Testing Viral Woodworking TikToks Again...
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- Опубликовано: 7 сен 2024
- Testing Viral Woodworking TikToks Again
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#Viral #TikTok #Trends
Watching John screw around with a pair of calipers when he could have just traced the arbor hole off the blade sitting on the bench next to him. 🤣😂🤣1:51
Wayyyyy too easy 🤣🤣🤣
The fact that there were 3 adults in the room and nobody thought of that. Sometimes your brain is just stuck in squirrely mode, baby!
I was thinking the same thing but three idiots workshop wouldn't be the same without it!
You beat me to it 🤣
Did he have an 8” saw blade to trace or did he just have the 10” out of the saw?
Watching American’s work out spacing with their weird measurements is really impressive, i have no idea how you’d figure that stuff out like that.
Haha yeah.
"The nine three quarters plus five eights is gonna be... ten five eights."
Like what did you just say.
Do you guys not learn how to add fractions in primary school?
@@brianwright9514 yeah but we don’t use fractions really. So its just gets forgotten
@@brianwright9514 ok, here's what I heard him say
Nine three quarters (9x3/4) plus five eights (5/8) is ten five eights (10x5/8)
Simplifed
54/8 + 5/8 is 50/8
Since this is incorrect (but close), I gotta conclude that he's not really doing the math in his head. He's using some quickhand system to get a rough estimate. And that just comes with experience. It's not about primary school curriculum.
Since we use metric, we don't develop those quickhand systems.
@@alfies98 the same principals used to add fractions are used in algebra and proportions.
When I worked in printing, I would cut a thick bleached cardstock on a bevel in the exact shape of a utility knife blade. The stock was just about the same thickness as the real blade. Being a sturdy coated stock, it held an angle/edge well. Next was the silver ink. a full dip for overall color and then you could run your finger along the beveled edge cut to deviate the silver finish.
A quick dry, and toss it in the handle of your nearest coworker. It was always a good time watching the reactions. Sometimes the "blade" worked for a minute before it failed miserably.
Random person: "What do you do for a living?"
John: "I make $10,000 tables and trying tiktok viral videos."
😂
"and i make videos about it so other people can share in my struggles and fun"
I love how sharp bladed steel spinning at thousands of RPM is apparently okay, but when it's paper John gets nervous haha. This is a great series!
Honestly the paper blade seems awesome. Almost no kerf? Finishes ends for you? With a good printer, some decent cardstock, and a 0 clearance insert, this might be an option for small projects
Plus, if you cut yourself on it it'll cauterize the wound at the same time so you won't bleed out.
What keeps the disc straight is the centrifugal force. Touching it from the side would do nothing for it.
@@1pcfred it just adds support for when force is on the blade. Same goes for metal blades. The closer the insert the less play. You also get less tear outs with a zero clearance insert. Where you will get more blowouts on your cuts with a half or quarter inch
@@stompingpeak2043 your blade is not touching your insert. Zero clearance does not equal zero. You're not going to get tearout using paper as a cutting disc either because the action is abrasive. There's clay in paper and that's why it "cuts". I don't think you really appreciate just how much centrifugal force is going on here. There's 18 pounds spinning out. Now do you really think a sheet of paper can support 18 pounds? Or what a piece of paper can support is going to influence 18 pounds of force? Because I don't.
@@1pcfred no shit. Of course they dont touch. If it did touch it would literally not spin right. You are right and it basically just spins like a drill. The insert helps remove play. Is there play on paper? No shit.
Imagine the paper cut that thing would give you.
