of job, but never mind. Now about the grounding: should I drive a screw into the foil and solder a wire from it to the ground, or is it sufficient that the foil in the cavity makes contact with the foil on the back of the scratchplate, which itself makes contact with the chassis of every pot bolted onto it? After all, every pot is already grounded.
I have two questions:
1: the switch on my new loaded pickup guard is much bigger than the old one. I had to route out my guitar, then covered the exposed wood with copper tape. I think the switch may be touching it though, because it’s crackles and hums REALLY loud and the sound comes through pretty muted. Is that the problem?
2: after taking everything apart and putting it together, I’m not sure if I reinstalled the wire that connects to bridge in the back correctly. I have one end attached to the metal plate that the springs attach to, and the other end wired to one of the ports on the loaded pick guard that says “ground”. Did I do it wrong?
Here is a trick for all of your shielding foils. Buy some copper shielding tape with the conductive adhesive and use small pieces to connect aluminum foils pieces together and also for copper foil that does not have conductive adhesive. Easier to put a small piece of conductive adhesive copper tape instead of soldering two adjoining copper foils pieces. This way you can buy cheaper non-conductive adhesive copper foil tape or cheaper aluminum foil tape and only use the expensive conductive adhesive tape for completing the continuity, including pieces to come out of the cavity to contact the pickguard, if applicable.
Sorry if u went over this, but if I want to shield ONLY the new pickguard this is on it's way to me for my Tele , how do you ground that? Not sure yet if I've decided on copper or aluminum foil.
Your cat was poking around lol. Speaking of cats. How do I ground my cat when it's louder than my guitar?
My favorite part of the video is the cats paw under the door.. ha ha.. I love cats..
Hi.
I have a fender strat that have static noise when I touch the Pickguard. Either than that the guitar is very quite.
How can I fix the static problem ?
Thx
I've wondered if i should cover the inside of my P-90 covers, and lead that to ground, would that be a good idea?
I have tried this and it doesn't make a lot of difference with our P90s, but ours are very quiet to begin with.
Can you demonstrate the improvement? I've watched several of your videos, and I don't see this proven to help. I've also seen contradicting information in your videos, such as shielding the cavity in this, you said not to in other videos. Other people are saying no shielding helps.
Unless the scratch plate isn't over any complex windings, like a Strat, why shield it? In a Tele, you are only shielding two or three 6" wires.
Hi, 1st of all i wanna thank u for ths video, very helful & informative. I hav a fender telecaster deluxe. Based on ths video, does it mean shielding d entire pickguard wud b enough fr my tele deluxe? Coz d pickguard of d deluxe covers all of d cavities..thanks n advance fr ur response
Hi! Great explenantion. I was wondering if I need to do this on strat with stack noiseless pickups?
Yeah at 6 minutes I love the cat trying to get under a door I thought I was seeing things haha
Just saw it and then went to the comments 😂
Greetings from the Netherlands 🇳🇱
Simple, straight to the point i like it and learnt what I needed to know. BIG👍
-The cats foot under the door is a nice Comic Relief, and not at all distracting😄
hello, I have been following your videos for some time and with interest. I don't think there are better ones on the net. I would like to ask you if on my strat with mini humbuker in single format it makes sense to do the shielding. for single coils I understand how it works but not for humbukers. i know humbukers cut 60hz but not RFI, is that correct? thank you
I've just shielded my bass and now it won't work through the amp, ant ideas ?
Was wondering about Brass as shielding?
Will aluminum tape work for shielding on a pick guard?
Yes, if it's grounded. An easy way to ground it is to extend a bit of your pickup (or control) shielding and sandwich it between the pickguard and body. This assumes that the cavity shield is grounded. Another way is if the metal casings of your controls are attached to the pickguard and have contact with the aluminum.
So, why not coat the entire guitar in conductive paint THEN apply the normal finish on top of that? I'm assuming it's something to do with the finish.
What's that under your door?
Hey Dylan, would i want to shield my amp as well?
what about static electricity? how do you shield from that?
earth yourself
Anybody know of any before and after comparisons demonstrating the amount of hum reduction shielding can make?
~ 5:36 and on - black paw under the door activity
Hey Dylan It's Jeff Here ..I was wondering why I need to solder every seam they seem to be touching as they overlap ,, I am a little Confused am I missing something ??? Thanks, but now I may have to re look at some of my jobs now ??
