Adam, If you take a flat head screwdriver and cut a slot in it the screwdriver becomes a tack puller. Sharpen the tip a bit to make it easier to get under staples and then twist the handle to twist and pull them out. I worked in furniture manufacturing for about 8 years. It's a must have tool there.
Adam Savage recommending a tool that he purchased and used of his own volition is worth so much more than any number of sponsored users praising a tool. I find his expertise in making and building props such a boon because he has such a broad range of experience building that he can find the proper use case for any well-crafted tool. The sincerity that he has when talking about the strong points of a tool is a breath of fresh air in a browsing experience polluted with partnerships and sponsored products everywhere you turn. I understand that people need to make a living and I cannot fault them for taking money from a willing advertiser. However, buying and using a tool with your own resources and using it on your own time rather than finding a project that suits the tool specifically makes me feel confident that Adam isn't selling me snake oil and genuinely wants me to know about something that could potentially make my building experience that much more pleasant.
I gotta say, I really like the more down-to-earth, low-budget style of the quarantine videos. It's nice to see a little more of the process and hear more of Adam's stream-of-consciousness narration. Honestly they could stay this way moving forward and I'd be happy.
Adam works with the speed and frantic movements of perpetually doing a quick favor for someone, as if he says before each project, "Hold on a sec, I'll just fix this real quick."
He's stressed and depressed and you can see it. Ergo the more then usual manic energy. The door project is subconscious need to lock the world out. That's why the hollow Core comment came out. It's too flimsy ergo unsafe.
Nah there’s a bit of truth to what Petra said, in so far as Adam is very empathetic and I can see him handling his stress by working and distracting himself.
Tbf his career has been knowing how something will look on camera and making sure it will look GOOD on camera, so I expect his cinematography to be good
The nicest thing about Adam is he is an everyman and humbly so. When he goofs up (like the rest of us) he does not edit it out or seek to conceal the fact that he has erred. He gets frustrated and is not perfect, freely admitting when his knowledge is lacking. Also, I like that he does not look camera ready ever! Just like the rest of us! It is no wonder I am a little addicted to watching his voyages.
Adam, I WANT TO THANK YOU for maintaining my sanity during these trying times. Dude, you're a public (mental) health service! (Wouldn't taking the hinge pins out be better???)
I love the Covid Builds. It's like Adam unplugged, no retakes, minimal editing. When you see Adam jump up and down because his brain is outpacing his body, it makes me laugh every time.
I love that you comment on tables being at a premium for makers who live in apartments! I've built furniture, a driving simulator, restored (and rust blued) a rifle from the 1800's, and so many other projects on my livingroom floor. My 3D printer is even on the floor in my closet.
Im pretty sure he thought he was powerful, but the look was just his brain recollecting its self so he can realize its a hollow door not a solid wood door.
ROTFLMAO! 🤣 love how Adam was so psyched about finding his saw actually did what it was ment to so funny. & how he nearly went on a rant about car alarms. Until he realized he was the offending individual. Classic Adam. 🤣🚗🚨🤣
Well the stapler has already had its moment in the sun. I'm astonished Adam's never used a multitool before! It's just his kind of thing with dozens of oddball uses; you'd think he'd have a one-day-build about making a holster for it to be in his EDC! 🤪 I avoided these things for a while for the same reasons he gave, but after reno-ing my attached studio with all the outlet holes in drywall and awkward trim cuts, I've come to appreciate mine greatly. Check out SeeJaneDrill's video about re-cutting the teeth on the attachments, otherwise you'll go broke replacing them as they lose teeth constantly. Also, I recommend getting one with an attachable plunge base to make accurate 90° cuts when needed.
44:03 That's the face of a happy man when his project is finished and works exactly how it's intended first time. It's always so fun to watch these videos, half for the project, and half for Adam's personality. It's the best 47 minutes you could spend watching someone build a door.
@@bercio That might be a good idea if you live in hurricane type places or if you want to build affordable coffins for one of the 100 000++ american people who died. Depends.
@@thejunkman I know. That and there are times I have to take the car rather than the truck to the home supply because the discount/damaged bin is way too tempting.
Fascia (long “ah”) is the layer of connective tissue under the skin, similar to ligaments. Facia (hard “a”) is the horizontal board that covers the butt end of rafters on a roof structure. What you are dealing with is.... (wait for it)... trim. 😉
The spelling is the same (though dropping the s is a recognized variant), and the non-meat definition is a bit broader than that, but indeed pronouncing it "fah" sounds like he's going to build a very gorey door...
Theater Carpentry... if you ever needed the CRAZIEST way to make something look like the real thing but out of the most minimal budget or parts... Theater Carpentry. Its only gotta look good from 20 feet away in most cases. Also. I honestly never thought of you having this awesome of a shop Adam. Man its awesome. Love watching you build and create in such a space. MOTIVATIONAL MASTER! Love it!