Whenever I do fitting strips for built in cabinets, I freehand cut them on the table saw. I take the measurements on different points of the wall, because no wall is straight, mark them on the fitting strip, and then cut along the line. Gives you a cleaner cut and it’s fast
Yeah back when I was installing cabinets I did all the fillers crown and toe kick skins on the table saw freehand which would end up being like 8 foot long boards freehand through it on a contractor saw, would hold them in place next to the wall/ceiling/floor and mark the entire length with a shim the size of the biggest gap to get a cut line. I didn't ever try on a full size shop table saw though cause they have way more power so it'd be easier to mess up but it still kinda terrifies normal woodworkers when I talk about it lmao. Like doing it with a skill saw you have to have the piece upside down if you want the clean edge of the cut to be the face and it just makes it so much more annoying so it just gets done on the table saw with fence and guards removed
Cabinet maker here too. I do the exact same thing. Combo that with the 48 in edge sander I can make any shape quickly
@@elijahdaves1305 I always used an angle grinder with a 40 grit flap sander wheel for the sanding part of it
@@elijahdaves1305 I am a cabinet maker too. I did this often enough that I can just freehand it to about 1mm accuracy. I dont even need any sanding. Measure, cut, put in place, done.
Doing flooring too a lot of cuts are freehand on the table saw
I can't lie... I laughed SO hard. That circular saw blade from paper is ABSOLUTELY something I would have tried in Junior High School, called it a science experiment, and got my a** beat by my dad. I loved it!
I can't remember if I was in junior high at the time, but I remember doing makeshift "saw blades" with Erector set girders and plates, and a 3V DC motor that I hooked up to a 9V battery. Really, just anything I could spin up and do damage with would have probably been alright, lol. Somehow I never cut myself, even when I made a little lever to launch the blade off the driveshaft for it to go haphazardly careening across the room.
I've actually used cardboard cut into discs for my angle grinder- and used a glue stick to attach sandpaper. Actually works pretty good. Really isn't dangerous if you aren't being incredibly stupid with it. Cheap hacks work sometimes! I think the fact that the paper you used was so "glossy" that it seared as it cut through. I'd be interested in seeing a fine sandpaper attached to both sides of that- you'd probably get a more normal looking cut. No reason to waste materials though.. I've actually seen someone glue fine sandpaper to their REAL circular saw blade on a table saw, cuts came out REALLY nice and the sandpaper stayed attached!
I saw John Heisz do that a few years ago. Also the paper blade.
On
For the first one, it reminds me of a parlour trick I'd do to entertain kids when I worked at a grocery store. I'd take a box I just stocked, tell the kid "Do you want to see a magic trick?" then draw a hand saw on the box, slice it out with my cutter, & use it to saw another box in half
Man listening to Americans trying to add up fractions of inches just makes me so happy I’m not American haha. Let’s just be honest the metric system is just better.
Watching the puzzle joinery (second project) makes me think, have you looked at wooden puzzles generally, and considered how you could put them into epic joinery projects?
Wooden puzzle boxes I love ❤️
John Heisz did the paper blade on YT. I think over 12M views
Probably where the tiktok got the idea from
4:21 This is a classic example of paper saw kickback. You were super lucky sir. Watch those feed rates. I find laminating 3 sheets of construction paper together (yellow-black-yellow gives best performance) is the best trade off between kerf, wear, and reasonable feed rates. Reinforcing the center with 2" fiber washers contact cemented to either side also increases rigidity and allows for even faster feed rates. Laser cut micro-perforations (width of laser, 0.25mm in length) every 2.87 degrees on the outer edge of a 10 inch blade has yielded great long term performance and allows the blade to wear to a predictable depth before "re-sharpening." Laser perforation cut interval should be adjusted during "re-sharpening" due to loss of blade diameter accordingly. Although you can get by with 3 degrees anywhere from 10" down to about 9.25" I usually just throw my blades away at that point and make a new one.
Careful -- those are Dewalt colors. They might come after you like they did Rockwell.
@@fgbhrl4907 I think I might be ok. You don't really much see the inner layer. I also use pink fiber washers with my logo lasered on. I could fall back to using Brown or Forrest Green. They had similar performance but the longevity isn't there. Has to be something to do with the pigment.
I'd like to see what charging the paper up with some polishing compound would do. Give 'er some grit.