If the glue on your shielding tape is conductive, you are fine. Many times it is not. In this case, the overlap will not give good continuity.
SG Epiphone do not need tape shield?
For more than looking for examples, is the only type of guitar that I have not seen examples
Even Humbuckers can create noise, but if you're not having issues then why worry about it? It won't hurt to add shielding as long as it's all connected/grounded properly.
To 'skyproclaimsit' ..... yup ... saw the cat, wonderful.
To Dylan ..... Thanks for that, and all of your clear, concise, uploads. This one especially. JB.
Where is ground in a guitar. Where can I solder the tape to to ground it?
As far as I am aware, when you plug your guitar into an amp the earth goes through the chord into the amp and then to ground through your house wiring. Most people seem to run a wire from the shielding and solder it to the rear surface of a pot. The pots have an earth going to the jack.
I think that’s the cat’s tail, not the paw… Either way, hilarious! 😂
Alluminium pickguard and coper foil are cuting high frequency from guitar
I find that hard to believe. What is the frequency range that is being cut? 5000Hz?
I've noticed most people do not have continuity or connection to the ground. They just stick tape in.
What is this home and garden copper tape? I've been trying to find a cheaper alternative to buying shielding tape a little at a time. Good video, I subscribed, will be learning a lot from you, the cat wants in
Copper tape is used to keep slugs out of gardens. It works great
Haha, my friend had a radio station he tuned into until I added the copper tape. It's as quiet as a mouse now. He loves it but it did freak him out.
Do you find you lose tonal character when shielding the pickup cavities? Thanks!
That depends on whether or not you think noise is character.
Haha, agreed. I find I lose a bit of tone, in addition to losing or reducing hum.
I was playing in an old church building that had been made into a civic center. I clicked on my crybaby and everyone heard Wild Cherry's Play That funky music from a local oldies station coming through the mains loud and fairly clear. Unfortunately it happened during sound check😟not many witnesses, it would've been epic if it happened with a full house
You say don't shield yet you run copper to tone area
What you can do is cut thin strips of copper foil wrap it around each coil then ground each coil to the back humbucker plate
Under the humbucker tape
I thought cockroaches started creeping in under the door! 😂. OK. Back to focus...RFI vs EMI vs cat paw vs grounded Faraday cages vs mouses under the door. OK I get it.
Dude, there is something sticking out from underneath the door behind you about halfway through the video. A cat's paw maybe?? haha
Love your videos some years back while playing bass we stopped in between songs and I could hear car number five I need you to pick somebody up Come through my bass amplifier…lol to funny Everybody just Laughed…
that cat wants in on the video..... LOL
Cat reaching for the door knob!
How are your p90s quiet to begin with
5:20 oh my gosh, look at the door, it's trying to enter hehehe.
It's the cat paw for me 😺
So incredibly helpful and well explained. thanks Dylan! ...so it's all about the square inch-age! faraday smairaday!
5:22 Electromeawgnatic Impluse enter the chat 😹😹😹
5.25 cat tries to get in through the door at the bottom lol
pssst the cat is trying to reenter the room to use e later box at 5:34
very informativa, but just look underneath the door at 5:19 lool
Lol
Having issues with microphonic type of noise which seems to be generated by having an anodised Pickguard. Guitar is a fender ultra luxe strat, small area on guard of bare metal around switch and controls only.
Humbucker is fine but noiseless neck and middle pups are unusable with live volume and high gain.
Any help would be much appreciated!
The cat is shielded behind the door 5:24
Cat paw 5:24
At 5:24 see the cat's paw under the door? :)
almost a cat ass trophy - but the content is very good
thats Tom and Jerry right there.
Make sure you ground the tin foil wrapped around your head. Not grounding that is crazy.
Why did you lock kitty out? Kitty just wants to be close to you!
the cat . AHHAHAHA
5:22 anyone else see this? 😂
🐱😂
Hey man cat wants in!
let the cat behind the door in!!
Hi Dylan m great video thank you, do me a favour and try to watch the video, there some really so hilarious, if you look at the bottom of the door , certainly the cat is asking the viewers to subscribe and like 👍😀
😻 😻 meow 😻 😻
5:22 meow
Sooo not exactly a "how to" video. It's informative but slightly misleading IMO.