- Видео 8
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Neil Finlayson
Добавлен 23 авг 2006
Видео
Electra demo ride in 1930s passenger aircraft at Vancouver
Просмотров 7639 лет назад
Electra demo ride in 1930s passenger aircraft at Vancouver
My Slideshow
Просмотров 5509 лет назад
I created this video with the RUclips Slideshow Creator (ruclips.net/user/upload)
Log Homes & Cabins-Layout & Scribing 4 of 4.mp4
Просмотров 482 тыс.13 лет назад
Book on Log Home Building and CD of same available at www.finlaysonloghomes.com/ . Visit our site to learn about the homes we build including a large gallery of photographs.
Log Homes & Cabins-Layout & Scribing 3 of 4.mp4
Просмотров 1,1 млн13 лет назад
Book on Log Home Building and CD of same available at www.finlaysonloghomes.com/ . Visit our site to learn about the homes we build including a large gallery of photographs.
Log Homes & Cabins Layout & Scribing 2 of 4
Просмотров 93 тыс.13 лет назад
Book on Log Home Building and CD of same available at www.finlaysonloghomes.com/ . Visit our site to learn about the homes we build including a large gallery of photographs.
Log Homes & Cabins-Layout & Scribing 1 of 4.mp4
Просмотров 94 тыс.13 лет назад
Book on Log Home Building and CD of same available at finlaysonloghomes.com Visit our site to learn about the homes we build including a large gallery of photographs.
Steam Locomotive 2816 in the Shuswap.mp4
Просмотров 3,7 тыс.13 лет назад
Restored CPR Locomotive 2816 on a run from Calgary to Vancouver BC. Consist also using 2 restored California Zephyr club cars. Captured at Salmon Arm, BC
Super Super Super Super gebaut Super Qualität top Qualität super super erklärt danke für deine Videos. Ps Albert
I’m a new subscriber and thanks for the great tips, so keep them coming as I’ve been studying how and where I’d like to build a nice cozy log cabin, one that’s built right and will last for generations to come for my family and friends to enjoy long after I’m gone! Thanks.
Real expertise and all with a chainsaw! It must take years to get that level of precision and control. Brilliant work. No way I could do that, the logs would end up as sawdust and bits of lumber?
That looks like the 2004 run to Vancouver from Calgary.
Nul
Thank you for sharing. It was an inspiration to watch a master craftsman
No hard hats, no guy lines on the logs, sandals, you’ve got to be kidding me! Stop encouraging stupid work practices. Sorry for the negativity but this demands it!
Magyarul kérem a filmeket legyenek szivesek!
Great job,thank's.
WHITE PEOPLE USE A COMPASS TO SCRIBE NOTCH
Beautiful locomotive! Thank you CPR.
Nice job! I like this type of knot. Shrinkin of the log doesnt effect to it so much. How ever, would it be a good idea to leave the lower logs cut a little higher on the midle? If rain water with the wind get to the wall, this cut leads it in the midle of the knot. Of cource the risk is very smal and log building can handle little mounts of moisture very well, but still i think, the corner would be this way even better.
Is the book & CD still available?
que buen video mi sueño es hacerme una casa de troncos i la verdad nunca mire como hacerlo
I would suggest that viewers NOT wear sandals or rings when building with heavy equipment and heavy material. Asking for an injury.
I understand proper footwear, but what about rings?
Im curious why you used wood instead of stone or cement blocks?
so if you cut that triangle out to fit in the groove, why dont you mark 45 degrees on the end of each log, and cut inwards 2 feet making every log the same, then all you need to is measure the depth of the log you are scribing on top, and mark a 45 degree cut into the log, it would save 3/4s of the time you spent here, trying to custom fit each log into place.
90 degrees, not 45 sorry
Vaše práce je úžasná, klobouk dolů.
Very informative, and nice job on the saw
i do not like that notch.too much wood cut off.waste of time.round notch no lateral groove much better.look more natural.
they don't worry about the HSE like we do in the UK.
+Tim “Teej” J Because the British are Emotional, Intellectual and physical weaklings.
+En Ulv i Skogen Hello there that made me laugh. I'm not sure we're emotional, we may be intellectual and as for physically weak well I'm a 15 stone 2.1 metre tall 53 year old. In my younger years I was tree surgeon who used to work in shorts and a tee shirt, before we had to use harnesses and chainsaw protection. Really I was just talking about our nanny state and all the European H&S directives and legislation we now have to adhere to such as the working at heights regs. You never know in a couple of months we may not be subject to so much red tape anymore, though some how I doubt that. Anyway thanks for your reply and I'm pleased to see you have a good understanding of the populous of other nations.
i feel 30 times more manly after watching this.
fuck
Good job.
