Thanks for posting this. I, too, am an MTMWood fan and I think this will be my next project. It's good to see how these can be made in a shop with tools that look more like mine (not as high end).
@@rosenbloom8 Bro, you scared me! Never use the table saw that way, especially with a blade that burns the wood. Clean your blades and practice a little shop safety. :(
Thanks Carter! I tried one of these using a different method and it didn't turn out great. You method looks like it will result in a better finished product. Also, pay no attention to the negative comments!
I see a lot of expert commenters here...your saw this, your technique that, your glue bla bla bla. I've met guys like this in real life. They're the ones that always have something to say but never have something they've made! Here's what I saw: an excellent looking final piece, a guy who has all 10 fingers and his shop is organized and clean. The haters, well they've got their comments...oooh how exciting for them
What's not exciting is when a novice watches how he uses the push stick on the wrong side of the blade and duplicates him eventually resulting in injury from kickback, not to mention his ripped pieces are guaranteed out of square/bowed with saw blade burn marks. If someone drinks alcohol then drives and they make it home it doesn't mean it's fine keep doing that. Kids please, don't use a push stick on the side of the blade away from the fence because this guy still "has all 10 fingers" as his method is unsafe!
Great job, you make it look so easy.I really like the illusion the patern gives.I hope to try it with the tools I have. Thanks for taking the time to make the video for others.
Omg that was awesome! I was a carpenter for 30 years now I'm trying my hand at woodworking because I miss doing the job and my body is all messed up. I'm watching thinking why is he cutting it again after he just put that 45 on it then it hit me and I thought ohhh I see what he did! Now I know how to make a 3D cutting board!!!
Really like the video. But one suggestion. After you plane the face of the wood, put that face on the fence of your jointer to plane the edge. That way the edge and the face are exactly 90 when you square the rest of the piece with a planer.
Nice work Carter. The illusion at the end is great. Just a small tip, when you do your glue joints, sprinkle a small amount of salt over the glue and it will stop it from slipping under clamp pressure. It does not affect the glue joint at all.
in my infinite ignorance, I thought these boards were made 1 piece at a time..... Thanks for the video, very entertaining. I am not sure why i watched it, but I enjoyed it.
This is so much easier than my attempt that produced a bag of tri-diamond end chunks that don't fit snugly due to trying to clamp 6 sided lengths unsuccessfully. Thank you for another way of doing this design. I do make the prettiest and most expensive firewood in the city though.
Finished product is very nice, but, dude - only the riving knife stood between you and some serious kickback. Might want to rethink how you make that cut safely.
Anyone else notice that he placed the unjointed wide side of the board against the fence when he placed it down to joint the edge at the very beginning of the video?
When you are making your 60 degree cuts in the glued up boards, you took a parallelogram piece and marked your cut lines. How did you determine the width of the cuts?
Not recommended if you plan to use it for food. Cedar can cause allergic reactions even potentially toxic to some people. Most cedar is fairly soft and less than ideal for cutting boards.
Pretty nice piece of work. I also have been inspired by MTM's cutting boards. Your board caught my eye, and at first, thought it was an MTM design. Very nice work. Not sure I'd exactly follow your table saw technique though. It looks a little awkward at times. May I suggest you use a 40 tooth triple chip rip blade rather than the 60 tooth narrow kerf blade that you're using. You're 60 tooth blade is loading up and can't clear the chip fast enough so you're getting a lot of heat, occasionally burning in the kerf, and shorter life on a sharpening caused by excessive heat. The blade you're using would be much better for ripping plywood or crosscutting some hardwoods on a miter saw. Just my opinion and it's worth every penny you paid for it.
Hello. I want to ask about the yellow instrument with which you are holding the wood while you are cutting it on the circular saw. I want to buy this thing to work with it. Can you give me a link or something to find this? Thanks.
Hi Carter , Dan Neumann from clinton township Could I Get some measurements Length and with of boards that you started with also angle of cut, and the thickness of the boards when you cut on the angle please. love the look of the board, I just got done making the number three from mtm .