For what it's worth, Adam, I found that grinding a knife edge on a used oscillating saw blade allows you to make amazing cuts on extruded foam board (insulating blue board). Nice tight fits with zero little blue "sawdust" all over the place. Sharpen ALL the edges, they all get used at one point or another. I found the ones with a wide head and the narrower "shank" where it connects to the tool work the best for me. Glad you've discovered a new expansion of your abilities! :)
I just worked out why I love watching your one day builds. You encourage me to go out and buy/collect/hoard tools. That door will never fall apart but must now weight much more will all those awesome nails in it from your nail gun. I too am in the process of repairing a door in my house and I too used far too many Brad nails and staples, but now I know it will never fall apart. Keep up the fantastic work love your channel, keep well from Cronulla Beach, Sydney Australia.
Adam: Uses a tool. Also Adam: This is one of my favorite tools. Always entertaining and enjoying to watch. Thanks for the countless number of hours of content .
use silicone basting brushes instead of acid brushes. once the glue dries in the silicone brush you can slide the dried glue out and reuse the brush :) no sense in creating more waste
I have a silicone brush for glue. The glue in the center of the bristles never dries and so getting the dried glue out is a multi-step process to let each layer dry out. Actually annoying. I just wash it with warm water when I'm done. Water WILL dry all the way through, and it doesn't mess up the water based glue if you use it wet.
I was really shocked to hear that you use acid brushes only once and trash them. While you can certainly afford it, it is extremely wasteful and the exact opposite of sustainable. Whether you continue using acid brushes or go for the silicone variety, I suggest you dump them in a water-filled jar when you're done with them and include cleaning out the brushes and emptying the jar to the daily workshop shutdown checklist. That way whatever stock of acid brushes you have left will last you forever...
I have a Sili-brush I bought from Amazon, and the bristles spread the glue wonderfully, and the blade on the other side gives me perfect edge clean-up! And cleaning the brush is super simple. I just stub it into warm running water and it flushes right out. If it dries on the bristles, it peels out no problem. And for less than $7 it's a fantastic product! www.amazon.com/Sili-Brush-Silicone-Wodworking-Hobbyists-Rubber/dp/B009OCEBD2/ Edit: A good way to work on a door without removing the screws is to pop the pins out of the hinges and it will be SO much easier!
@@awestwood3955 I know there are hinges with fixed pins. But they are rarely used on hollow-core interior doors. I'm not saying it never happens, just that it would be rare.
Your mannerisms just about mimic my own and its' soothing AF. You, with the passion of making things and me, with the passion of honing my guitars to my liking. Its a beautiful thing to watch. I wish i could watch myself sometimes. But then I watch your channel. And it all makes sense.
I love those Stanley handles! I have a ratchet set with a screwdriver-style base for the bits and it shattered a few years ago. After combing thrift stores and secondhand stores for years, I finally found the exact one to replace it! I was so happy.
Not sure if you read these comments, but your one-day-builds and other videos during ALL the stuff happening right now are so nice and are a mental life saver.
I love how most professional shops are look messy from the outside but are actually very organized. My dad's friend owns a woodworking studio behind his house and I am constantly amazed by how everything has it's place even though the space holds like 200 times the stuff it should be able to.
start of video: "This old hollow core piece of crap, ugh" end of video: "This o'l door and I go way back. I'll be fixin'er up one of these days, no finer door could a man ask fer"
@@theboredengineer2612 I was thinking it was working on the door that totally changed his perspective which hides a cool little anti-throwaway-culture idea, something like: If you don't like your stuff, improve it and you might like it more than anything you could buy.
I can tell you, as a carpenter, those oscillating multi tools are the single most used tools I have with the possible close exception of the impact driver. I didn’t believe the commercials at first either, but man oh man they changed my workflow SO MUCH!
Perhaps - and this is just idle internet-nobody speculation/fun - this is what it looks like when Adam Savage goes 'round the bend? He becomes even MORE productive!
If you hadn't figured it out already from watching Mythbusters. Adam was *already* off his rocker (it the best possible way of course). If anything this quarantine has just focused his creativity insanity. Off onto every more intriguing place.
In theater I have built stuff that the cast and crew were warned "Don't touch, don't even look at it to hard." and I have built stuff that supported the entire cast 4 feet off the ground.
Adam talking about the nail gun and moving his hand out of the way reminded me of tenth grade when we toured the local Vo-Tech to see if we wanted classes. They had the older kids in the building trades class talking about safety and the one kid made it a point to explain that the large nail gun they were using could go straight through a large piece of would and your knee before stopping and what it would look like.
"No one can lose a tape measure faster than i can lose a tape measure." I felt such a kinship here. I literally have a metal yardstick screwed to the wall with TAPE MEASURES GO HERE! written on it. I have more tape measures than fit on it, yet it is rarely full because so many have wandered off.
I use ones that are meant to clip onto a belt (or the top of an open toolbox, which is where they live). I usually find them clipped everywhere apart from the top of the box. They like to go on adventures.
This really hit home with me. I have lost several over the years. Occasionally one will return for a while, but never for long. I always hold out hope for them, but deep down, I know that it just.... it just isn't meant to be 😢
@@mattrickard3716 Throw away that hope brother, because they will never come back for good. I feel like tapes hate humans. So they run away on purpose lol Even if you put it in your tool box its still gonna be missing when you open it up.
