No, the "but" is fine. It's a totally acceptable conjunction for joining two clauses, especially where the second one is surprising. ("I seem too young for woodworking BUT I'm woodworking.")
I was lucky enough to have woodwork classes as an option at school. I only did it for a couple of years, but it was value to me. Hope the woodworking goes well for you.
As a lefty who prefers pull saws, I appreciate the callout!! Simple, elegant, effective… very nice! I also really appreciate that you’re clearly running a business (which I greatly respect), but it’s not just an empty money-grab. You’re creating a good product that solves a problem while also empowering people to do the same thing for free if their circumstances are different! This is exactly how great brands are built!
Thanks! I mostly use power tools, but you've inspired me to sharpen up my chisels and dig out some other hand tools. Since I have a table saw and a lot of scrap wood, I'm opting to make up my own sawyer's hooks, but I owe you at least this much compensation for your intro and plans, as well as your other entertaining and informative videos. +10!
I like your content and your style/methods. I prefer the videos that show how something is made, with the 'you can buy these' worked into the instructions as options. This makes it clear that woodworking/making is your primary focus, and that Compass Rose is one option for viewers to consider using in their woodworking/making. Thanks for doing all this. I'm glad you've been able to make this gig work for you.
You only really need one bench hook. As long as it's square. This is the best 'no-nonsense' woodworking channel I know of - too many youtubers have sterile, clean workshops that don't look they've been used.
Yes, this format is better! I liked your original Woodworking for Humans series and miss the good ole days of basic, simple tips, tricks and projects. Thanks!
This is a great format. It has enough general purpose info not to feel like an infomercial, and even the parts specifically about the CR kit are applicable to homemade hooks. Well done!
Video started and, ok he is talking bench hooks - but around 4:45 it went to a sales pitch, oh this is a hook & sales pitch video! Wow wait a minute now: He starts to show so many useful tricks with hooks; and he explains why this works!! OK not bad - say WHAT - Rex is giving us all this free info on how to make our own hooks??? REX you & your team made a great video - it is informative, it is sharing, helpful, and it offers a way to acquire a great set of hooks, if one is just not sure they could make their own. Great video - YOU get an A+
I grew up in a woodworking shop. My father and I made furniture, shelving, repairs on anything people brought in, spiral and straight stairs and just about anything you could imagine. In all the time I worked with him in his shop I never saw him use one of those bench hooks. But I have to say, it is brilliant and seriously wished we'd had them on several occasions. I can imagine where these would be immensely handy! I want to add that your willingness to have plans online for these has convinced me to subscribe.
I like the direction of your channel. The length and energy level are just right. I appreciate the depth of knowledge. Who knew bench hooks could do all that?
I have said it before, and I’ll say it again your commercials are the only commercials I love to watch! In fact this time around I bought the bench hook! It just seems like a good starting point to then be able to build all my other tools!
Many thanks from a left-handed woodworker.!. Have my set on order.!. Been following you for years and very happy to see your channel expanding and your content staying true to what makes it great. All the best to you. Mark in Colorado.
Imagine meeting this guy at a coffee shop and accidentally starting a conversation about woodworking…. Next thing you know you’re leaving your family and moving to another state and becoming best friends. Rex, you rock 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻 A true inspiration for this lifetime
These are awesome! Thank you so much for making them. As a teacher trying to set-up a hand tool only wood shop class, these are a life saver. Without a tablesaw, there was no way I could batch these out for all the students, and when I tried having them make some bench hooks of their own... well, square would be the last word to describe them. These will save my kids so much time and frustration by helping them make and shoot clean, square cuts. I bought 16 sets and they all turned out great (the B stock has some tear-out on the holes, but that gets covered by the blocks anyway). Now let's see how well they hold up to a bunch of teenagers.
Your bench hooks are deceptively simple, but you really thought them through. The ability to use them left or right-handed, or with a pull saw impressed me.
I’ve taken an old kitchen cutting board and added boards to make a bench hook out of it! Works great and with it being long it makes the work peice more stable for what ever you want to do!
I'm sure you'll get plenty of negative comments, so I just wanted to say that as someone who hasn't touched a saw since school but wants to get started this seems like a great product. A rewarding project and a useful tool that is as approachable as IKEA furniture. If you do end up making more I'll be sure to order one later in the year.
