I think when it comes to hand tool woodworking there are actually a good handful. Rex Krueger, Woodbywright, Paul Sellers, Pask Makes (not entirely hand tools), Wortheffort (a mixed bag), Matt Eastlea, The Unplugged Woodshop (Tom Fidgen), Wood and Shop (Joshua Farnsworth), The English Woodworker (Richard Maguire-probably the closest to this one), Stavros Gakos (making fancy tools), Renaissance Woodworker (Shannon Rodgers), Peter Follansbee (green woodworking, historical projects without nails, glue, etc.), Graham Blackburn, etc.
Another, Great video buddy. For anyone who cares a Stanley #8 isn’t about 4ft, it’s 23.75in. I love seeing a young man so interested and devoted to old tool’s.
Hock Blades make a whole range of replacement Irons and chip breakers for old planes. Their blades are absolutely fantastic. I have a Stanley #6 and an old Stanley spoke shave that I bought used. The blades were absolutely destroyed. Replaced them both with Hock blades and they are spectacular. Holds an edge for a very long time, and I am a guitar builder, so they're used 100% of the time on very hard woods.
I went through a hand plane collection phase, and this brings back memories. The tuning is fun, but a chore. I love reaching for all my planes, vested in them after spending a hour or more tuning up each one.
So many good memories of being in the garage with my dad and ‘helping’ with the planing. I loved the sound and the shavings as a little kid, and thought it was like magic how it made the wood so smooth. Wish I was well enough to do woodwork now 😢
Youve finally listened to us! Thank you heaps for the longer videos! They are really entertaining while still having a relaxing undertone. Thanks again!
Very nice job. I liked how you restored the plane back to working condition and not a show piece to be placed on a mantle. You have a new subscriber. Keep up the good work!
I discovered your channel like 2 days ago binged it. I adore you and your work, in a world that's just going to hell it feels you're a breath of fresh air. Keep it up
I just want you to understand that I literally look forward to watching your videos anytime I see them dude you have such a talent. I am in the carpenters union here in Detroit and believe it or not handwork in the commercial field like this is non existent my friend you are keeping a Beautiful vision alive and well.
Never seen a plane iron that short! With your most used planes try going down in grits when lapping the sole. I recently restored a no 4 which was my late father in-laws. Lapped to a mirror finish with machine wax after to stop rust. Glides over the surface now. The number 7 or 6 like that, graft yes to get there, would make using it feel amazing
Eoin you have inspired me to take out my few hand planes and really give them the care that they deserve. I have a no 5 Stanley from my great grandfather and I can't wait to get it ready to use and cleaned up. Thanks for being an inspiration!
I’m so very glad to know that I’m not the only one that can’t find anything I need or want in my shop. Lol. Thanks so much for sharing your knowledge and skills with us!!!
I own a #8 that belonged to my wife's grandfather. I also have two wooden bodied joiner planes. A trick to joining two boards together to make a wider board is to flip one and put both in the vise at the same time. This way, any wobbly imperfections offset when you flip the board around again and put them together. I did like you did in the video (still do sometimes) until an older gentleman showed me the flip trick. I only use my #8 when joining two boards and don't want to set up my electric joiner. Never tried it for smoothing a surface, but am darn sure going to use it that way after watching this!
My Bedrock No. 605 had a persistent chatter and kept jamming. I did everything known to get a razor edge and fettle the chip breaker, but no luck. Turned out I was looking on the wrong side. The corrugated bed had a divot at the throat. A few strokes with a flat file, checks with a square and finish on glass with emery and she became the fine beast she was meant to be
I likewise share the love of old tools, they certainly have a warmth that is lacking in new tools. I have an old Matheison wooden jointer plane that I love. Heavy in the hand but light in use, whereas I find the metal planes are heavy in hand and heavy in use without additional lubrication. The only downside of the wooden planes is the height of the handle in relation to the sole.