First tryout with my new Sony RX10. Will follow with some more interesting vids.
PLEASE TELL ME HOW COULD THAT IS CALLED tool to trace. AM OF PERU, would help me a lot if COMPAS TELL ME LIKE THAT LEVEL WITH USING TO THE LAYOUT OF THE LOG IS CALLED. TAKE CARE!!
Nice video! Nice to see more CP locomotives running again! I really like CP #2929 at Steam Town in Scranton, PA. It is a 4-4-4 Jubilee type loco and sadly does not operate.
BRAVO, COMPLIMENTI DALL' ITALIA.-
Mr. Finlayson, you sure remind me of the movie actor Gary Cooper. You walk like him and talk like him. And I mean that as a compliment sir.
un super programa para aprender y disfrutar
amazing !! i wish he was my dad
Thank Neil! I do similar work here in the Adirondack Mountains, however your skills dwarf mine. I'd love to spend a month learning from you.
Thanks for your comments Frank. It is my brother Reid from Finlaysonloghomes.com who is the master builder. I am the web guy and photographer. Check out his website for more pics. Neil Finlayson
I certainly will Neil. Thanks!
Hi, You are very talented Mr. Finlayson, Very accurate cuts with that chainsaw, But where is the chain brake on your saw, Did you remove it to try and make it lighter or to get that big plastic thing out of your line of sight ?
I forgot in my reverie to mention that three of the old beams which were far from straight and narrowed very much towards one end, these each were used in exactly the same plan as the original so the toilet and bathroom ‘heads’ became progressively lower and the bend in one was slightly ‘screwed’ so that fitting the next layer as with the original build over a thousand years ago was and would have been also. Getting under a bathroom door of only 4’-6" when with the same tree 15 ft further along the door was just 2 ft higher. The people must have been shorter then as I have since been able to confirm and showing any guest/s around the place and especially the screwed log and subsequent lower doorway was always a treat for us and then it was always a great talking point when the Owner of the two barns and the other two smaller building made from the third, which I am bound to keep secret the place for fear of too many footsteps and the ‘souvenirs taken by some!
Hi and many thanks for the uploads of the videos. I shall never build a cabin but for those who will your learned errors and ‘bottled advice to prevent ANY errors at all and your oh so skilled way of working makes this seem easy with the use of power saws, and it can also seem slow, but the advantages are you know every joint along its possible other lapping X joints and winder with be perfect and as it ages it will, because of the shape and care in truing the logs after de-barking and the actual choose of logs in the first-place choosing as straight as possible lengths, the time taken in levelling the many various, or as my nan used to say "Varicose" joints after the first two layers with help speed the next log layer ad infinitum right. My day and I rebuilt Mortised and Tenoned jointed Barns from the 13th and 15 C so they and the ground around them, and btw the ‘plates called ‘Mushrooms I believe which formed to very bottom layers of all the Oak beams were laid in precisely the same spots as on one barn it was partly layer on bedrock. My father also recovered some oak trees which ran the length and width of the original barn but which for ‘varicose ;-) :-) reasons were not mendable in its original sight and this was more obvious as which huge Barn was dimpled - to build one complete and using every part of the largest Barn, and then the same with the second brought from many miles away which me and my uncle and father did, and it was my job to check and clean and mark the beams and the joints so the fitted together exactly as they were, and then the third barn moved for a road widening plan, and we were also able to re-use most of the ‘protected’ steel and some which were brass bolts and nut. Take care, it is surprising how fast these go up to build the finished more or less at least, building, and the whole thing gets tighter every passing Century right. Mrbluenun
Beautiful......A true craftsman at work. Reminds me of my dad. Sure wish he was still around. People do such sloppy work now days.
Thanks for sharing.
This is a very helpful series.
Great information.
Thanks for posting , nice to see a man who knows what he is doing and is so willing to share with the rest of us.
Great videos made by a man who knows his craft.
Всё верно. Всё понятно и без знания английского. И черновая разметка и чистовое причерчивание и вырезание чаши. Ещё бы посмотреть дальнейший процесс.
Some saw skill
Thanks gave you a thumbs up please return the favor
I didn't realize there was that much that was involved in layout and making a good joint. Good work Neil.
Love watching this guy at work. He is really good at what he does, but he makes it look easy and doesn't make it out to be anything really difficult. He is real old school. Guys nowadays try to make out their jobs are rocket science.
I would have a beer with this guy.
youtube is best
I had no idea the amount of work and detail that goes into each notch. It's amazing.
truely good work