I spend half me working time walking back to where I just was, to grab one of the 4 tape measures I left there... Because the last time i left a tape measure there I grabbed another one from the tool box, and walked over there with it. AND LEFT IT OVER THERE. ARRGGHH! And now there's none left in the tool box to grab!
9:13 im guessing he was thinking about that gear assembly being driven by the door knob - what a satisfying sound that would make every time the door is opened and closed
As soon as Adam put down his big boy square I could instantly see why it was not straight: he leaned on it for about a sec. Long enough to warp it. Hey I’m guilty of this too: I’m thinking an idea for a new badge? Bent Giant Square 😀
Watching Adam Savage use a table saw has taken years off of my life. I don't know how he has all of his fingers. Perhaps his fingers have absorbed my life energy in order to remain attached to his hands.
As someone that works somewhere where I go through them every day all I can say is “NOOOOOOOooooooooooooo!!!!!” Literally every single injury you can get from a saloon door has happened to me. They get caught on clothing and things you are carrying, they swing back and forth very hard and a lot faster than you’d imagine which can both hit you in the face with tremendous force and also jam your fingers between the doors. If there is more than one person anywhere near it it only gets worse from there.
I watch Adam because I think I’m a younger version of him. I work so much like him AND multitools!!!! I’ve already burnt out 2 and I’m on my 3rd one!!!! As i do plastering, timber framing and drywall walling for a living it has got to be the best thing I have ever bought!!!! You don’t know how much you need one......until you’ve got one!!!!! Get one if you haven’t already!!! I’m a massive fan of the diamond tip plunge attachment that goes into brick, block, cuts metal.....it’s a must have. Don’t get me started on how amazing it is for cutting plasterboard 🤣🤣 just reading that back I sound like a right nerd....I’m not honestly 🤣🤓
I did the same thing! I got a new slab cuz it was cheap (rental, i cant cut holes in the doors that came with the place) Even got the door hardware right! THEN I cut the flap wrong!
As someone who installs and services doors every day, the best way to take a door off of its hinges is to unscrew the middle hinge from the door, then pop the pins out of the top and bottom hinges. This makes it to where the hinges will come apart, with one half staying on the door, and the other half staying on the jamb. You can do whatever work you need to do, then slide it back together and put the pins back in. It’s very easy and fast as long as the door doesn’t weigh a million pounds. To pop the pins out, I use a spring loaded nail set, it usually shoots the pins out pretty easily. (While the door is closed) If the pins aren’t budging, you can use a dull chisel and hammer. Fit the chisel in between the head of the pin and the top of the hinge. Hit the chisel with a hammer lightly until the pin starts to move upward. Then hit the blade of the chisel from below and the pin should come out. I have tried other methods, and this is the fastest way for me. Just a little tip for anyone who has to work on doors.
DeWalt Oscillating Multi-Tool: amzn.to/2z3nsbm
Integra Oscillating Saw Blades: amzn.to/2MsDf6k
Festool Carvex jigsaw: amzn.to/36X30p0
God help you if you ever have to move....you have a lot is stuff.....reminds me of the old George Carlin bit about stuff
Adam,
If you take a flat head screwdriver and cut a slot in it the screwdriver becomes a tack puller. Sharpen the tip a bit to make it easier to get under staples and then twist the handle to twist and pull them out.
I worked in furniture manufacturing for about 8 years. It's a must have tool there.
Can we have a link to that cognitive bias poster at 1:20, please?😊
Do you have a link to the brass and wood aperture?
Hi Adam, sorry to be that guy, but you really need a fire escape in your office. What if fire breaks out in your workshop when you are in your office?
Adam you should paint your name on the door window. Like some film noir private eye office door!
Spencer DeShon xhe said he was going to do lettering at a later date.
A. Savage
Private Fabricator
Instead of the eye, a crossed hammer and welder torch
I thought the exact same thing. Frosted glass, the name in black or black and gold on the door
@@Dauntless2000 yes like every tool is a hamer, or some thing like Pink Floyd the Wall simbol of cross hamers.
"Hollow core hardware store garbage door." This is my new favorite Adam Savage quote 7:22
Poetry
It sounds like a new genre of heavy metal
ya good one but mine is still "I reject your reality and substitute my own" even if some have taken it a little too literally
@@derrickfoster644 OOOfff...agreed, but yeah. A little too real...
They say that's the most beautiful phrase in the English language
Adam Savage recommending a tool that he purchased and used of his own volition is worth so much more than any number of sponsored users praising a tool. I find his expertise in making and building props such a boon because he has such a broad range of experience building that he can find the proper use case for any well-crafted tool. The sincerity that he has when talking about the strong points of a tool is a breath of fresh air in a browsing experience polluted with partnerships and sponsored products everywhere you turn.
I understand that people need to make a living and I cannot fault them for taking money from a willing advertiser. However, buying and using a tool with your own resources and using it on your own time rather than finding a project that suits the tool specifically makes me feel confident that Adam isn't selling me snake oil and genuinely wants me to know about something that could potentially make my building experience that much more pleasant.