Good tutorial. COMMENT: New planes are usually NOT badly machined, but they are all to often GREEN. By that I mean that the castings are not stabilized...cast iron (and to a smaller extent other metals) continue to move over time after casting. Machining the rough casting also induces movement by removing some stresses, and it starts to self-adjust elsewhere. This is why large machinery castings are left to sit outdoors for a year or more, both before AND after rough machining...the change in temperature over seasons lets some of those internal stresses relax. This actually became a problem in the 1970s when companies like BRIDGEPORT had to start making a large number of their vertical mills, and all they had were green castings. Many of these had to be returned or re-machined later due to stress movement. OTHER problems with cast metals are the casting SHAPES. Too-small radii in corners, abrupt changes in metal direction, poorly cast (not high enough temp, or TOO high when cast, poured too slowly, poured too fast, poor venting of gasses in the molds) can have a great effect on the internal stresses. Walls that are too thick or too thin can contribute to movement when curing. Look at older machine tools, they often had large curves built into their castings...this was not just for aesthetic reasons, but it permitted stresses to self-adjust and reduce over time. Many cheap planes (and I've seen new ones on offer for as low as $7) can LOOK like older designs, but they aren't. Kinda like cheap Cheng Shin tires...they can look like Dunlops, but only LOOK like them, Internally, crap. This is why even with the advanced age of your #8, it still had some movement over the decades. Planes and other metal tools need to be checked and corrected now and them.
One other thing: new cheap planes often have a coat of paint to cover or hide manufacturing flaws, or it's just on there sloppily. Taking the plane apart and ensuring metal-to-metal fits are good are par for the course, and corrections often need to be made. NEVER expect a plane, new or old, to work right out of the box. You are responsible for making sure everything works and is fettled correctly.
Most guys would usually go for a bigger knob if given the choice, women however are not as fussed as you may think! That said they mostly would go for a shorter fatter one over a long thin one, feels much better in the hand. Love the content Eion keep it up 👍🏼
Antes no era muy fans del cepillo pues mas usaba la lijadora y la sierra de banco para nivelar la madera , ahora hasta me compre otros es una buena herramienta y el acabado que deja es muy diferente , saludos desde Ecuador
Especially for thin boards, clamp and plane more than one board and plane together, then when you lay them down to glue up, flip one over and if you've ended up off from a 90 degree edge, the two will fit perfectly together as they're mirrored perfectly. -flip across the width, not the length!
I was collecting a bunch of tools when I thought to get into woodworking. Most are new but I did pick up an old 60 1/2 block plane and a No. 8 plane. The block plane is fun to use. The 8 is nice to use but the blade is bent and out of square. The lateral adjustment needs to be at one side to get an even cut. Lately I've been looking into modern blades and cap irons by Hock or Veritas. Both the blade and cap come out to around $90 USD for either brand. Can't get any right now but maybe in a few months.
@@roberttailspin6330 I got the blade it was already skewed. I used my honing guide to sharpen but it was still the same. I'm thinking the blade isn't properly squared and thought of getting a new blade some day to see if that helps sort things out.
came from the chair video and unless i'm much mistaken, you're around my age (early 20s)? vibing with the simultaneous chaotic lad and no-fuss grandpa energy going on here. exact opposite energy to an actual grandpa Japanese carpenter's channel i also follow (Shoyan) but you're both equally unpretentious and lovely to watch! taste in jumpers also approved.
Like your channel.I have a collection of Stanley Plane,s being a Cabnetmaker I use No 4 and 5 and a block plane.The No 8 plane r AUD 200 to 250 dollars here in Australis
Ay lad. Instead of using a pencil, you can use a blue marker [I don’t exactly know the name of the pen] but they work a treat when working metal with a scribe.
I debated on getting a 7 or 8, I ended up going with a 7 after asking a handful of people. The consensus was the 8 was a bit too cumbersome abs the 7 was much easier to wield for longer timeframes. I think im done buying bench planes with that. A 4, 5 and 7 should do 99.999% of jobs! Anything else will just sit on a shelf collecting dust
Good night ! Very nice your video. By chance i found an old n8 on e-bay, and I'm looking for a n8 Stanley Bailey replacement blade... Could be the same blade as the n7 planer ? Do you agree ?
You should really pay attention to keeping the sandpaper perfectly flat against the granite or you can sometimes end up sanding more off of the areas where the sandpaper sits high from the granite when slack,
Surely that would only maybe put a slight chamfer on the front and back of the foot? The plane itself would keep the sandpaper flat unless it totally folded under itself
A long plane will even out the surface because it rides the high spots (a plane can even out a surface about double its length). A jointer is for making flat surfaces, mainly for making the edge perfectly flat and square so you can join the boards together edge to edge.