This style of video is just fine with me. I did watch to the very end. The secret is that you showed almost every use or configuration for the bench hooks. That was vital and you did a terrific job. I have known about these for years but weeks after I think of them, I forget about it. Making or buying a pair may keep them in my head as a great tool. (I remember a video I saw on how to make the old fashioned ones. That video taught me relief cuts and chisel work. Your design is simpler.
I started to learn woodworking in my dad's workshop when I was 10. He taught me a lot of the old profession inherited in Syria. I find your videos very inspiring and valuable. Waiting for your next video. Thanks for your efforts.
Again a very useful video. One thing you could emphasize more on your channel: working with hand tools is waaay safer (and also healthier for the ears and lungs) than power tools. For a hobbyist, these things count: do I want to lose a few fingers for just making a shelf for my loved one? Would she be happy with the shelf if it cost me an eye from table saw kickback? Now I find that by making my hand saws more readily accessible and putting my cross cut sled away on the top shelf, I am much less inclined to remove the blade guard on my table saw, and use the hand saws instead. And then since the track saw is better and safer for long rips, I even think I might get rid of the table saw at some point. When I do, and I still have all my digits by then, I'll tell everyone on the internet that it's thanks to you guys hand tool TH-camrs in general, and you Rex in particular.
Never hurts to hear another voice, always helps, but I am quite sure that Rex has made your points over the years more than once or twice, and made them in exemplary fashion.
I really love your approach to selling stuff. It genuinely feels like you care vastly more about helping people out than getting rich. I hope to be starting woodworking soon and I expect to buy some plans from you. Awesome job!
I love the marketing of putting a QR code on the instructions for making it yourself. I can see paying for the bench hooks getting to be a better deal each time you mess up trying to make them!
Exactly for these very convenient reasons, bench hooks, saw benches etc., I try to get used to Western style saws since years. Unfortunately, I am still into Japanese style saws, I like them so much more. But holding the workpiece is always a pain. 😢 OK, I just saw the end of the video. Nice reminder 😂 Anyway, it's more than a tradeoff in my opinion. I need free space on the whole surface to hang the benchhooks onto the backside. And I have some requirements for my bench. Shouldn't be too deep (or you'll need very long hooks), shouldn't have a mounted back wall for tool storage or beeing placed directly in front of a wall (yep, here I am, small space, efficient use of it, half of my bench has a tool wall at the back side). And the edge of the bendge should be sharp all around (here I am again - the backside of my bench's other half's surface has a rounded edge because I reused some old wood). Sigh, I know, this is not fair, prob. most pull saw enthusiasts have a nice bench at least. Snif. Btw. You are very generous with your plans. And oh my good, do they look great. That's a plan you would love to leave hanging on your wall after the build is finished.
Please do keep up the new product video style. When you show how to use your products and what your products can be useful for, it makes it easier for beginners to pick up; we're short on tradesmen these days, and channels like yours help build interest.
Rex, I'm so proud to see your company taking off. I love my vice block and I can't wait to use these hooks. I wish you the very best! Thanks for your videos and products!
Was going to comment that I was disappointed to see tear out around the dowel holes on a product that Rex is trying to sell, however if you look at the description there are two links provided and the second of the two offers a decent discount for blemished-stock bench hooks. Cool idea.
Rex! What a commercial!! LOL! As usual, very informative. I have two of your bench stops on my bench. Excellent little devices. Thank for the video. Ialways love seeing these pop up on TH-cam. :)
Yup a bench hook is an essential jig for your bench been using them my whole life. I find them very useful when I have to pair a small piece with a chisel like a wedge.
Definitely like this style. Shows me what I'm missing, how to use it, as well as tips to fabric my own or purchase if I don't have time or tools . Thanks.
Your commercial is terrible. I’m supposed to be bored or put off by it. I’m supposed to think you’re a shill. I’m supposed to spot flaws where you make things look easier than they are, be annoyed, and make the noise my preteen makes when I ask her to do something. Instead, it’s mostly just educational. You’re extolling the virtues of bench hooks more than YOUR bench hooks. You don’t claim yours do anything magical. And then I’m thinking I might want to buy them just to get you to do all the right angles for me so I can focus on my work and trust it. Your stuff is amazing. It’s inexpensive, accessible, and super useful. You can do a video like this with no hard sell because the value is pretty obvious.