@@1pcfred I'm dubious of how well the paper will hold compound, but I'm going to try this. I'll report back with results.
@@StoneyMeyerhoeffer I polish plastic with compound charged paper so it should work pretty good. I get optical clear results.
Behold Perry the Platypus! My Papercutinator!
lol--buys a super expensive router table set up and cuts on the wrong side of the dovetail bit. Genius. How many times did those boards go shooting across the room?
Thanks recommended videos I had no idea Bert kreischer was into wood working
For the first thing you're attempting, a compass is what you're after for drawing circles at a particular diameter. A protractor is for measuring angles.
I believe they are the most commonly mixed up names because so many people get it mixed up. I believe it's because for school and stuff, we always got them both together as a requirement for maths or shop class.
Or just trace the blade next to him.
This takes getting paper cut to a whole new level
Serious question here...I'm relatively new to router tables. Shouldn't the dovetail cut have been run left to right going behind the bit? Or preferably right to left using the front side of the bit? Why did he choose to go behind the bit?
Right to left is fine, but almost certainly not between the fence and the bit. Work piece, bit, fence. Cool video though.
Definitely should have cut it on the front of the bit. That way there's no spinning bit exposed to run your fingers into, and you'll experience a smoother cut. The way it was done in the video is called "climb cutting" , where at the point of contact, the blade is spinning in the direction of travel. I definitely don't recommend that as it's best left to a CNCs!
You're absolutely right my man, good instincts. Right to left using the front side of the cutter, with pushers between hands and the spinning bit, would be the safe way to do this.
As a dad with little kids, that little stool with rounded weeks would make a perfect handwashing stool for the bathroom
Why in the world did you spend so much time trying to scratch out a circle on the paper instead of just tracing the blade. Lmao. Live and learn I guess
Because that’s too obvious
To be fair, MOST videos I have seen treat the paper sawblade as what it is, a neat little science thing. Anyone who promotes it as an actual woodworking tool is nuts.
That 3-piece joint reminds me of some puzzles I've played with. Those would be cool for a small table with some work though. Great job!
I saw that paper cutting plastic trick with a drill and a small disk of paper more than 20 years ago. Another neat trick is a simple thread that you can pull from both ends. It cuts plastic well and sometimes comes in handy if no other tool can reach the spot.
The bootlace ziptie saw is an old-school SERE tactic
Worked in a precision metal shop for years. We'd side cut metal (wires, rods, tubes, shims) with dremel paper sanding disks. Then cleanup / shape the cut with actual sanding surface. All in one smooth 3 second move.
Works so well that I didn't realize for a long time how ridiculous it was we were cutting metal with essentially paper.
John's looking good. Looks like the morning walks are paying off
Claims it's unsafe to free-hand on the table saw then proceeds to send material between the bit and fence on the router table. Seems legit. LOL
Paper often has clay mixed in to make it smoother that may serve as an abrasive.
Ohhhhhh
This is why a brown paper bag with no print or wax coating on it is excellent for buffing up certain oil finishes.
@@PikkaBird I wouldn't think brown paper has any clay though. The clay is used to whiten and make the paper smooth. Things desired in office paper.
In cardboard it is used as a filler, and I guess probably to smooth as well, as that is the type used for food packages and gets printed on.
I doubt much is used in corrugated card board as it would increase the shipping weight unnecessarily, without increasing strength.
woop woop! Safety police here. Don't route with the board between the bit and the fence.
The stool is a pretty nice project, John! I liked it! 😃
Stay safe there with your family! 🖖😊
Love the Ron Swanson picture on your wall.
its a COG puzzle, the cut outs literally spell cog
I found this chancel from the first Woodworking TikToks and I just loved your channel ever since. Thanks for making the Woodworking part of my brain light up!
You have found a new way to cut steaks on the table saw. Paper sliced thin for sandwiches
Steve Ramsey did that puzzle design once, called it a C-O-G puzzle because that roughly describes the shape of the hole in each piece. I think that might be the first thing I ever cut on my bandsaw.