@@Katrina_Taylor Nothing, as far as I know. It's just a long plane. The Stanley planes all have numbers, names (jointer, Jack, Tri (or Try?)), etc. but if you look at the wooden planes tradition, a long plane is just a long plane. When I'm trying to translate the names from my Scandinavian wooden planes, it's always difficult, because the long planes are just Rubanks in Danish. The thing is also, as he says in the video, you don't need the whole Stanley range, but they liked to sell them :^) You can do most of your work with a #5 or #4. Paul Sellers would say #4. I don't think that's entirely true, but you don't need all of them. And it depends on what you do. Mainly I use a scrub, a "Jack", and a smoother. Again, it's difficult to translate it directly from Danish. The "Jack" is not really a Jack, since it's basically the same size as the scrub (the scrub being less wide, though, but my scrub is a converted "Jack", so it's the same width). I'm rambling, sorry, I haven't slept and have the flu. That's why I'm on here instead of in my workshop making Christmas gifts😅 I should have said: The point of a jointer is to be long enough to bring the high points down and make the surface flat.
Well, clearly he says, it depends on how you hold it. But in your defensive the smaller ones are ,indeed, a bit easier. They usually worry about having a better personality too, unlike his new screwdriver with the flat edge for gripping. lol. I did not see this until you pointed it out 😂😂 thanks man.
Me too but I'm about to buy a no. 6. I'm sure I could use a no. 5 for jointing but it's easier (especially when you aren't quite as skilled as you might be like me) to use a longer plane.
This is one of the most relaxing and educational channels on TH-cam. You dont get much content that is this genuine in most parts of TH-cam.
Agreed
I think when it comes to hand tool woodworking there are actually a good handful. Rex Krueger, Woodbywright, Paul Sellers, Pask Makes (not entirely hand tools), Wortheffort (a mixed bag), Matt Eastlea, The Unplugged Woodshop (Tom Fidgen), Wood and Shop (Joshua Farnsworth), The English Woodworker (Richard Maguire-probably the closest to this one), Stavros Gakos (making fancy tools), Renaissance Woodworker (Shannon Rodgers), Peter Follansbee (green woodworking, historical projects without nails, glue, etc.), Graham Blackburn, etc.
Follow him on TikTok
The sheer fact hat Eoin has only been a woodworker for two years blows my mind, he looks like he's been doing this for years!
Another, Great video buddy. For anyone who cares a Stanley #8 isn’t about 4ft, it’s 23.75in. I love seeing a young man so interested and devoted to old tool’s.
I scrolled the comments immediately to see if anyone else noticed. I played it back twice to make sure I was really hearing him say 4 ft. 😂
😆 I've just done exactly the same.
My first thought was, HOW TALL IS THIS MAN?!?
Lmao I was going to say if that plane is 4ft he must be one of Santa's little elves
@@BenDover-de7tf Surely the opposite logic, if that plane is 4ft then he must be the tallest man in the world...
Hock Blades make a whole range of replacement Irons and chip breakers for old planes. Their blades are absolutely fantastic. I have a Stanley #6 and an old Stanley spoke shave that I bought used. The blades were absolutely destroyed. Replaced them both with Hock blades and they are spectacular. Holds an edge for a very long time, and I am a guitar builder, so they're used 100% of the time on very hard woods.
I went through a hand plane collection phase, and this brings back memories. The tuning is fun, but a chore. I love reaching for all my planes, vested in them after spending a hour or more tuning up each one.
I love the way you describe the spirits of the previous owners still living in the tools.
So many good memories of being in the garage with my dad and ‘helping’ with the planing. I loved the sound and the shavings as a little kid, and thought it was like magic how it made the wood so smooth. Wish I was well enough to do woodwork now 😢
Youve finally listened to us! Thank you heaps for the longer videos! They are really entertaining while still having a relaxing undertone. Thanks again!
I love this channel. You’re an interesting and extremely talented character. Thank you for sharing your knowledge.
I thoroughly enjoy listening to this young man tell me how to care for tools I'll likely never own.
I appreciate your longer videos, thanks for the education and entertainment.
I really like the longer video’s too!!! When I first found this channel, I immediately wanted much longer videos.
Very nice job. I liked how you restored the plane back to working condition and not a show piece to be placed on a mantle. You have a new subscriber. Keep up the good work!
I discovered your channel like 2 days ago binged it. I adore you and your work, in a world that's just going to hell it feels you're a breath of fresh air. Keep it up
I just want you to understand that I literally look forward to watching your videos anytime I see them dude you have such a talent. I am in the carpenters union here in Detroit and believe it or not handwork in the commercial field like this is non existent my friend you are keeping a
Beautiful vision alive and well.