Nice video and I've come to the same realization that bench hooks give you much better workflow than a front vise. I need to make a new pair using this design for the support it offers for the waste piece. I don't use bench dogs but I have holes for holdfasts and I would argue that they are faster than clamps for securing work pieces and not interrupting your workflow. Just one or two taps from a mallet to secure or release the holdfast can't be beat even by quick clamps.
A little trick for avoiding bench hooks to move back, for instance when working with japanese style saws: I screw a very short screw through, with the head sunk and the point barely poking out below the underside. As soon as there's a minimum amount of weight applied, it will keep everything in place. It does leave tiny marks (and scratches) on my workbench but I am not particularly fussy about that.
17:12 I'd say you have succeeded very well. I did not think of the video as a commercial at all. I didn't mind the previous format, just think this one works better.
Man i love that you are designing and selling tools now! And really unique useful things. Not just different version of the same old same old. I haven't pulled the trigger yet but i really wanna get the router plane when i can afford it.
Good video. The CNC benchhooks are indeed well thought out & versatile. The solid one piece ones could be a very challenging project especially if you started with a tree😀😃😄
I like the bench hooks, but before you go into all-out production, you can remove one dowel from each of the groups of three. Only two dowels are necessary. For maximum accuracy, position the dowels as far apart as is practical, so I would suggest using the two diagonally positioned dowels.
I like these, but as shipping something to Europe would be a little bit eco-unfriendly, i will build them on my own. Btw., by doing so you can just adapt everything to your workbench. Live the simplicity and adaptability of these!
Got a new workbench you haven't mentioned yet, would be interesting to see you add it to the list: Japanese workbenches, they appear to just be 3" thick slabs of wood on the floor with a plane stop strip, some are raised off the ground a few more inches, and still others are angled like plane beams (another cool thing to take a look at) Best way to start without a workbench is to just work as if you diddn't have one. Great for small apt's too!
A very nice video and a great little product. Instead of having a dot to distinguish the parts, I would change the hole pattern so that it couldn't be assembled incorrectly. CNC might be overkill for this product. If you are making them in reasonable volume (say a few dozen sets), a table saw to cut the blanks and a drill with some jigs to position the holes would probably be less expensive.
About that glue squeeze out, how about putting a small chamfer on the edges of the blocks that end up inside the stage? Another way to make a benchhook is to take a board, plane it four sides square, cut about 5cm of each end and then dovetail it into the ends of the longer middle piece, cut down through your fence and you are done.
Thank you!, Mr. Krueger, for the free plans! BTW, I wanted to make my own bench hooks for some time so I really appreciate this! Have a GREAT day, Neighbor!
I do a lot of hand tool wood working. I have my kids in for projects now and then. My Daughter is left-handed. If the other hook were set to the inside edge, they would work for both right- and left-handed folks. ... Nevermind Rex thinks of everything see "but what about" or watch whole video before commenting.
But Rex, what if I like my coffee dark but with low acid?! Fantastic video, as always, and thanks for trying to address as many wood workers as possible!
ohhh this is awesome! i was gonna say if you had any plans for a shooting board coming up from your company. then u showed you can use the hooks for that same reason. i love it
Pretty good idea, Rex! 😃 But here goes another, for Japanese saws... Have you ever seen those magnetic guides for sawing people make? The fence would need to be higher and with a magnet embedded. The second one could be a 45° guide as well. Pull saws won't work with that kind of support... But if you have bench dogs... You know. 😉 Anyway, stay safe there with your family! 🖖😊
If you want to make the one-piece bench hooks, it's also worth searching for Roy Underhill's bench hook video he did for Lie Nielsen Tools for a deeper dive into that style. That said, my bench hooks are pretty similar to Rex's here and I've never had a problem with them.
So you cut a piece of stock to an exact length, use your hooks as a shooting board to take a chamfer off one edge to avoid tear-out, then plane the end of the stock square on the shooting board…..but don’t you end of with a piece of stock slightly shorter than what you need? head-scratch?