Right before you flip and clamp up the board, when it is still lying there as one glue covered piece, give it a slight dusting of salt, it will help to control them sliding around ;)
How about voice description on the different steps you took to make that nice board. I would like to know some measurements..etc. I'm a beginner at all this, so I need all the help I can get.
ok so i tried this and failed. my problem was once you make your first cut at 6o degree how do you know how far to set your fence to make each piece? i made mine way 2 thick and had to plain off a bunch to get it to line up right. wasted a ton of material. i would like to know how to figure out that cut if anyone can tell me i would appreciate it.
as the original board? so if you do 1/2 inch outside and 1 inch middle then make the strips 1"? that would make sense to me but i am no wood worker. this just looks fun so i thought i would try it. I do love cutting boards for my hunting. I am trying to get this right so that i can make a huge hunting processing station at my house.
Actually MTM if you stop his video has a point where it shows all the dimensions of the final boards before glue up. The 60 deg cut dimension being asked about shows 23.1mm. Converting that to inches is 0.9094 or 29/32. But that assumes that your starting with a 10mm/20mm/10mm as MTM did. If you start with "1/2"-"1"-"1/2" as I suspect Mr Rosenbloom did then that dimension actually works out to 1.01" or 1" as Mr Rosenbloom has suggested. Sorry I actually got an A in high school geometry, I can't help myself.
There is actual math to do this correct. Back to Trig but I think I can simplify it for you. Your center board is 1". Using (sin of angle) Opposite over Adjacent you will get exactly 1.1547" What you saw on this video was a swag. So... set your fence so you rip strips exactly 1.157" and when you trim the triangles off you will be perfect. I would cut it at 1.16 or a tad more so you can drum sand or plane smooth. To prove this formula, take the (sin of 60) and use MTM's dimensions of 20mm and you will get 23.09mm
Dear Carter, that is a great job! What wood did you use? In some comment you offer to provide with the plan with dimension, how could I get it? Thank you in advance!
this is so amazing - after having seen a bunch of this heavy woodworking videos. you dive down on your workbench with a thousands of dollar worth of equipment and a variety of fancy wood. after hours days and weeks you surface with a ---------- cuttingboard ;-? can you imagine what kind of wood your lady was working on the last three weeks ;-?
Thank you for sharing this. I would like to make one of these for my son and have the finished board be 15x20 x2 . What would the measurments of the "sandwiches " be? I just finished a practice one that started with 8x12 sandwiches of pine and oak and pine and cherry it ended up being 16 inches long and 5 1/2 wide
looks really good. You might check your fence to make sure it is truly square to the blade or maybe a couple of thousands of toe out. that's what's burning your wood.
Or maybe his wood is burning from using his push stick on the wrong side of the blade...by maybe I mean it definitely will cause burning, not to mention risks kickback.
I have watched this demo a lot to try to pickup what he was doing. I would have been helpful if he would’ve Tarth us thru what he was doing at each step.
I love your video and would like to attempt making one. Could you share some dimensions? Carter, What are the L & W dimensions of the boards your starting with in this video, and the finished board. Thank you !
? @@rosenbloom8 you told leslie weiss you couldn't speak English, where did you learn so fast? the sentence seems to be grammatically correct, did you use Rosetta Stone?
Wow dangerous dave with that table saw glad it worked out
Right?!? I can’t believe this is the only comment about that
Noob here could you elaborate on what he did that’s dangerous?
Thanks for posting this. I, too, am an MTMWood fan and I think this will be my next project. It's good to see how these can be made in a shop with tools that look more like mine (not as high end).
@@rosenbloom8 Bro, you scared me! Never use the table saw that way, especially with a blade that burns the wood. Clean your blades and practice a little shop safety. :(
Thanks Carter! I tried one of these using a different method and it didn't turn out great. You method looks like it will result in a better finished product. Also, pay no attention to the negative comments!
Thanks for taking the time to produce this video. I am about to fall down the cutting board rabbit hole!