Someone at work relabeled the hand sanitizer, it now says “paper cut finder” on the label
That’s AMAZING!!!!
I know what I'm doing at work tomorrow.
We had a bottle that said "worst lube ever" xD
accurate.
Synthetic_Future A classic (when not in corona times) is to fill the hand sanitizer bottle with lube. Good luck working it into hands 😂
I gotta say, I really like the more down-to-earth, low-budget style of the quarantine videos. It's nice to see a little more of the process and hear more of Adam's stream-of-consciousness narration. Honestly they could stay this way moving forward and I'd be happy.
"sometimes crunchy is the flavor of the day" is a great quote that i will now be using
Love that quote
Adam works with the speed and frantic movements of perpetually doing a quick favor for someone, as if he says before each project, "Hold on a sec, I'll just fix this real quick."
hahahah
He's stressed and depressed and you can see it. Ergo the more then usual manic energy. The door project is subconscious need to lock the world out. That's why the hollow Core comment came out. It's too flimsy ergo unsafe.
Petracore Sage you might be reading a little to deep
Nah there’s a bit of truth to what Petra said, in so far as Adam is very empathetic and I can see him handling his stress by working and distracting himself.
Adam has done an unusually good job filming content himself, like a true TH-camr.
And more importantly, he's not putting on a fake personality or act... Or screaming at the camera.
The excitement is genuine and relatable.
I’m really enjoying these quarantine builds., they’ve got a different vibe but I’m into it..
Tbf his career has been knowing how something will look on camera and making sure it will look GOOD on camera, so I expect his cinematography to be good
@@ShinobiShane That's true, but it's still commendable.
The nicest thing about Adam is he is an everyman and humbly so. When he goofs up (like the rest of us) he does not edit it out or seek to conceal the fact that he has erred. He gets frustrated and is not perfect, freely admitting when his knowledge is lacking. Also, I like that he does not look camera ready ever! Just like the rest of us! It is no wonder I am a little addicted to watching his voyages.
"I see why you're not holding on there, because you're no longer straight" might as well have been my senior quote.
Badum-tchk!
Top lel
I wanna upvote but it's currently on 69.
Adam, I WANT TO THANK YOU for maintaining my sanity during these trying times. Dude, you're a public (mental) health service!
(Wouldn't taking the hinge pins out be better???)
I was wondering the same thing about the hinge pins
I can tell when Gunther edits just by the music chosen on the time lapses.
“...weathering that door...”
Dude, that’s the most “weathered” door I’ve ever seen.
Was gonna say, I've seen doors that have sat out in literal weather that are less "weathered" than this one 😂
was it a prop door?
If that door were a box holding something, he'd be in love with the patina and the story it told of all it's use.
@@rong1924 I mean, technically the door is just the sideways lid to the box that is his office.
Plus, being a hollow core, the door is itself a box.
I love the Covid Builds. It's like Adam unplugged, no retakes, minimal editing. When you see Adam jump up and down because his brain is outpacing his body, it makes me laugh every time.
I love that you comment on tables being at a premium for makers who live in apartments! I've built furniture, a driving simulator, restored (and rust blued) a rifle from the 1800's, and so many other projects on my livingroom floor. My 3D printer is even on the floor in my closet.
For some reason, my wife is always upset at finding a loungeroom full of router shavings.
I want "totally sufficient" merch lol
I would totally buy that!
Haha, that would be quality
Joseph London it would be... totally sufficient?
It would be "Non trivial" to make
Non trivial merch too!
"This is the first time I've used a claw hammer to pull a nail in ages. No, wait. That's a screw."
Cant forget the look of slight confusion he gives to the screw too. xD
Im pretty sure he thought he was powerful, but the look was just his brain recollecting its self so he can realize its a hollow door not a solid wood door.
Adam: "Shoutout to this One-Day Build's MVP, the DeWalt Cordless Oscillating Multi-Tool!"
T50 Stapler: "Am I a joke to you?"
ROTFLMAO! 🤣 love how Adam was so psyched about finding his saw actually did what it was ment to so funny. & how he nearly went on a rant about car alarms. Until he realized he was the offending individual. Classic Adam. 🤣🚗🚨🤣
No the t50 isn't a joke it's a demonoic menace
Well the stapler has already had its moment in the sun. I'm astonished Adam's never used a multitool before! It's just his kind of thing with dozens of oddball uses; you'd think he'd have a one-day-build about making a holster for it to be in his EDC! 🤪
I avoided these things for a while for the same reasons he gave, but after reno-ing my attached studio with all the outlet holes in drywall and awkward trim cuts, I've come to appreciate mine greatly. Check out SeeJaneDrill's video about re-cutting the teeth on the attachments, otherwise you'll go broke replacing them as they lose teeth constantly. Also, I recommend getting one with an attachable plunge base to make accurate 90° cuts when needed.
We call that thing "The Nutria" after the invasive rodent that chews through everything.
I am loving the lower production quality of these videos during the pandemic. We are getting more of what makes Adam so lovable, his quirks!