If you mark out with knife lines, you can saw them a whisker long and plane them down to the knife line, it will crumble away nicely when you reach it.
Nicely done video. While I do like your videos that advertise your products, I’d also like to see more project videos like the ones you haven’t made in a while. Also… if one were to make their own bench hooks without using a kit, would it work out well to make a single, double-wide bench hook, then cut it in half to get the desired final result?
Any tips on making some sort of dog hole style stop to plane wide pieces that are under 1/8"? It's complicated for why, but I really struggle to stabilize pieces that thin, and then being able to take a full pass of a piece that is about 10" long, and I need it to eventually be around, or slightly under, 1/8". Right now I have a few holes drilled that I slide really little dowels into, and brace that way, but they often snap because they are so thin and low profile. It's a bit of a niche need, and I can't find anything out there on how to make some sort of dog hole style stop that can be so low profile, so my plane doesn't hit it.
A wood planing stop is how I do it. Easy to make and if you end up planing the top of the stop no big deal. As for snapping the wood use a longer plane
For the really thin stuff, I've seen YT woodworkings recommend using double-sided tape to hold the piece down flat to the bench and not using stops/dogs of any kind. I haven't had to try that yet, myself. (I have a 1.5 x 1.5 square "planing dog" in the usual plane-stop spot on my bench... no metal parts on top, just an unadorned chunk of wood I can raise/lower. I can probably plane to about 1/8" thin but anything less than that I'd probably buy some double-stick tape. People that hand-plane wooden bookmarks have my respect.)
Love it! Just want to ask one question. Do you have anything against using an old school miter-box for the same application? Or modifying a miter box with a rear blocks to hook on the work bench?
I am 14 years old but because your video's i am starting with handtoolwoodworking, thank you for that.
Mad respect for starting that at this young an age. I didn't trust myself near saws until I was 17.
Needs an "and" not a "but" in your sentence and happy journey
No, the "but" is fine. It's a totally acceptable conjunction for joining two clauses, especially where the second one is surprising. ("I seem too young for woodworking BUT I'm woodworking.")
Ahh yes,the English teacher in Rex making a showing.
I was lucky enough to have woodwork classes as an option at school. I only did it for a couple of years, but it was value to me. Hope the woodworking goes well for you.
As a lefty who prefers pull saws, I appreciate the callout!! Simple, elegant, effective… very nice! I also really appreciate that you’re clearly running a business (which I greatly respect), but it’s not just an empty money-grab. You’re creating a good product that solves a problem while also empowering people to do the same thing for free if their circumstances are different! This is exactly how great brands are built!
Thank you! I would rather do nothing than do the "empty money grab." I appreciate you noticing the difference.
Pinned me too, leftie who prefers Japanese style pull saws. Great channel, thank you Rex.
This is absolutely the best sort of marketting :)
(And I mean that in a good way)
There are more than woodworking lessons to be learnt from Rex!
for sure, showing two free and fun ways to replicate your product before even showing the product is a refreshingly honest change
Your tool ads have been just as enjoyable as your other content. Informative, helpful and nothing pushy about them.
This is how all ads should be.
Wood working brought me to your channel, but your personality, your straightforwardness keeps me here
Thanks! I mostly use power tools, but you've inspired me to sharpen up my chisels and dig out some other hand tools. Since I have a table saw and a lot of scrap wood, I'm opting to make up my own sawyer's hooks, but I owe you at least this much compensation for your intro and plans, as well as your other entertaining and informative videos. +10!
I like your content and your style/methods. I prefer the videos that show how something is made, with the 'you can buy these' worked into the instructions as options. This makes it clear that woodworking/making is your primary focus, and that Compass Rose is one option for viewers to consider using in their woodworking/making.
Thanks for doing all this. I'm glad you've been able to make this gig work for you.
I was going to build one myself but decided to support the channel and get one here instead.
You only really need one bench hook. As long as it's square. This is the best 'no-nonsense' woodworking channel I know of - too many youtubers have sterile, clean workshops that don't look they've been used.
Yes, this format is better! I liked your original Woodworking for Humans series and miss the good ole days of basic, simple tips, tricks and projects.