Never seen a plane iron that short! With your most used planes try going down in grits when lapping the sole. I recently restored a no 4 which was my late father in-laws. Lapped to a mirror finish with machine wax after to stop rust. Glides over the surface now. The number 7 or 6 like that, graft yes to get there, would make using it feel amazing
You're videos are so cozy. I really adore you. Not many people my age are so knowledgeable and passionate about something. Thank you
Eoin you have inspired me to take out my few hand planes and really give them the care that they deserve. I have a no 5 Stanley from my great grandfather and I can't wait to get it ready to use and cleaned up. Thanks for being an inspiration!
I’m so very glad to know that I’m not the only one that can’t find anything I need or want in my shop. Lol. Thanks so much for sharing your knowledge and skills with us!!!
I really enjoy your videos! I’ve been a carpenter for almost 40 years and I’m learning from you! Great Job!
I own a #8 that belonged to my wife's grandfather. I also have two wooden bodied joiner planes.
A trick to joining two boards together to make a wider board is to flip one and put both in the vise at the same time. This way, any wobbly imperfections offset when you flip the board around again and put them together. I did like you did in the video (still do sometimes) until an older gentleman showed me the flip trick. I only use my #8 when joining two boards and don't want to set up my electric joiner. Never tried it for smoothing a surface, but am darn sure going to use it that way after watching this!
Thanks for sharing your fascinating hobby! Woodworking is always something I would have loved to have gotten into! Maybe when I retire!
My Bedrock No. 605 had a persistent chatter and kept jamming. I did everything known to get a razor edge and fettle the chip breaker, but no luck. Turned out I was looking on the wrong side. The corrugated bed had a divot at the throat. A few strokes with a flat file, checks with a square and finish on glass with emery and she became the fine beast she was meant to be
She's some plane for one plane but fair play to you for having the patience and determination to get it lapped!
I likewise share the love of old tools, they certainly have a warmth that is lacking in new tools. I have an old Matheison wooden jointer plane that I love. Heavy in the hand but light in use, whereas I find the metal planes are heavy in hand and heavy in use without additional lubrication. The only downside of the wooden planes is the height of the handle in relation to the sole.
Good tutorial.
COMMENT:
New planes are usually NOT badly machined, but they are all to often GREEN. By that I mean that the castings are not stabilized...cast iron (and to a smaller extent other metals) continue to move over time after casting. Machining the rough casting also induces movement by removing some stresses, and it starts to self-adjust elsewhere.
This is why large machinery castings are left to sit outdoors for a year or more, both before AND after rough machining...the change in temperature over seasons lets some of those internal stresses relax. This actually became a problem in the 1970s when companies like BRIDGEPORT had to start making a large number of their vertical mills, and all they had were green castings. Many of these had to be returned or re-machined later due to stress movement.
OTHER problems with cast metals are the casting SHAPES. Too-small radii in corners, abrupt changes in metal direction, poorly cast (not high enough temp, or TOO high when cast, poured too slowly, poured too fast, poor venting of gasses in the molds) can have a great effect on the internal stresses. Walls that are too thick or too thin can contribute to movement when curing. Look at older machine tools, they often had large curves built into their castings...this was not just for aesthetic reasons, but it permitted stresses to self-adjust and reduce over time. Many cheap planes (and I've seen new ones on offer for as low as $7) can LOOK like older designs, but they aren't. Kinda like cheap Cheng Shin tires...they can look like Dunlops, but only LOOK like them, Internally, crap.
This is why even with the advanced age of your #8, it still had some movement over the decades. Planes and other metal tools need to be checked and corrected now and them.
One other thing: new cheap planes often have a coat of paint to cover or hide manufacturing flaws, or it's just on there sloppily. Taking the plane apart and ensuring metal-to-metal fits are good are par for the course, and corrections often need to be made.
NEVER expect a plane, new or old, to work right out of the box. You are responsible for making sure everything works and is fettled correctly.
Most guys would usually go for a bigger knob if given the choice, women however are not as fussed as you may think! That said they mostly would go for a shorter fatter one over a long thin one, feels much better in the hand. Love the content Eion keep it up 👍🏼
😂😂😂
Antes no era muy fans del cepillo pues mas usaba la lijadora y la sierra de banco para nivelar la madera , ahora hasta me compre otros es una buena herramienta y el acabado que deja es muy diferente , saludos desde Ecuador
Eoin 'the smoothest arms in all of Ireland' Reardon. Love it.
That's the shortest 4 feet I've ever seen. But Eoin your videos are class, don't change anything
So glad to have found your channel.