44:03 That's the face of a happy man when his project is finished and works exactly how it's intended first time. It's always so fun to watch these videos, half for the project, and half for Adam's personality. It's the best 47 minutes you could spend watching someone build a door.
i just love how adam is like: everybody is home so imma just repair and upgrade the whole shop until they are back.
Everyone: Panic buys TP and Hand Sanitiser
Adam: I've literally gone through an entire bottle of wood glue during the pandemic
Before going on lockdown, I panic bought plywood.
@@bercio That might be a good idea if you live in hurricane type places
or
if you want to build affordable coffins for one of the 100 000++ american people who died.
Depends.
if he's only gone through one i'd be shocked.
and a carton of pin-nails
I just want to buy some guitar stuff.
"I've already got a window into the shop..." Where the view is completely obscured.
I was thinking the same, I didn't even see the window until he pointed it out 😂
How long until the window becomes a convenient place to stick notes and posters? Needs a "post no bills" sign! 😅
Window is window
36:15 "Oh you can't even see it......... sorry" man I felt involved... I felt... included, what a nice and inspiring man you are sir :)
OmG that Etsy eyelet thing is amazing !!
love it.
"I don't know why I have this crappy piece of wood"
*laughs in high functioning hoarder*
I understand perfectly. I have wood and blocks that I constantly move around because "someday"
If you only knew. IF YOU ONLY KNEW.
@@thejunkman I know. That and there are times I have to take the car rather than the truck to the home supply because the discount/damaged bin is way too tempting.
@@tested WE KIND OF DO aha
@@tested We'd all take a 'tour' of the "Strange Stuff that may someday be used" in that cave
Adam: "NEVER put your extremities in the path of a staple gun or nail gun!"
Also Adam: *constantly* puts his fingers behind whatever he's securing
Fascia (long “ah”) is the layer of connective tissue under the skin, similar to ligaments. Facia (hard “a”) is the horizontal board that covers the butt end of rafters on a roof structure. What you are dealing with is.... (wait for it)... trim. 😉
Thanks for commenting on this. It was driving me crazy
The spelling is the same (though dropping the s is a recognized variant), and the non-meat definition is a bit broader than that, but indeed pronouncing it "fah" sounds like he's going to build a very gorey door...
th-cam.com/video/Mrt2Xs3RYm0/w-d-xo.html
Actually the spelling is the same. Facia isn't a word. It's always fascia.
Theater Carpentry... if you ever needed the CRAZIEST way to make something look like the real thing but out of the most minimal budget or parts... Theater Carpentry. Its only gotta look good from 20 feet away in most cases. Also. I honestly never thought of you having this awesome of a shop Adam. Man its awesome. Love watching you build and create in such a space. MOTIVATIONAL MASTER! Love it!
For what it's worth, Adam, I found that grinding a knife edge on a used oscillating saw blade allows you to make amazing cuts on extruded foam board (insulating blue board). Nice tight fits with zero little blue "sawdust" all over the place. Sharpen ALL the edges, they all get used at one point or another. I found the ones with a wide head and the narrower "shank" where it connects to the tool work the best for me. Glad you've discovered a new expansion of your abilities! :)
I love watching the giant swiss army knife move during the time-lapse sections.
Adam alone is keeping the 22 g nail producers in business through these dark times.
I bet that door is now 10 pounds heavier than it was before 😂
He sure loves using his pneumatic nail/staple guns...
"This thing, it wants blood" 😂 That would be the best warning sticker to come on the nail gun
Never did I think I would be so entertained by watching someone work on a door
A window in a door is not just a window in a door with Adam Savage !! I loved it this is what makes his channel AWESOME !! 🔩🔨🔧👍👍
I just worked out why I love watching your one day builds. You encourage me to go out and buy/collect/hoard tools. That door will never fall apart but must now weight much more will all those awesome nails in it from your nail gun. I too am in the process of repairing a door in my house and I too used far too many Brad nails and staples, but now I know it will never fall apart. Keep up the fantastic work love your channel, keep well from Cronulla Beach, Sydney Australia.
Adam, you make me feel like I'm literally in the Cave with you. That effect you have is priceless. I desperately needed it right now. Thank you.
I'm loving the running commentary from Adam. It's like a window into his mind
The multi tool is one of my favorite tools. I use it on a daily basis.
A multi tool is GREAT to have. You won't use it all the time, but when you need it, you'll be so happy that you do.
Adam: Uses a tool. Also Adam: This is one of my favorite tools. Always entertaining and enjoying to watch. Thanks for the countless number of hours of content .
I always take the 'this is one of my favourite tools..' with the add on '.. for this type of task' mentally 😅
Adam's next book: Every Tool's A Favourite
TH-cam: "Hey wanna see a how a door is build for almost an hour?"
Me:" You know me so well"
Adam could scrub the toilet in his shop, and I would watch...
@@BROON71 He probably has some really cool and niche tool for it
@@srgpepper42 It's probably long discontinued, and fetches crazy money on Ebay too..
" I already have a window into the shop " *show window that is 90% obscured by shelves and random items*
Its still a window though
@@ericgordon342 that I cannot deny. Not a very functional one though 😶
I love these sort or improvements to the little things in our daily life. BTW The triangle should oriented on the bottom of the B.R.P.D. logo.