I think it's also the basic design for a low budget czech hedgehog tank trap...
Fun fact. I have seen that as a table base quite a few times. It always makes for an interesting looking table. You should make one, it would be a fun little project!
You should have installed a paper riving knife to stop all those safety comments you'll get for removing it!
The paper saw blade would probably be the worst paper cut ever
That puzzle joinery matches the COG puzzle from Steve Ramsey, he has a tutorial on his channel for it.
Oh super cool. I’ve never seen it
Honestly I could see a miniaturized version being incredibly popular for crafts, considering that one could definitely get the right kind of paper/cardboard (NOT corrugated fiber board you heathens) that could cut at least 25-30 pieces of foam before encountering problems and without using an insert. Adding in additional helpers for stability would only improve the durability of the already dirt cheap "blades".
Subbed. As a beginner the allure of the viral woodwork Tiktok is irresistible. Really needs an experienced voice of reason to sort the BS from the real and the squirrel rating is awesome 🐿️🐿️🐿️
hahah thank you Devante
I know you guys kid around in the shop but it's obvious you all take safety seriously. And I appreciate you pointing out the dangerous things the Tik Tokkers were doing. Have to say I was astounded by the paper saw blade. WTF? This was a fun one, John.
Paper isn't just cellulose. There's clay content in it. Clay is an abrasive. A table saw spins at a very fast speed too. That particular model has a spindle speed of 4,800 RPM. An 8" disc on it is moving at 114 MPH. At that speed it's going to give anything that touches it quite the road rash.
Okay so I've never done like any woodworking ever in my life, so I'm curious: what makes using the table saw dangerous for the triangle cuts?
They're not using the fence on the saw (which is like a guide) to keep the wood straight. This means the wood could turn while cutting and bind up in the blade, making the piece shoot out at you. I have personally done that and it is very sketchy. I hope this answers your question.
The blade spins towards you instead of away from you, and there's so much power in the blade, it will "bite" or "grab" if there's any twisting or shifting of the workpiece, which causes the piece to "kickback" oftentimes causing an injury, but also known to be fatal in some cases
@@clay_d Yeah, that makes sense to me - thanks!
I was getting frustrated watching my guy try to measure and math out a paper saw blade, meanwhile I'm thinking to myself "you already removed the actual blade, just trace it on to the paper!" 😂
John Hiez or whatever his name is, did use paper as a table saw blad to successfully cut a block of wood.
I think he was the first to do it too right?!
Did he make a nice clean cut, or was it mostly a burn like this one?
@@erict3728
He sure did.
1) Someone little, your son, Jordan...HA! Poor Jordan. 2) Tasting to determine wood type...priceless!
1:30 taking paper 📄 cuts to the next level 😱🤞🏼
John you look GREAT!! All your hard work is really paying off!
very entertaining video john, I certainly wouldn't run that paper blade in my sawstop either😂
"I could [insert thing that'd make the job easier], but that'd be too smart."
Boy those sound like engineering words right there
Make something out of laminated printer paper.
John Heisz did the paper blade a couple years ago. While it did cut, he did have to slow way down on thicker materials.
John have you been losing weight?
Yep, I mention it in the video haha
I'm still watching. LoL. Up to the stool at router table.
A regular paper cut hurts like hell! I can't imagine what a 10-12,000rpm paper cut would do. 😂😂
That guy that does all those dangerous A$$ cuts is all over the place. When someone else does the videos , you’ll know … he got bit by the SQUIRREL
I love how Ron Swanson is just chilling back there. Like “I approve this picture of mine”
Your face when cutting the pencil was FANTASTIC
You should make a table using the interlocking legs, but use your three favourite woods to make it 😁🤘
That coach Hines part absolutely killed me 😂😂😂😂
Hahaha the amount of freehand cutting we used to do on a table saw at work…🤣🤣🤣
Bought flatstack (not pre-assembled) kitchen cabinets that came dovetailed like that last project. Out of all of the flatstack cabinets I've built and installed, they were by far the most solid.
