Hello there. I'm a great admirer of your works. Saw a lot of videos that's you share. What if I want to be your student? I'm from Pakistan.... My grandfather have a furniture factory as yours but after his death factory was closed. Then I was a young boy. I feel this wood work in my veins. And the smell of woods feels me like fragrance of the roses. My childhood memories. I'm in a different profession, run a small factory of stainless steel utensils. But also want to be learnt woodworking. I love to see your great works and you've a great team of workers. Congratulations Waiting for your response....
The machinery is incredible and it’s running really well they must have a good mechanic plus in the comments most people think these guys have been doing this for a couple of weeks they’ve been doing it for many many years and are very highly skilled I’m sure they lost a digit here and there along the way Watt craftsman hasn’t wear flip-flops but I don’t see them dropping any lumber anywhere and everything seems to be running smooth I think we could learn some lessons from them
All I can say is respect for their skills of woodworking with tools my grandfather was using when he was a kid, but great stuff and skills for dudes in slippers and barefoot.
Amazing work... not a crane, forklift or anything modern to lift into place. Craftsmanship with robust machinery. All ways a pleasure to watch their projects.
Yeah, thinking the same thing here. I've worked on a punch press from the '90s. 1890, that is. Complete with the convex pulley for the drive belt, and still in service in Nashville. A Monarch lathe who's blueprint (actually blue) was dated two weeks after I was born. And an old 1925 tenoner from 1925. And god knows what else. Basically, it ain't old if it doesn't have babbitt bearings. But nothing wrong with their woodworking skills.
Right? I was thinking the same thing. Not every Wood shop is full of CNC stuff. There must be tens of thousands of hobbyists with similar equipped home shops or at least many of the same tools in the USA alone. But, chucking a few hundred lb hunk of rough cut mahogany around in flip flops? Funny to see some wearing masks while sawing or shaping but not while running a belt sander. And spray finishing in the same shop as the tools making chips and dust? That make me chuckle. Hey, if it works it works. That was a custom made ginormous piece and someone engineered really well. I’m sure I’d have had more then one “whoops” moments! Awesome vid. What am I doing with my Covid time? TH-cam ad revenue must be super strong these trying times!
... and at 15 seconds in we see a skilled operator with no PPE pushing a power saw into the path of a power cable. I guess the black tape on the power cable is where he went a little too far last time.
Olmost every one speaks about safety, yes it is important thay should take care more , but I'm sure you have more accident in New modern factory or workshop what ever, more than them. Just sayin! It Anyway keep up the great job.
well the machinery they are good, though they are old they are good, but the people who do the work i do not think their work has quality , simply the way they use the machines, also safety is been totally ignored , for me people who dont care about safety means their work is also no good.
these tough little guys in their flip flops punch out some nice stuff with some pretty backdated equipment. they put themselves in some horribly compromising safety positions however. please be careful
While you are waiting for your safety meeting, finding your hard hat, back brace, putting on your steel toed boots and seeing if you have the right ethnic mix of employees they are building something. Did you see the wood they were using, can you even begin to think about the environmental laws you would violate here to cut wood like that. They are a nation that is working without a bunch of "Homeless" people not knowing where to turn and a government without a clue. We have evolved beyond them in our need for work rules and environmental laws making the largest work opportunity one of creating and designing machinery and equipment that reduces the need for employees to work.
@@xx1590 It is the reality of most all of the world Young people doing much with little and creating wonderful things with few resources. And yes, most have never worn real shoes, let alone safety shoes. (Just sent three pairs of shoes to gentlemen who never had shoes before) To be honest these men have much more than most. All that equipment was very high end 30 years ago.
@@dhex1098 I think it is impressive how some people with very limited education, money, opportunity, or modern conveniences can go forth and overcome all that to produce useful products that provide for them and their families while others set around crying about being victims and can never seem to overcome the victimhood to accomplish anything to get out of abject poverty.
They do not need glue. That is the craftsmanship here. But yes. sure did not like seeing those nails go into that wood. Likely not needed but only an over precaution.
That is amazingly hard labor. The machinery didn't seem to be inappropriate or too old for the work they're doing. I guess '80s is ancient if you were born in 2000. I'm retired so it doesn't seem that long ago to me. Not everything needs to be or should be done on CNC machinery. The wealth of natural resources contrasts strongly with the working conditions, though. That's the most teak I've ever seen in one place. My entire stash of teak wouldn't make more than one or two of the planks they carried inside.