Cheers from Nova Scotia
I see a lot of expert commenters here...your saw this, your technique that, your glue bla bla bla. I've met guys like this in real life. They're the ones that always have something to say but never have something they've made! Here's what I saw: an excellent looking final piece, a guy who has all 10 fingers and his shop is organized and clean. The haters, well they've got their comments...oooh how exciting for them
What's not exciting is when a novice watches how he uses the push stick on the wrong side of the blade and duplicates him eventually resulting in injury from kickback, not to mention his ripped pieces are guaranteed out of square/bowed with saw blade burn marks.
If someone drinks alcohol then drives and they make it home it doesn't mean it's fine keep doing that. Kids please, don't use a push stick on the side of the blade away from the fence because this guy still "has all 10 fingers" as his method is unsafe!
Great job, you make it look so easy.I really like the illusion the patern gives.I hope to try it with the tools I have. Thanks for taking the time to make the video for others.
So Escher , Great use of great tools. well done, you deserve this wonderful shop
Omg that was awesome! I was a carpenter for 30 years now I'm trying my hand at woodworking because I miss doing the job and my body is all messed up. I'm watching thinking why is he cutting it again after he just put that 45 on it then it hit me and I thought ohhh I see what he did! Now I know how to make a 3D cutting board!!!
Awesome job! Beautiful art.
Nice, I just couldn't wrap my head around MTM's video. Now, I'm inspired to try this. Thanks!
Wow!! You are a master carpenter!! That is beautiful!!
Really like the video. But one suggestion. After you plane the face of the wood, put that face on the fence of your jointer to plane the edge. That way the edge and the face are exactly 90 when you square the rest of the piece with a planer.
That's a great job for your 1st 3D board..... Id be proud enough to give that to my mom.
Excellent craftmanship, you make it look so easy but it must be really hard to do.
I've watched your video many times, preparing to make my own. Appreciate the awesome music!!
Thank you for the video, so much work. The boards look great.
instaBlaster.
Nice work Carter. The illusion at the end is great. Just a small tip, when you do your glue joints, sprinkle a small amount of salt over the glue and it will stop it from slipping under clamp pressure. It does not affect the glue joint at all.
Beautiful outcome bud👍... Thanx for sharing this with us...
"No glue joints were starved in the making of this video."
Glue.....my farqen god, that's some glue.
man, that came up awesome..thank you!! something i would like to try....
Please while ripping push the board through that is between the saw blade and the fence with a push stick
Yes. That was very difficult to watch.
in my infinite ignorance, I thought these boards were made 1 piece at a time..... Thanks for the video, very entertaining. I am not sure why i watched it, but I enjoyed it.
Some are doing it that way but mtmwood found a way to make it in strips to ease the production and reduce the gaps.
I thought the long anti-snipe sticks were a great idea! I learned something useful after being in the biz for over 20 yrs
Beautifully created.
I would have no problem pushing the boards through the jointer edge up, but for flat I would think a pusher tool would be better.
Hello friend, it was very top, my congratulations, I'm from Brazil and your video arrived here
Awesome board. I have to admit though, my cheeks clenched when you let go of the piece during that first 60 degree rip.
Nicely done!
Это просто шедевр!!! Лайк 100% 👍👍👍
This is so much easier than my attempt that produced a bag of tri-diamond end chunks that don't fit snugly due to trying to clamp 6 sided lengths unsuccessfully. Thank you for another way of doing this design. I do make the prettiest and most expensive firewood in the city though.
Love the video in the cutting board but I would rather have you given measurements then the music but I still appreciate the cutting board thank you
Finished product is very nice, but, dude - only the riving knife stood between you and some serious kickback. Might want to rethink how you make that cut safely.
Qbert would approve!
Nice job! Nice music! Nice workshop! Nicely done!
Absolutely beautiful. I am definitely going to give this one a try
nice clean finish, looks great.
Anyone else notice that he placed the unjointed wide side of the board against the fence when he placed it down to joint the edge at the very beginning of the video?