Thanks!
This is a great format. It has enough general purpose info not to feel like an infomercial, and even the parts specifically about the CR kit are applicable to homemade hooks. Well done!
Video started and, ok he is talking bench hooks - but around 4:45 it went to a sales pitch, oh this is a hook & sales pitch video! Wow wait a minute now: He starts to show so many useful tricks with hooks; and he explains why this works!! OK not bad - say WHAT - Rex is giving us all this free info on how to make our own hooks??? REX you & your team made a great video - it is informative, it is sharing, helpful, and it offers a way to acquire a great set of hooks, if one is just not sure they could make their own. Great video - YOU get an A+
I grew up in a woodworking shop. My father and I made furniture, shelving, repairs on anything people brought in, spiral and straight stairs and just about anything you could imagine. In all the time I worked with him in his shop I never saw him use one of those bench hooks. But I have to say, it is brilliant and seriously wished we'd had them on several occasions. I can imagine where these would be immensely handy! I want to add that your willingness to have plans online for these has convinced me to subscribe.
I like the direction of your channel. The length and energy level are just right. I appreciate the depth of knowledge. Who knew bench hooks could do all that?
I have said it before, and I’ll say it again your commercials are the only commercials I love to watch! In fact this time around I bought the bench hook! It just seems like a good starting point to then be able to build all my other tools!
Love the multiple call-outs for us left handers 😅
Many thanks from a left-handed woodworker.!. Have my set on order.!. Been following you for years and very happy to see your channel expanding and your content staying true to what makes it great. All the best to you. Mark in Colorado.
I love the spirit of your company. I hope it will have a bright future.
Imagine meeting this guy at a coffee shop and accidentally starting a conversation about woodworking…. Next thing you know you’re leaving your family and moving to another state and becoming best friends. Rex, you rock 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻 A true inspiration for this lifetime
I've had lunch with Rex a couple times - fortunately I live in the same state! haha
These are awesome! Thank you so much for making them. As a teacher trying to set-up a hand tool only wood shop class, these are a life saver. Without a tablesaw, there was no way I could batch these out for all the students, and when I tried having them make some bench hooks of their own... well, square would be the last word to describe them. These will save my kids so much time and frustration by helping them make and shoot clean, square cuts. I bought 16 sets and they all turned out great (the B stock has some tear-out on the holes, but that gets covered by the blocks anyway). Now let's see how well they hold up to a bunch of teenagers.
I like that in the video you're selling bench hooks you also teach us how to make them. I'm making my first set of these today, and im excited =)
Your bench hooks are deceptively simple, but you really thought them through. The ability to use them left or right-handed, or with a pull saw impressed me.
I’ve taken an old kitchen cutting board and added boards to make a bench hook out of it! Works great and with it being long it makes the work peice more stable for what ever you want to do!
Good mix of showing us alternatives and presenting your product.
I'm sure you'll get plenty of negative comments, so I just wanted to say that as someone who hasn't touched a saw since school but wants to get started this seems like a great product. A rewarding project and a useful tool that is as approachable as IKEA furniture. If you do end up making more I'll be sure to order one later in the year.
This is one of the many reasons you are certainly one of the top woodworking instructors ever. Thanks man youre awesome!
Your approach to selling your products is great. Informative and entertaining, and your stuff is quite affordable!
I’m a lefty who really wants a logo up version 😂
Thanks Rex, another great product from Compass Rose!
This style of video is just fine with me. I did watch to the very end. The secret is that you showed almost every use or configuration for the bench hooks. That was vital and you did a terrific job. I have known about these for years but weeks after I think of them, I forget about it. Making or buying a pair may keep them in my head as a great tool. (I remember a video I saw on how to make the old fashioned ones. That video taught me relief cuts and chisel work. Your design is simpler.
I started to learn woodworking in my dad's workshop when I was 10. He taught me a lot of the old profession inherited in Syria. I find your videos very inspiring and valuable. Waiting for your next video. Thanks for your efforts.
Again a very useful video.
One thing you could emphasize more on your channel: working with hand tools is waaay safer (and also healthier for the ears and lungs) than power tools. For a hobbyist, these things count: do I want to lose a few fingers for just making a shelf for my loved one? Would she be happy with the shelf if it cost me an eye from table saw kickback?