Hi bros! This is really "biiiiiiig', huge. Now what's ancient with a power circular saw with a guard and a power morticing machine! Some how it was made do interesting!
I actually have the Makita Power saw and I bought it brand new in the 70s, nowt wrong with old machinery they most probably take more care of their tools than they do for themselves, no proper industrial shoes, eye protection, hearing guards. And were on earth is the dust collection. Definite fire hazard. But they do put out quality work.
Congratulations on the job, very beautiful but I see that your company is very dirty, this can cause an uncontrollable fire. Think of working in a cleaner place, for safety ...
Who ever wrote the title of this do they actually know how to use the Queens English, or the meaning of certain words!!!!!! Since when can tools that work by electricity be classed as ancient, misleading titles like this by people who have no understanding in the use of the English language honestly annoy me beyond belief.
My god the lack of basic safety and self preservation appears to be completely absent in these 2 guys. Holding a circular saw with finger 9n the guard. Running cable straight over where you intend to cut. Why they're cutting in that tiny area is beyond me. Placing bare feet under the saw .... It's so goddamn cringe worthy. How one of them hasn't died or lost a digit or limb is beyond me. With those kind of behaviour its merely a matter of time.
These machines aren’t ancient, hand saw, brace and bits, hand planes and chisels, they’re the old classic tools, ancient ones are stone axes. Just sayin!!
Perkerja ini membuat kerja yang bersungguh dan memberi kebaikan diri sendiri dan majikan.
These are the most modern and advanced ancient woodworking machines!👍👍👍👍👍
I have become a big fan of your craftsmanship. Amazing work.
By the way fantastic work
Ancient machines???wish I could get my hands on some of then plus intelligent craftsmanship and muscle of this people well done !!!!!!!
I never tire of this channel!
👏👏👏👏👏👏👏
I am drooling over that beautiful lumber
Amazing work
Peralatannya LENGKAP dan skill pekerjanya MUMPUNI. Saya SUKA SEKALI.!!!!!
Gotta love the safety shoes.
Very good
Hello there. I'm a great admirer of your works. Saw a lot of videos that's you share. What if I want to be your student? I'm from Pakistan....
My grandfather have a furniture factory as yours but after his death factory was closed. Then I was a young boy. I feel this wood work in my veins. And the smell of woods feels me like fragrance of the roses. My childhood memories.
I'm in a different profession, run a small factory of stainless steel utensils. But also want to be learnt woodworking. I love to see your great works and you've a great team of workers. Congratulations
Waiting for your response....
The machinery is incredible and it’s running really well they must have a good mechanic plus in the comments most people think these guys have been doing this for a couple of weeks they’ve been doing it for many many years and are very highly skilled I’m sure they lost a digit here and there along the way Watt craftsman hasn’t wear flip-flops but I don’t see them dropping any lumber anywhere and everything seems to be running smooth I think we could learn some lessons from them
All I can say is respect for their skills of woodworking with tools my grandfather was using when he was a kid, but great stuff and skills for dudes in slippers and barefoot.
Amazing work... not a crane, forklift or anything modern to lift into place. Craftsmanship with robust machinery.
All ways a pleasure to watch their projects.
Ey es buen trabajo y buena madera 👍👍😁😁
Hard heavy work turned out great in the end. Love the young Carpenter.
thank you so much!!!
Gỗ to làm hàng dôi và đẹp quá bác
Buenas tardes bonito trabajo, gracias por este video tan bonito...............
Hermoso trabajo , saludos desde Bogotá
nice work....Grande trabalho, vamos ver quando o serviço estiver completo, parabéns.
Vocês são incríveis na marcenaria muito rápido também São Paulo Brasil
الله ينور عليكم
Nice
Apparently, for some people manually operated power tools are "incredibly ancient"...
Yeah, thinking the same thing here. I've worked on a punch press from the '90s. 1890, that is. Complete with the convex pulley for the drive belt, and still in service in Nashville. A Monarch lathe who's blueprint (actually blue) was dated two weeks after I was born. And an old 1925 tenoner from 1925. And god knows what else.
Basically, it ain't old if it doesn't have babbitt bearings. But nothing wrong with their woodworking skills.