Especially for thin boards, clamp and plane more than one board and plane together, then when you lay them down to glue up, flip one over and if you've ended up off from a 90 degree edge, the two will fit perfectly together as they're mirrored perfectly.
-flip across the width, not the length!
That's book matching like a guitar top. Looking deeply into a mirror polished chisel is a great way to get perpendiculars.
I was collecting a bunch of tools when I thought to get into woodworking. Most are new but I did pick up an old 60 1/2 block plane and a No. 8 plane.
The block plane is fun to use. The 8 is nice to use but the blade is bent and out of square. The lateral adjustment needs to be at one side to get an even cut. Lately I've been looking into modern blades and cap irons by Hock or Veritas. Both the blade and cap come out to around $90 USD for either brand. Can't get any right now but maybe in a few months.
Over time, a lot of irons get a bit skewed due to sharpening habits of the user, but they aren't difficult to re-sharpen to the correct geometry.
@@roberttailspin6330 I got the blade it was already skewed. I used my honing guide to sharpen but it was still the same. I'm thinking the blade isn't properly squared and thought of getting a new blade some day to see if that helps sort things out.
Eoin you should show the toolbox so we see the tool's, Now we just see the side of it,, and love the vids and keep them coming!!!
There is something extremely satisfying about using a well tuned plane. It just glides across the surface of the timber.
came from the chair video and unless i'm much mistaken, you're around my age (early 20s)? vibing with the simultaneous chaotic lad and no-fuss grandpa energy going on here.
exact opposite energy to an actual grandpa Japanese carpenter's channel i also follow (Shoyan) but you're both equally unpretentious and lovely to watch! taste in jumpers also approved.
I have this exact plane! Fished it out of my neighbors trash at the side of the road after I drove by one day
You're video quality is improving alot if you jeep this up you might get some of that youtube money
Like your channel.I have a collection of Stanley Plane,s being a Cabnetmaker I use No 4 and 5 and a block plane.The No 8 plane r AUD 200 to 250 dollars here in Australis
Another eoin upload, my day is complete now
Ay lad. Instead of using a pencil, you can use a blue marker [I don’t exactly know the name of the pen] but they work a treat when working metal with a scribe.
You've a great channel, ya don't need the ads.
These big boys are totally indispensable!
You're like the bob ross of wood work 😌♥️
Found ya through your shorts, I must say you're quite skilled at your craft. I'm jealous XD
Love the quality of this video
I would like to see you more close-ups, and details of what you’re doing. Looks very interesting would like to be able to see more.
As a 19 year old who liked to play with grandpas tools for wood i can absolutely relate to "i can never find a pencil" 🤣🤣🤣🤣
A cool trick is to joint both thin boards together then even if they aren't square they will go together perfect!
I was wondering that, if you inadvertently go off 90’ it will be fine when one board is turned end to end then they’ll match 👌
Make a pencil cup for the side of the toolbox! Love the videos, lad 🙌
I could listen to this man say "WD-40" all day.
Always look forward to your uploads also second
"loosen the frog nuts" is such a fun sentence
just found my great grandpa's hand planes the blades were still sharp after not being used since 1979 but the rest of t is in bad need of restoration
Man I can put your stuff on background just like I do the BBC world service, they should be doing an interview with you really
3:45 what grit of sand paper are you using to lap the planer base on the granite?
Start with a coarse grit, say 80g and then use progressively finer grits. A lot depends on the condition of the sole, 👍🔨🇮🇪
I am shortly picking a No8!
The Stanley no.5 along side the 18mm chamfer chisel is the 10mm socket and the 8mm Allen bolt of the carpentry world.
I debated on getting a 7 or 8, I ended up going with a 7 after asking a handful of people. The consensus was the 8 was a bit too cumbersome abs the 7 was much easier to wield for longer timeframes. I think im done buying bench planes with that. A 4, 5 and 7 should do 99.999% of jobs! Anything else will just sit on a shelf collecting dust
Good night !
Very nice your video. By chance i found an old n8 on e-bay, and I'm looking for a n8 Stanley Bailey replacement blade...
Could be the same blade as the n7 planer ? Do you agree ?
You should really pay attention to keeping the sandpaper perfectly flat against the granite or you can sometimes end up sanding more off of the areas where the sandpaper sits high from the granite when slack,
Agreed, I'd be taping it on to the bottom of that granite slab.
I always tape the sandpaper down with duck tape to keep it fairly taut.
Surely that would only maybe put a slight chamfer on the front and back of the foot? The plane itself would keep the sandpaper flat unless it totally folded under itself
@eionreardon - What grit is the sandpaper?