Oops, forgot to ask, what were the starting measurements of your initial 3 board blanks?
The two white pieces are half the thickness of the dark walnut. And the pallelelograms have all equal side leghts.
LOL "This is what happens when you start watching MTMWood"
Nice, thanks for sharing. I, too, am a fan of MTMwood. After watching your video, I may give making one of these a try myself.
3:50 Holding my breath for this entire cut
When you put the two boards on the out side would you use two different shades of wood to get more distinction.
what angle do you use to cut the diagonals
at 5:10 in the video what does that measurement have to be or how do we calculate it based on our dimensions.
Wow great video and awesome sound track, is that original?
Very nice, I like it a lot!
Soundtrack? Medeski, Martin, and Wood? Great job on the board!
It would be nice if you explained some of the dimensions, etc. as you were making this instead of just playing music.
Mate throw the Gripper in the bin 5 cuts I saw the front piece move away from the fence as you pushed it through
Felicitaciones, me gustó mucho tu trabajo 🇵🇪
When you are making your 60 degree cuts in the glued up boards, you took a parallelogram piece and marked your cut lines. How did you determine the width of the cuts?
For when Q-Bert needs to prepare a meal...
Can i use red cedar as wood for a board like that???
Not recommended if you plan to use it for food. Cedar can cause allergic reactions even potentially toxic to some people. Most cedar is fairly soft and less than ideal for cutting boards.
WOW !!! Amazing work,
Excellent video! Love the 3D visual effect, and the great music! Kudos!
Pretty nice piece of work. I also have been inspired by MTM's cutting boards. Your board caught my eye, and at first, thought it was an MTM design. Very nice work. Not sure I'd exactly follow your table saw technique though. It looks a little awkward at times. May I suggest you use a 40 tooth triple chip rip blade rather than the 60 tooth narrow kerf blade that you're using. You're 60 tooth blade is loading up and can't clear the chip fast enough so you're getting a lot of heat, occasionally burning in the kerf, and shorter life on a sharpening caused by excessive heat. The blade you're using would be much better for ripping plywood or crosscutting some hardwoods on a miter saw. Just my opinion and it's worth every penny you paid for it.
Hello. I want to ask about the yellow instrument with which you are holding the wood while you are cutting it on the circular saw. I want to buy this thing to work with it. Can you give me a link or something to find this? Thanks.
Thank you 😊
I watching mtmWood! Hi from Ukraine!
Сергей Никитин i9
Hi Carter , Dan Neumann from clinton township Could I Get some measurements Length and with of boards that you started with also angle of cut, and the thickness of the boards when you cut on the angle please. love the look of the board, I just got done making the number three from mtm .
Hello . i am peruvian ... En el minuto 3:40 es un angulo de 45°? .
Splendid, magnificent !!!
how wide are the cuts on the table saw?
@@rosenbloom8 I determined the width is the width of the 60 degree cut. Have ordered some wood and plan to try it. thanks.
What kind/type of wood are you using?
I like it !!! good video ! but what dimension(s) did the board finish at ?
nice , what type of wood are you using
Excellent work!
Wow Nice job I will be making a similar one but for a table top
Magnificent, splendid, a work of art!
Exelente ...siempre se aprende algo nuevo ...lo boy a intentar hacerlo...saludos
How many degree are you cutting those
@@rosenbloom8 thank
Right before you flip and clamp up the board, when it is still lying there as one glue covered piece, give it a slight dusting of salt, it will help to control them sliding around ;)
How about voice description on the different steps you took to make that nice board. I would like to know some measurements..etc. I'm a beginner at all this, so I need all the help I can get.
How much this if need to buy ?