I watched him put a hole in a door for 47 minutes and I'm happy with how I spent my time. How is this possible
I'm going to start calling this channel "A man and his stapler"
I think Adam's paid by the staple...
9:37 you were on the verge of installing the most menacing gloryhole ever known.
🤣🤣🤣
'Look at the size of that thing!'
Terrifying 😂
Gloryhole roulette.
Bwahahaha!!! This made me die! 🤣🤣
I’m a little worried that the trim doesn’t have enough staples/nails.
I'm worried that he glued the BPRD logo on upside down
I know youre joking but it's called a pin nailer for a reason, they arent that substantial
This man is a blessing to humankind
Thank you Adam for this beautiful door build . My Father was in the door business for many years, until retirement. Thank you
use silicone basting brushes instead of acid brushes. once the glue dries in the silicone brush you can slide the dried glue out and reuse the brush :)
no sense in creating more waste
I have a silicone brush for glue. The glue in the center of the bristles never dries and so getting the dried glue out is a multi-step process to let each layer dry out. Actually annoying. I just wash it with warm water when I'm done. Water WILL dry all the way through, and it doesn't mess up the water based glue if you use it wet.
I was really shocked to hear that you use acid brushes only once and trash them. While you can certainly afford it, it is extremely wasteful and the exact opposite of sustainable.
Whether you continue using acid brushes or go for the silicone variety, I suggest you dump them in a water-filled jar when you're done with them and include cleaning out the brushes and emptying the jar to the daily workshop shutdown checklist.
That way whatever stock of acid brushes you have left will last you forever...
I have a Sili-brush I bought from Amazon, and the bristles spread the glue wonderfully, and the blade on the other side gives me perfect edge clean-up! And cleaning the brush is super simple. I just stub it into warm running water and it flushes right out. If it dries on the bristles, it peels out no problem. And for less than $7 it's a fantastic product!
www.amazon.com/Sili-Brush-Silicone-Wodworking-Hobbyists-Rubber/dp/B009OCEBD2/
Edit: A good way to work on a door without removing the screws is to pop the pins out of the hinges and it will be SO much easier!
I just wash the brushes off and reuse them. I've been using the same 3 dozen for years.
Yes, exactly. I picked up a silicone brush from the kitchen utensil section of the local dollar store for this purpose.
Adam: shoots 23 nails in top frame board.
Adam: "That's not going anywhere"
Niether is that median! I didn't count, but he's got a butt load in that thing! :-)
Assuming the door was hung well to start with, you're way better off leaving the hinges screwed in and taking out the hinge pins instead.
I was scratching my head too when he started removing the screws from the hinges.
Assuming the pins can be removed. No hinges in my house have removable pins.
@@awestwood3955 I know there are hinges with fixed pins. But they are rarely used on hollow-core interior doors. I'm not saying it never happens, just that it would be rare.
@@jondough76 considering this is *Adams* workshop, its probably what he had😅
The hinges don't look like they have easy removable pins :/ But yeah, in case they have it would have been better that way
my eyes are always drawn to the moving swiss army knife, the same stood in a shop window in my hometown when i was a kid, love it
On this weeks episode of: Adam uses literally a thousand nails.
And that was just on that decorative piece. Jeeze. With the wood glue, I think four would have sufficed.
I saw this comment early on and decided to keep count.... 236..... That we saw 😂 haha
It's like a Japanese garden of nails -- not one symmetrically placed nail in the entire build.
"literally "
Door is now probably worth more based on the nail and staple content, rather than the wood content.
34:27 "Thats not going anywhere!" You sure? Might want to go for an even 24 nails for that one piece of trim.... lol
In the next video Adam welds up an entire door out of brad nails.
No kidding. Glue and then 2000 staples and brads. I think he just loves the sound of the tools.
I think that he simply loves using those pneumatic nail/staple guns.
You made me count and yes it was 23!
I love that these series of builds is just Adam walking into his shop and thinking "What about this space bothers me?" then fixing it
Watching your video, being entertained while building a chainmaille dress. Loved you onMythbusters, love your show now. Keep up the good work!
Your mannerisms just about mimic my own and its' soothing AF. You, with the passion of making things and me, with the passion of honing my guitars to my liking. Its a beautiful thing to watch. I wish i could watch myself sometimes. But then I watch your channel. And it all makes sense.
7:22 "Hollow-core, hardware-store, garbage door..." THAT WAS A LOVELY RHYME!
Adam “you can never have too many nails” Savage
#NeverEnoughStaples
Until you forget order of operations, and have to take it all apart again!! :-D
It may not be stronger but you can weld crap to it now.
@@EldarKinSlayer He can now hang that T-Rex skull off that molding... 🤣
Great video, as ever! But that BPRD symbol is off, the triangle should be at the bottom. Its a small thing but it irks me!
"I'm just doing this by eye."
that's gonna haunt me if that was my door.
Was hoping he was going to correctly rotate it. then came the nails...
"It's upright..."
