I am glad that you enjoyed the video and I am so happy that I could help… please share a pic of your build on my insta: instagram.com/woodworksrv?igsh=eWI2Nnh3Y3FlY3Zt& Looking forward to it!
As a professional furniture maker don’t need anything like that but if you’re a hobbyist then it might help. Definitely you don’t want to use double sided tape to hold the template together when flush trimming on the router, there’s better safer ways to do that. Safety first!
A comment from a professional is a compliment in itself; thank you! May I ask, as a professional furniture maker, what would you use to hold a template while routing? I’ve used blue tape and CA glue in the past but double sided tape has worked better for me.
Yes indeed, thank you! I called it out in the video twice and linked his original video in the video description as well. I just learned woodpecker has a production version now as well.
That is true; I am glad experienced woodworkers like yourselves are out there to improve our knowledge; thank you. I also learned that woodpeckers also makes “Steadycurve Band Saw Template Guide” which I didn’t know about either.
@@RVWoodworks It has evolved with different takes and modifications. IIRC the earliest that I saw was a single piece of wood stuck to the table with double stick tape and the pattern on the bottom. FWIW you will run across many jigs that may be new to you but WW has been around for a very long time and so have jigs. It may be better to present something new to you as something new that you have learned. Otherwise you may alienate many possible subscribers that have many more years of experience.
@@RVWoodworks Food for thought. You present well on TH-cam. But there are many many people on TH-cam that think that they are introducing something new and in reality it is only new to the TH-camr. For those of us that are more experienced it comes across as Click Bait. Rather than follow that pattern I think it would be more interesting if relatively new woodworkers presented as something like, Hey, I learned something new today. I think this would still attract new woodworker views as well as us older guys going down memory lane and seeing some thing similar to how we learned about a new tool or technique loooong before TH-cam or social media, or in my case before home computers were a thing. :~). There are some pretty entertaining woodworkers on TH-cam that entertain and some times make fun of themselves. Those guys are the ones that get the subscriptions and the most likes.
Excellent video, Thank you . I'll be making this jig today
Really glad you enjoyed the video; cheers!
What a great idea... I will make one tomorrow.
I am glad that you enjoyed the video and I am so happy that I could help… please share a pic of your build on my insta:
instagram.com/woodworksrv?igsh=eWI2Nnh3Y3FlY3Zt&
Looking forward to it!
very cool
Glad to hear you enjoyed the video; Thank you!
Great video!
Glad you enjoyed it
As a professional furniture maker don’t need anything like that but if you’re a hobbyist then it might help. Definitely you don’t want to use double sided tape to hold the template together when flush trimming on the router, there’s better safer ways to do that. Safety first!
A comment from a professional is a compliment in itself; thank you! May I ask, as a professional furniture maker, what would you use to hold a template while routing? I’ve used blue tape and CA glue in the past but double sided tape has worked better for me.
@@RVWoodworks Toggle clamps on a pattern jig.
Ahh that’s interesting; I have a few in my shop and will give that a try on the next build; thanks for sharing..,
Great vid.
Cheers; thank you!
that's clever
Thank you! Hope you to see you again soon with more build videos :)
Katt Moses made this jig , he even sells it.
Yes indeed, thank you! I called it out in the video twice and linked his original video in the video description as well. I just learned woodpecker has a production version now as well.
And he saw it on another video. This is an old jig..
That is true; I am glad experienced woodworkers like yourselves are out there to improve our knowledge; thank you. I also learned that woodpeckers also makes “Steadycurve Band Saw Template Guide” which I didn’t know about either.
okay after the 3rd "click the bell" i had enough
so annoying
Sorry, feedback noted for sure! Didn’t mean to be annoying just trying to gain a crowd.
Pretty sure I just saw a metal, manufactured version of this a couple days ago, from Woodpeckers or somebody.
Wow, thanks for sharing. I would invest in that! Do you have the link?
@@RVWoodworks
Woodpecker's SteadyCurve
Ahh it’s $200… but thanks for sharing; learned something new!
@@RVWoodworks Very welcome!
Thanks for letting us know about this jig!
Lose the background music, please.
This BS jig is a very old method to learn how to cut curves with a BS. Not new, not life changing.
Thanks for the comment; I did not know that this is an old jig. Are you aware if its changed over time?
Well, it's new to me. So I learned something.
@@RVWoodworks It has evolved with different takes and modifications. IIRC the earliest that I saw was a single piece of wood stuck to the table with double stick tape and the pattern on the bottom. FWIW you will run across many jigs that may be new to you but WW has been around for a very long time and so have jigs. It may be better to present something new to you as something new that you have learned. Otherwise you may alienate many possible subscribers that have many more years of experience.
That is so interesting and thanks for sharing the history of the jig. Also, very valuable feedback, thank you!
@@RVWoodworks Food for thought. You present well on TH-cam. But there are many many people on TH-cam that think that they are introducing something new and in reality it is only new to the TH-camr. For those of us that are more experienced it comes across as Click Bait. Rather than follow that pattern I think it would be more interesting if relatively new woodworkers presented as something like, Hey, I learned something new today. I think this would still attract new woodworker views as well as us older guys going down memory lane and seeing some thing similar to how we learned about a new tool or technique loooong before TH-cam or social media, or in my case before home computers were a thing. :~). There are some pretty entertaining woodworkers on TH-cam that entertain and some times make fun of themselves. Those guys are the ones that get the subscriptions and the most likes.