Why would you spray the water with your planes in the way?
ok so i tried this and failed. my problem was once you make your first cut at 6o degree how do you know how far to set your fence to make each piece? i made mine way 2 thick and had to plain off a bunch to get it to line up right. wasted a ton of material. i would like to know how to figure out that cut if anyone can tell me i would appreciate it.
specifically i am talking about the cut length he got at 4:54. how do you get that size?
as the original board? so if you do 1/2 inch outside and 1 inch middle then make the strips 1"? that would make sense to me but i am no wood worker. this just looks fun so i thought i would try it. I do love cutting boards for my hunting. I am trying to get this right so that i can make a huge hunting processing station at my house.
Actually MTM if you stop his video has a point where it shows all the dimensions of the final boards before glue up. The 60 deg cut dimension being asked about shows 23.1mm. Converting that to inches is 0.9094 or 29/32. But that assumes that your starting with a 10mm/20mm/10mm as MTM did. If you start with "1/2"-"1"-"1/2" as I suspect Mr Rosenbloom did then that dimension actually works out to 1.01" or 1" as Mr Rosenbloom has suggested. Sorry I actually got an A in high school geometry, I can't help myself.
There is actual math to do this correct. Back to Trig but I think I can simplify it for you. Your center board is 1". Using (sin of angle) Opposite over Adjacent you will get exactly 1.1547" What you saw on this video was a swag. So... set your fence so you rip strips exactly 1.157" and when you trim the triangles off you will be perfect. I would cut it at 1.16 or a tad more so you can drum sand or plane smooth. To prove this formula, take the (sin of 60) and use MTM's dimensions of 20mm and you will get 23.09mm
Oooh using your push stick on the wrong side!!! It's there to stop your timber kicking back or flipping up!
is this music from the movie napolean dynomite?
Which woods did you use?
Would be nice if you would explain what you are doing and why.
Excelent!. Thanks for sharing... Wich woods are used in this video?... the darks are diferent, isn't it?
You're so perfect and talented. I like ur work
Wow , very nice sir,
It is really amazing
@ 4:40... did you turn off the table saw with your knee or what?😆
Шикарно!!! А размеры можно?
Dear Carter, that is a great job! What wood did you use? In some comment you offer to provide with the plan with dimension, how could I get it? Thank you in advance!
Fantástico. Hermoso trabajo.
Quais são os nomes das ferramentas que você usou? Muito Top seu canal...Thanks
@@rosenbloom8 obrigado amigo
this is so amazing - after having seen a bunch of this heavy woodworking videos. you dive down on your workbench with a thousands of dollar worth of equipment and a variety of fancy wood. after hours days and weeks you surface with a ---------- cuttingboard ;-? can you imagine what kind of wood your lady was working on the last three weeks ;-?
Parabéns! Belo trabalho! Vc pode passar as medidas finais? Largura, comprimento e altura. Por gentileza
Thank you for sharing this. I would like to make one of these for my son and have the finished board be 15x20 x2 . What would the measurments of the "sandwiches " be? I just finished a practice one that started with 8x12 sandwiches of pine and oak and pine and cherry it ended up being 16 inches long and 5 1/2 wide
hm
looks really good. You might check your fence to make sure it is truly square to the blade or maybe a couple of thousands of toe out. that's what's burning your wood.
Or maybe his wood is burning from using his push stick on the wrong side of the blade...by maybe I mean it definitely will cause burning, not to mention risks kickback.
I have watched this demo a lot to try to pickup what he was doing. I would have been helpful if he would’ve Tarth us thru what he was doing at each step.
Interesting . . . and the yellow glue lobby thanks you.
Really awesome thanks so much!!
This is awesome job,,,,,,,keep it up brother
I love your video and would like to attempt making one. Could you share some dimensions? Carter, What are the L & W dimensions of the boards your starting with in this video, and the finished board. Thank you !
Nice job by the way
is it possible to have the plan by forming PDF? Thanks in advance.
The board turned out great! How does the Rotex do on endgrain?
I have the rotex too . I can't help myself, I go through the grits until it starts to shine without finish.
? @@rosenbloom8 you told leslie weiss you couldn't speak English, where did you learn so fast? the sentence seems to be grammatically correct, did you use Rosetta Stone?
Bonjour,
C"est magnifique. Félicitations !!