Now I find that by making my hand saws more readily accessible and putting my cross cut sled away on the top shelf, I am much less inclined to remove the blade guard on my table saw, and use the hand saws instead. And then since the track saw is better and safer for long rips, I even think I might get rid of the table saw at some point.
When I do, and I still have all my digits by then, I'll tell everyone on the internet that it's thanks to you guys hand tool TH-camrs in general, and you Rex in particular.
Never hurts to hear another voice, always helps, but I am quite sure that Rex has made your points over the years more than once or twice, and made them in exemplary fashion.
I really love your approach to selling stuff. It genuinely feels like you care vastly more about helping people out than getting rich.
I hope to be starting woodworking soon and I expect to buy some plans from you. Awesome job!
Thanks!
I love the marketing of putting a QR code on the instructions for making it yourself. I can see paying for the bench hooks getting to be a better deal each time you mess up trying to make them!
I never expected your channel to refuel my desire to get my hobby CNC machine working again! :D
Exactly for these very convenient reasons, bench hooks, saw benches etc., I try to get used to Western style saws since years. Unfortunately, I am still into Japanese style saws, I like them so much more. But holding the workpiece is always a pain. 😢
OK, I just saw the end of the video. Nice reminder 😂 Anyway, it's more than a tradeoff in my opinion. I need free space on the whole surface to hang the benchhooks onto the backside. And I have some requirements for my bench. Shouldn't be too deep (or you'll need very long hooks), shouldn't have a mounted back wall for tool storage or beeing placed directly in front of a wall (yep, here I am, small space, efficient use of it, half of my bench has a tool wall at the back side). And the edge of the bendge should be sharp all around (here I am again - the backside of my bench's other half's surface has a rounded edge because I reused some old wood).
Sigh, I know, this is not fair, prob. most pull saw enthusiasts have a nice bench at least. Snif.
Btw. You are very generous with your plans. And oh my good, do they look great. That's a plan you would love to leave hanging on your wall after the build is finished.
Please do keep up the new product video style. When you show how to use your products and what your products can be useful for, it makes it easier for beginners to pick up; we're short on tradesmen these days, and channels like yours help build interest.
Rex, I'm so proud to see your company taking off. I love my vice block and I can't wait to use these hooks. I wish you the very best! Thanks for your videos and products!
I already made my own bench hooks, but I love the product and never underestimate the value of your own wasted time.
I did not expect to learn so much terminology when I started woodworking. I thought I knew what a dang dog was.
Thank you for including left handed people!
Was going to comment that I was disappointed to see tear out around the dowel holes on a product that Rex is trying to sell, however if you look at the description there are two links provided and the second of the two offers a decent discount for blemished-stock bench hooks. Cool idea.
I like this educational format. Also, I just ordered a B-stock kit. Thanks for making these available and affordable.
Rex! What a commercial!! LOL! As usual, very informative. I have two of your bench stops on my bench. Excellent little devices. Thank for the video. Ialways love seeing these pop up on TH-cam. :)
Yup a bench hook is an essential jig for your bench been using them my whole life. I find them very useful when I have to pair a small piece with a chisel like a wedge.
Definitely like this style. Shows me what I'm missing, how to use it, as well as tips to fabric my own or purchase if I don't have time or tools . Thanks.
Your commercial is terrible. I’m supposed to be bored or put off by it. I’m supposed to think you’re a shill. I’m supposed to spot flaws where you make things look easier than they are, be annoyed, and make the noise my preteen makes when I ask her to do something.
Instead, it’s mostly just educational. You’re extolling the virtues of bench hooks more than YOUR bench hooks. You don’t claim yours do anything magical. And then I’m thinking I might want to buy them just to get you to do all the right angles for me so I can focus on my work and trust it.
Your stuff is amazing. It’s inexpensive, accessible, and super useful. You can do a video like this with no hard sell because the value is pretty obvious.
Nice video and I've come to the same realization that bench hooks give you much better workflow than a front vise. I need to make a new pair using this design for the support it offers for the waste piece.