Too bad it's not :(
@@souleatingpanda I never knew a man could put so many nails in such s small wood surface!
Me: Ummmm.... That doesn't look right....
Nailer: BamBamBamBamBamBamBamBamBamBamBamBamBamBamBamBamBam
Me: I guess it's fine
I love those Stanley handles! I have a ratchet set with a screwdriver-style base for the bits and it shattered a few years ago. After combing thrift stores and secondhand stores for years, I finally found the exact one to replace it! I was so happy.
Not sure if you read these comments, but your one-day-builds and other videos during ALL the stuff happening right now are so nice and are a mental life saver.
Fun drinking game: take a shot every time Adam insults his office door
XD
What about every time he throws something on the floor that could possibly injure him... 3:06
Take a shot every time he yeets something. Get ethylic coma in 15min.
These comments are giving me life while I wait for over an hour at a pharmacy for penicillin
"sometimes crunchy is the flavor of the day" I mean yeah what a mood.
03:41 Me: That did not sound like a nail.
03:44 Adam: "That's actually a screw."
I had to go back I missed this the first time xD
I love how most professional shops are look messy from the outside but are actually very organized. My dad's friend owns a woodworking studio behind his house and I am constantly amazed by how everything has it's place even though the space holds like 200 times the stuff it should be able to.
I can't believe Adam has never used a multi tool before, it's THE most useful cordless tool I own, especially useful for niche problems!
Adam: "No one can lose a tape measure faster than I can."
Me: "Challenge accepted!"
theres one time where I lost the my dad’s tape measure that he literally bought like a few hours before i lost it
Ha!
I keep 3 or 4 laying around.
I have five tape measures all different lengths but only have 3 to hand 😤
On one magical day I will find the 2 dozen or more "lost" tape measures about 15 minutes before I die.
"Every tool opens up a new part of your brain."
- Adam Savage
uh oh, sounds dangerous
"DeWalt does not endorse use of oscillating multi-tools for open brain surgery" - DeWalt's legal department
@@pecztery Stryker does though, look up Stryker Saw, it's an oscillating saw that gets used for bone in surgeries including opening the cranium.
Use the right tool for the job. th-cam.com/video/KWXHJnwXomg/w-d-xo.html
@@1pcfred Montgomery Scott: Aye, sir. [spots a nearby engineer] How many times do I have to tell you-- the right tool for the right job!
start of video: "This old hollow core piece of crap, ugh"
end of video: "This o'l door and I go way back. I'll be fixin'er up one of these days, no finer door could a man ask fer"
Right next to a cognitive bias reminder poster ahah. Humans are great and weird.
Just because you know something's a piece of crap doesn't mean you don't love it.
@@theboredengineer2612 I was thinking it was working on the door that totally changed his perspective which hides a cool little anti-throwaway-culture idea, something like:
If you don't like your stuff, improve it and you might like it more than anything you could buy.
I can tell you, as a carpenter, those oscillating multi tools are the single most used tools I have with the possible close exception of the impact driver. I didn’t believe the commercials at first either, but man oh man they changed my workflow SO MUCH!
"Sometimes crunchy is the flavour of the day."
Words to live by
Ive been watching a bunch of celebrities slowly going to pieces on TH-cam, and then there is Adam Savage?
Perhaps - and this is just idle internet-nobody speculation/fun - this is what it looks like when Adam Savage goes 'round the bend? He becomes even MORE productive!
@@Bad_Wolf_Media he has time to look around and go, I WANTED to do something with that 2 years ago. got nothing else to do so might as well do it
If you hadn't figured it out already from watching Mythbusters. Adam was *already* off his rocker (it the best possible way of course). If anything this quarantine has just focused his creativity insanity. Off onto every more intriguing place.
1:57 Reminds me of the time I found an intelligent door in one of my D&D campaigns and the party took it off its hinges
Adam:"This is some theater carpentry."
Also Adam: Makes a hole in a door that looks like that's the way it was manufactured.
In theater I have built stuff that the cast and crew were warned "Don't touch, don't even look at it to hard." and I have built stuff that supported the entire cast 4 feet off the ground.
@@johno186 ahahah i know exactly what you mean. I love it. "Don't even look at it too hard" made me giggle.
your cheerful attitude towards life inspires me to just keep moving...thanks Adam...
Adam talking about the nail gun and moving his hand out of the way reminded me of tenth grade when we toured the local Vo-Tech to see if we wanted classes. They had the older kids in the building trades class talking about safety and the one kid made it a point to explain that the large nail gun they were using could go straight through a large piece of would and your knee before stopping and what it would look like.
"No one can lose a tape measure faster than i can lose a tape measure."
I felt such a kinship here. I literally have a metal yardstick screwed to the wall with TAPE MEASURES GO HERE! written on it. I have more tape measures than fit on it, yet it is rarely full because so many have wandered off.
I use ones that are meant to clip onto a belt (or the top of an open toolbox, which is where they live). I usually find them clipped everywhere apart from the top of the box. They like to go on adventures.
Whenever I'm upstairs in the house of horrors the tapes are downstairs, and....you know!