Right? I was thinking the same thing. Not every Wood shop is full of CNC stuff. There must be tens of thousands of hobbyists with similar equipped home shops or at least many of the same tools in the USA alone. But, chucking a few hundred lb hunk of rough cut mahogany around in flip flops? Funny to see some wearing masks while sawing or shaping but not while running a belt sander. And spray finishing in the same shop as the tools making chips and dust? That make me chuckle. Hey, if it works it works. That was a custom made ginormous piece and someone engineered really well. I’m sure I’d have had more then one “whoops” moments! Awesome vid. What am I doing with my Covid time? TH-cam ad revenue must be super strong these trying times!
Wow !,
👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👍
Komeaa kädenjälkeä Hyvin tehty jatkakaa samaan malliin🇫🇮👍👍😉
So wondfeaul work. Iliik it
thanks
Wow nice wood
thanks
Rất hay
Great video! I enjoyed seeing this being constructed.
thanks
Que lindo trabalho meus parabéns 👏👏👏👏👏
Wow, an art work!
thank you
Good working idias halpfull in working
But we need this wood
Was the chap with the cap Smoking in a carpenters shop?
The Best Wood Sawing Skill...
thank you
Not using glue, plus hammering directly on the production piece.
Grande trabalho, vamos ver quando o serviço estiver completo, parabéns.
obrigado
That’s awesome work...👍🏻 Thanks for sharing!
thank you my friend
Nossa que lindo amei
Graças do Vietnã
perfeito
Makita has been around for awhile, but I don't think electric circular saws count as "Ancient Woodworking Machines".
I use exactly the same Makita and it is dated from the seventies. Still working properly. Maybe we count it as ancient ?
@@BalticSailor no. It's not
@@BalticSailor Haha. I had no idea Makita has been around that long!
@@BalticSailor I could call hand-made bronze saws "ancient", but not power tools that are simply old.
Bom dia amigos
... and at 15 seconds in we see a skilled operator with no PPE pushing a power saw into the path of a power cable. I guess the black tape on the power cable is where he went a little too far last time.
เรื่องราคาไม้ต่างๆ
OH DEAR! After 45 seconds I'd seen enough!!
☝️👏👏👏👏😎🐶🍀🇮🇹
Looking good!! I hope we get to see it when it's all finished. I bet it'll be beautiful
Enjoyed your video and gave it a Thumbs Up
thank you
@@WoodworkingCraftsman You're welcome
Do these guys see any of the end profit when the furniture is finished and sold .let's hope so
Where do these guys work? Indonesia?
I get the sense it is terribly hot and humid where these guys are. tough men
ประเทศไหนนี้
Ancient Woodworking Machines? Those are all normal modern woodworking tools that everyone uses
Lần sau xoay khuân để cục kê ở gjữa xoay nhe nhang hon
ok bác.
Olmost every one speaks about safety, yes it is important thay should take care more , but I'm sure you have more accident in New modern factory or workshop what ever, more than them. Just sayin! It Anyway keep up the great job.
well the machinery they are good, though they are old they are good, but the people who do the work i do not think their work has quality , simply the way they use the machines, also safety is been totally ignored , for me people who dont care about safety means their work is also no good.
these tough little guys in their flip flops punch out some nice stuff with some pretty backdated equipment. they put themselves in some horribly compromising safety positions however. please be careful
While you are waiting for your safety meeting, finding your hard hat, back brace, putting on your steel toed boots and seeing if you have the right ethnic mix of employees they are building something. Did you see the wood they were using, can you even begin to think about the environmental laws you would violate here to cut wood like that. They are a nation that is working without a bunch of "Homeless" people not knowing where to turn and a government without a clue. We have evolved beyond them in our need for work rules and environmental laws making the largest work opportunity one of creating and designing machinery and equipment that reduces the need for employees to work.
@@xx1590 It is the reality of most all of the world Young people doing much with little and creating wonderful things with few resources. And yes, most have never worn real shoes, let alone safety shoes. (Just sent three pairs of shoes to gentlemen who never had shoes before) To be honest these men have much more than most. All that equipment was very high end 30 years ago.
@@dhex1098 I think it is impressive how some people with very limited education, money, opportunity, or modern conveniences can go forth and overcome all that to produce useful products that provide for them and their families while others set around crying about being victims and can never seem to overcome the victimhood to accomplish anything to get out of abject poverty.