I don't use bench dogs but I have holes for holdfasts and I would argue that they are faster than clamps for securing work pieces and not interrupting your workflow. Just one or two taps from a mallet to secure or release the holdfast can't be beat even by quick clamps.
I love your products so far, so helpful for new woodworkers. I will definitely try these out.
0:30 Setting a vise on the right for all those staunch right-handers? Or more friction on the workbench top like rubber, cork or softboard
This is the “Everyman” that we need to get back to👍🏻
Rex, you’ll be pleased to hear, I have plugged the bench dog holes in my workbench. Love these videos.
A little trick for avoiding bench hooks to move back, for instance when working with japanese style saws: I screw a very short screw through, with the head sunk and the point barely poking out below the underside. As soon as there's a minimum amount of weight applied, it will keep everything in place. It does leave tiny marks (and scratches) on my workbench but I am not particularly fussy about that.
17:12 I'd say you have succeeded very well. I did not think of the video as a commercial at all. I didn't mind the previous format, just think this one works better.
Man i love that you are designing and selling tools now! And really unique useful things. Not just different version of the same old same old.
I haven't pulled the trigger yet but i really wanna get the router plane when i can afford it.
Hey Rex, great job here, the new format, showing woodworking advice along with an ad is great. Keep up the good work!
Good video. The CNC benchhooks are indeed well thought out & versatile. The solid one piece ones could be a very challenging project especially if you started with a tree😀😃😄
Rex coming out with exactly the thing i was needing and looking for a build. It's like you're in my head. I apologize for all the clutter in there....
I would rather use power tools but I still admire this piece of kit.🙂🙂
Really looking forward to my kit's arrival tomorrow! Thanks as always, Rex. You saw the lefties coming this time, so nicely done. :)
I like the bench hooks, but before you go into all-out production, you can remove one dowel from each of the groups of three. Only two dowels are necessary. For maximum accuracy, position the dowels as far apart as is practical, so I would suggest using the two diagonally positioned dowels.
Great presentation of the need and how to fulfill it. Keep on!!
Another nice product that is well thought out. Great job to you and your team Rex.
Excellent video as always. Interesting and informative, also a great looking product. Keep up the work.
I like these, but as shipping something to Europe would be a little bit eco-unfriendly, i will build them on my own. Btw., by doing so you can just adapt everything to your workbench.
Live the simplicity and adaptability of these!
Excellent video! I wish you great success with this and all your Compass Rose projects!
Is there going to be a part 2 for the Alexander log chair?
I ordered mine right away. Excited to use them when they get here. Thanks, Rex!
Thank you!
Got a new workbench you haven't mentioned yet, would be interesting to see you add it to the list:
Japanese workbenches, they appear to just be 3" thick slabs of wood on the floor with a plane stop strip, some are raised off the ground a few more inches, and still others are angled like plane beams (another cool thing to take a look at)
Best way to start without a workbench is to just work as if you diddn't have one. Great for small apt's too!
A very nice video and a great little product.
Instead of having a dot to distinguish the parts, I would change the hole pattern so that it couldn't be assembled incorrectly.
CNC might be overkill for this product. If you are making them in reasonable volume (say a few dozen sets), a table saw to cut the blanks and a drill with some jigs to position the holes would probably be less expensive.
You rock. Don't change. Loving it!!!
Didn’t realize Compass Rose was your company. Cool!
Great content thanks. I prefer this style really showing off tool AND technique.
I really appreciate your videos and desire to share your knowledge. This format is great.
About that glue squeeze out, how about putting a small chamfer on the edges of the blocks that end up inside the stage?
Another way to make a benchhook is to take a board, plane it four sides square, cut about 5cm of each end and then dovetail it into the ends of the longer middle piece, cut down through your fence and you are done.
Thank you for the effort you put into your videos.
Thank you!, Mr. Krueger, for the free plans!
BTW, I wanted to make my own bench hooks for some time so I really appreciate this!
Have a GREAT day, Neighbor!
You're the best, Rex. Thanks!
I do a lot of hand tool wood working. I have my kids in for projects now and then. My Daughter is left-handed. If the other hook were set to the inside edge, they would work for both right- and left-handed folks. ... Nevermind Rex thinks of everything see "but what about" or watch whole video before commenting.