Great video
6:55 My god the screwdriver nearly fell off the bench lol
I’d definitely consider wearing a mask when sanding cast iron.
Hey Eoin, is that a Carraigdonn sweater? I think I'm currently wearing the same one, only in green!
Hey I think we have the same sweater. Is your's from Aran sweater market in Ireland?
So did you manage to find a no 1 or no 2 when you were getting them all? 🙂
What made you inspired to do wood working?
What kind of spokeshave do you use?
Quick question I've got a lovely block of sycamore and have no idea what to make out of it any ideas?
A mallet maybe...
Plane fascinating
Have you ever made a pool cue?
If that plane is 4 ft long you're taller than I thought ;)
If you can't find your stroping compound use toothpaste it will work just fine not as good but just fine
Did ya say 4 feet long? 🤔
What’s the difference between a jointer plane and the regular planes. Clearly there is but they look the same
A long plane will even out the surface because it rides the high spots (a plane can even out a surface about double its length). A jointer is for making flat surfaces, mainly for making the edge perfectly flat and square so you can join the boards together edge to edge.
What physically makes the jointer different from a long plane?
@@Katrina_Taylor Nothing, as far as I know. It's just a long plane. The Stanley planes all have numbers, names (jointer, Jack, Tri (or Try?)), etc. but if you look at the wooden planes tradition, a long plane is just a long plane. When I'm trying to translate the names from my Scandinavian wooden planes, it's always difficult, because the long planes are just Rubanks in Danish. The thing is also, as he says in the video, you don't need the whole Stanley range, but they liked to sell them :^) You can do most of your work with a #5 or #4. Paul Sellers would say #4. I don't think that's entirely true, but you don't need all of them. And it depends on what you do. Mainly I use a scrub, a "Jack", and a smoother. Again, it's difficult to translate it directly from Danish. The "Jack" is not really a Jack, since it's basically the same size as the scrub (the scrub being less wide, though, but my scrub is a converted "Jack", so it's the same width). I'm rambling, sorry, I haven't slept and have the flu. That's why I'm on here instead of in my workshop making Christmas gifts😅 I should have said: The point of a jointer is to be long enough to bring the high points down and make the surface flat.
@@thomashverring9484hope you get better soon friend!
@@Katrina_Taylor Thanks :^)
There is no way that's 4 feet long... looks 2-3 max
Oh jayssus. I meant to say 2 foot long and 4 inches wide.
@@EoinReardon I figured as much. either that, or your arms are 8 feet long lol
Just another case of a man saying something is twice as long as it is
@@Katrina_Taylor if ya want to take things there, 12:45 - 13:00
Well, clearly he says, it depends on how you hold it. But in your defensive the smaller ones are ,indeed, a bit easier.
They usually worry about having a better personality too, unlike his new screwdriver with the flat edge for gripping. lol. I did not see this until you pointed it out 😂😂 thanks man.
It do be true, it doesn't matter how big or what shape ya knob is... It's how you used it 😘
Technically a no 34 is the largest Stanley produced!
👏👏👏
4ft long ?
Wait, four feet long?
6:48
4ft?
4feet long???
Here a year on and nobody has mentioned that he took his tools to bed to sort them out & clean them 😂
4 feet?
dude come and read me bed time stories you''re so relaxing
FOUR foot long. Guys and gals, he is using an old Celtic system of measurement. Sometimes referred to as the boys scale.
4 ft?
🧐🤔👌👊👍🙏
It's NOT 4 feet long, It's 24 inches.
She be looking a hair under 4 foot there.
4 feet long haha seems abit generous but we’re guys Lmfao
Agreed! Lol.
Pity you didn't lap the sole of the frog when you had the opportunity - it can be worth the effort!
Not a criticism but rather a suggestion.
0:08 Whoa...slow down. It's not over 4 feet long. It's only 23 7/8 inches. Less than 2 feet long. It's long for sure, but not 4 feet long :)
I think your imperial system is a little rusty, either you’re 9 feet tall or that’s 1-2 feet long
So we’re clear I love this guys work and channel not meant to be slander
At first i was like 4ft?!.. i looked it up, its 24 inches which is 2 ft
I only have 4 and 5
Me too but I'm about to buy a no. 6. I'm sure I could use a no. 5 for jointing but it's easier (especially when you aren't quite as skilled as you might be like me) to use a longer plane.
If that’s 4ft long that plain then you must be 8ft tall