2:31, xưởng mình có chế cái giá con lăn nâng hạ được làm gỗ dài nhàn hơn với chuẩn hơn, đẩy vậy kiểu j cũng ko đều được
cảm ơn người anh em
Nothing ancient about electrical tools.
It's a shame they don't know about glue and clamps they could have avoided using 20 penny nails in that beautiful wood.
They do not need glue. That is the craftsmanship here. But yes. sure did not like seeing those nails go into that wood. Likely not needed but only an over precaution.
Steel nails??
You did very good!! You are making more money from TH-cam, than wood work!
Hearing protection - did I miss it! Just one of the "safety" measures apparently lacking. For all that they do amazing work.
Mình cần mặt bàn ghép 2 đến 3 tấm gỗ. Mặt dài 2m4, rộng 85m và dày 7cm. Xin hỏi giá bao nhiêu ạ, mình ở Đà Nẵng.
That is amazingly hard labor. The machinery didn't seem to be inappropriate or too old for the work they're doing. I guess '80s is ancient if you were born in 2000. I'm retired so it doesn't seem that long ago to me. Not everything needs to be or should be done on CNC machinery. The wealth of natural resources contrasts strongly with the working conditions, though. That's the most teak I've ever seen in one place. My entire stash of teak wouldn't make more than one or two of the planks they carried inside.
Gỗ gì vậy
lim bạn ơi
Machines from the 1980's are only ancient to people born in the new millenium. There is a word for those, I believe.... ;-)
christ man....that stack hanging above them makes me fret....i do believe that's what the old timers would call being in the bite
I was trying to workout the Skilful part of this video
👍😍👍....
what kind of wood the?
iron wood, thanks
Hi bros!
This is really "biiiiiiig', huge.
Now what's ancient with a power circular saw with a guard and a power morticing machine!
Some how it was made do interesting!
ต้องการติดต่อสอบถามหน่อยครับ
And not one minute wasted on safety either!
cho e hỏi khuôn cửa nhà mình thường xẻ mấy phân
tuỳ khách nhé người anh em, 4cm, 6cm, 8cm, 10cm
I actually have the Makita Power saw and I bought it brand new in the 70s, nowt wrong with old machinery they most probably take more care of their tools than they do for themselves, no proper industrial shoes, eye protection, hearing guards. And were on earth is the dust collection. Definite fire hazard. But they do put out quality work.
What kind of wood is being used?
iron wood,thanks
Hello my friend
Love the exposed electrics not
Congratulations on the job, very beautiful but I see that your company is very dirty, this can cause an uncontrollable fire. Think of working in a cleaner place, for safety ...
What kind of wood?
iron wood, thanks
Where do you buy your shoes?
Somebody please get these guy some boots, goggles and hearing protection! Or at least pay them enough to afford some!
Who ever wrote the title of this do they actually know how to use the Queens English, or the meaning of certain words!!!!!! Since when can tools that work by electricity be classed as ancient, misleading titles like this by people who have no understanding in the use of the English language honestly annoy me beyond belief.
no power drive on that planer it appears
Wood name pls
i could see this guy on the new makita ad banners at home depot, thug life status cutting big timber in childs flip flops
All that joinery and they ruined it with nails
Xươrng a ở dau the
Hải Dương a ơi
May móc hiện đai qua
Woodworking Craftsman ok b luong làm ngày bao tien the b m hung yen
Incredible Ancient Woodworking Machines??? What? Are you 10 or something?
Where is this
Viet Nam Asia
My god the lack of basic safety and self preservation appears to be completely absent in these 2 guys.
Holding a circular saw with finger 9n the guard. Running cable straight over where you intend to cut. Why they're cutting in that tiny area is beyond me. Placing bare feet under the saw .... It's so goddamn cringe worthy. How one of them hasn't died or lost a digit or limb is beyond me. With those kind of behaviour its merely a matter of time.
I liked the breakers with exposed terminals, probably with at least 240v
@@cldude691 Oh I almost missed that part.
No, electric machine in India before 80s.we Are working only hand work particular ly chezels
If you want to know how to do it yourself, just look for Stodoys.
8
These machines aren’t ancient, hand saw, brace and bits, hand planes and chisels, they’re the old classic tools, ancient ones are stone axes. Just sayin!!
When the fuck did we start calling the 1980s ancient?
It is obvious the OSHA police haven't visited this shop in a while....
Ccçv. Xx ncc
Nice
Steel toe chanclas