I really like this kind of instructive videos. Thank you Rex!
But Rex, what if I like my coffee dark but with low acid?!
Fantastic video, as always, and thanks for trying to address as many wood workers as possible!
Another awesome gesture Rex, thank you
ohhh this is awesome! i was gonna say if you had any plans for a shooting board coming up from your company. then u showed you can use the hooks for that same reason. i love it
update: just got these in the mail! so excited to get started and do some projects. thanks Rex!
Great video, I loved the part where you talked about bench dogs!
Thank you for including pull saws! I always wondered if you could use bench hooks for them. I bet it would also work for Japanese planes too...
Excellent video rex. Good format 👍
Nice work. Good ad format
Pretty good idea, Rex! 😃
But here goes another, for Japanese saws... Have you ever seen those magnetic guides for sawing people make? The fence would need to be higher and with a magnet embedded. The second one could be a 45° guide as well.
Pull saws won't work with that kind of support... But if you have bench dogs... You know. 😉
Anyway, stay safe there with your family! 🖖😊
Oh... I guess I spoke too soon about Japanese saws. 😂
I respect that you didn't delete your comment, but instead called yourself out on your mistake. That's cool as fuck, and I appreciate it.
@blahblah9036 Oh, absolutely. We all make mistakes, it's the human nature. 😊
I love the fact that you dont do top 10 videos with shameless plugs. I dont enjoy the shorts format but i get it if you wanna stick with what works.
If you want to make the one-piece bench hooks, it's also worth searching for Roy Underhill's bench hook video he did for Lie Nielsen Tools for a deeper dive into that style.
That said, my bench hooks are pretty similar to Rex's here and I've never had a problem with them.
Have you spoken with Jonathan Katsmoses or Jimmy Diresta? I believe that they have production facilities?
Adverts! (But I really like the way you do yours)…
So you cut a piece of stock to an exact length, use your hooks as a shooting board to take a chamfer off one edge to avoid tear-out, then plane the end of the stock square on the shooting board…..but don’t you end of with a piece of stock slightly shorter than what you need? head-scratch?
If you mark out with knife lines, you can saw them a whisker long and plane them down to the knife line, it will crumble away nicely when you reach it.
@@leehaelters6182 Good idea! Thanks for the suggestion.
@@rickpick9058, all the best!
Nicely done video. While I do like your videos that advertise your products, I’d also like to see more project videos like the ones you haven’t made in a while.
Also… if one were to make their own bench hooks without using a kit, would it work out well to make a single, double-wide bench hook, then cut it in half to get the desired final result?
You are a wealth of knowledge
Great job on the video!
Awesome demo! But searching for this video title in the future is going to be a nightmare...
Any tips on making some sort of dog hole style stop to plane wide pieces that are under 1/8"? It's complicated for why, but I really struggle to stabilize pieces that thin, and then being able to take a full pass of a piece that is about 10" long, and I need it to eventually be around, or slightly under, 1/8". Right now I have a few holes drilled that I slide really little dowels into, and brace that way, but they often snap because they are so thin and low profile. It's a bit of a niche need, and I can't find anything out there on how to make some sort of dog hole style stop that can be so low profile, so my plane doesn't hit it.
A wood planing stop is how I do it. Easy to make and if you end up planing the top of the stop no big deal. As for snapping the wood use a longer plane
For the really thin stuff, I've seen YT woodworkings recommend using double-sided tape to hold the piece down flat to the bench and not using stops/dogs of any kind. I haven't had to try that yet, myself. (I have a 1.5 x 1.5 square "planing dog" in the usual plane-stop spot on my bench... no metal parts on top, just an unadorned chunk of wood I can raise/lower. I can probably plane to about 1/8" thin but anything less than that I'd probably buy some double-stick tape. People that hand-plane wooden bookmarks have my respect.)
Love it! Just want to ask one question. Do you have anything against using an old school miter-box for the same application? Or modifying a miter box with a rear blocks to hook on the work bench?
Hey Rex, any advice on woodworking without a plane? It seems to be a big barrier for me.
Thank you for thinking of us lefties this time around. Have you considered making lefty versions of your other tools?