This really hit home with me. I have lost several over the years. Occasionally one will return for a while, but never for long. I always hold out hope for them, but deep down, I know that it just.... it just isn't meant to be 😢
@@mattrickard3716 Throw away that hope brother, because they will never come back for good. I feel like tapes hate humans. So they run away on purpose lol Even if you put it in your tool box its still gonna be missing when you open it up.
I spend half me working time walking back to where I just was, to grab one of the 4 tape measures I left there... Because the last time i left a tape measure there I grabbed another one from the tool box, and walked over there with it. AND LEFT IT OVER THERE. ARRGGHH! And now there's none left in the tool box to grab!
It could say “Adam Savage - Sir Makealot” on the acrylic. Like the old sign painters used to made it.
36:31 ADAM! Stop! The triangle in the BPRD is supposed to point up, not left!
9:13 im guessing he was thinking about that gear assembly being driven by the door knob - what a satisfying sound that would make every time the door is opened and closed
A lot of trim carpenters that hang doors use lip stick on the latch to see where it hits on the jam to see where to place the strike plate.
How many nails you gonna put in that?
Adam: yes
Why put one staple in it, when you can put two dozen! 🤣
23 in the top frame board alone (I counted)
ADAM: "No one can lose a tape measure as fast as I can lose a tape measure"
ME: "Challenge accepted!"
I have three tape measures (somewhere) in a vain attempt to always be able to find at least one. It mostly works.
Thats why I bought like 100 when I found them on clearance for $0.05 at a local hardware store. Now I have one in every drawer, toolbox, and vehicle.
Love the "cut point" behind the scenes reverse 😂 made me laugh and feel more level with you guys 😊
I appreciated that, too. Like the editor was like, “no wait, you need to see what Adam did here”
As soon as Adam put down his big boy square I could instantly see why it was not straight: he leaned on it for about a sec. Long enough to warp it. Hey I’m guilty of this too: I’m thinking an idea for a new badge?
Bent Giant Square 😀
Watching Adam Savage use a table saw has taken years off of my life. I don't know how he has all of his fingers. Perhaps his fingers have absorbed my life energy in order to remain attached to his hands.
30:30 The next one-day-build:
*The ultimate iPhone-clamp-holdery-thing*
For Some reason, “Wild West Saloon Doors” would suit Adam somewhere in the cave
Ohhh that sounds so true and fun!!!!
As someone that works somewhere where I go through them every day all I can say is “NOOOOOOOooooooooooooo!!!!!” Literally every single injury you can get from a saloon door has happened to me. They get caught on clothing and things you are carrying, they swing back and forth very hard and a lot faster than you’d imagine which can both hit you in the face with tremendous force and also jam your fingers between the doors. If there is more than one person anywhere near it it only gets worse from there.
me: hmmm a hollow core door won't be quick and easy
adam: I'm basically taking the thing completely apart and building a new one
me: my man!
I watch Adam because I think I’m a younger version of him. I work so much like him AND multitools!!!! I’ve already burnt out 2 and I’m on my 3rd one!!!! As i do plastering, timber framing and drywall walling for a living it has got to be the best thing I have ever bought!!!! You don’t know how much you need one......until you’ve got one!!!!! Get one if you haven’t already!!! I’m a massive fan of the diamond tip plunge attachment that goes into brick, block, cuts metal.....it’s a must have. Don’t get me started on how amazing it is for cutting plasterboard 🤣🤣 just reading that back I sound like a right nerd....I’m not honestly 🤣🤓
"Sometimes crunchy is the flavor of the day"...This is mine now. Thanks Adam.
Reminds of the time I installed a cat flap. When I finished the job, I realized I had mistaken the top of the door for the bottom
So, do you just throw the cat through the cat door?
@@Therodaas depending on how jumpy the cat is... they could achieve enough height to still use it
I did the same thing!
I got a new slab cuz it was cheap (rental, i cant cut holes in the doors that came with the place)
Even got the door hardware right!
THEN I cut the flap wrong!
Better have a nimble cat.
Now it's a bird flap
I'd love to see you do a one day build where you intentionally over engineer the door knob and locking mechanism for your office door. :)
You want some door with your nails, Adam? lol
The nails are now holding up the walls in his office..
I love watching Adam because he's really just a big kid
As someone who installs and services doors every day, the best way to take a door off of its hinges is to unscrew the middle hinge from the door, then pop the pins out of the top and bottom hinges. This makes it to where the hinges will come apart, with one half staying on the door, and the other half staying on the jamb. You can do whatever work you need to do, then slide it back together and put the pins back in. It’s very easy and fast as long as the door doesn’t weigh a million pounds.
To pop the pins out, I use a spring loaded nail set, it usually shoots the pins out pretty easily. (While the door is closed) If the pins aren’t budging, you can use a dull chisel and hammer. Fit the chisel in between the head of the pin and the top of the hinge. Hit the chisel with a hammer lightly until the pin starts to move upward. Then hit the blade of the chisel from below and the pin should come out. I have tried other methods, and this is the fastest way for me. Just a little tip for anyone who has to work on doors.