After putting glue in the dovetail (they said it was optional) I would say they were stronger that most if not all preassembled cabinets I've dealt with. They were all plywood boxes with hardwood face frames too, no particle board.
Freehanding a cut on a table saw is dangerous? Well, you learn something every day. Maybe I should stop doing that? Nah.
Good luck! hops you don’t experience any kickback
Bro learnt to run before he could walk..... Makes crazy shit out of wood but cant draw a circle on paper. 👍🤣
Hi John. I just watched your industrial table build from 6 years ago! My God, has it been that long? I look at your shop, and stuff at present. It blows my mind away. How far you have come. Your wife-child etc. Take a moment if you can. I have recently reflected on the last 5 years of my life. Ours is very much the same, yet different. I have acquired more in five years, than the last twenty. That is not meant to be bragging, just a statement of a lot of work. Well done. Looking forward to seeing what is next for the both of us.
I’d LOVE to see you build the fish tank table!
I genuinely like this guy. I also like that he didn't edit out the multiple instances of router jump. His tools are better than mine, so I guess that's why the finished piece of wood doesn't have the gouge from jumping.
Fabulous!!! A suggestion....next time bury about two thirds of the dovetail bit in the fence so your work is not "trapped" between the fence and bit. Much safer. As spastic as I am I could never make your way work.
Your tool wall is beyond visually satisfying 😂
Cool set of suff I like the interlocking walnut piece the best
That‘s a puzzle and pretty old.
Being named Aaron, makes this so much better because John talks to me specifically, and says that he messed up.
Easy explanation, paper, cardboard and wood are all cellulose. And thus have close to the same hardness value, which means paper can scratch or indent wood, especially at such rapid speeds
I love the painting of Ron Swanson in the background.
“I’ve got a paper cut” takes on a whole new level of meaning
7:28 This was a project i did as a high school freshman in my engineering-manufacturing class!! (we cad-ed it and then used bandsaw and jigsawed it)
The poster board cutting/burning through walnut really surprised me. I like the way after it cut through a pencil you just went straight to hard wood. Next video idea I want to see if it can cut through sheet metal LOL
Sandpaper would cut steel, if you install it same way he did..
Wouldn't it have been easier to trace the saw blade on the paper than using your 'not protractor' 🤣😂🤣 Love your videos brother!
Instead of trying to make calipers to make your circle try tracing the 10” blade, this will center your arbor circle and the outer circumference just do a rough round edge.
When I wrote this I hadn’t yet read the comments, thankfully someone pointed this out long ago
Oh, you've created the perpetual paper-cut machine from my nightmares. Neat.
This man is a truth seeker! May the man never silence him!!!!!
Look at that untouched dewalt blade in that table saw.
Should have done Rock Paper Scissors but against a paper table saw blade 😂
The 2nd part that does the wood working is similar to the Japanese style of building structures. Its really cool.
If you take one more swing at Jordan I'm going to send a pepperoni pizza to your shop for him and not you. It's not a great punishment, but it's the only vector I have.
How do you not love this dude...😂
If I remember rightly the reason paper cuts things easily is because on a very small scale it’s actually a really serrated edge, which is why papercuts happen and why they hurt so much
A regular paper cut hurts like hell! I can't imagine what a 10-12,000rpm paper cut would do. And to the side of the neck at that.😂😂
Bro obsessed with the table saw thing when he does the same exact thing with the band saw that is like 30 times more dangerous
Lol
Wowers that's freaking awesome. Can't wait for more. Keep up the great craftsmanship and hard work my friends. Fab On. Weld on. Keep Making. Stay squirrely. God bless.
I love this series that you're doing!
"Freehanding on a table saw is dangerous" .. My man.. I know literal no one who owns a table saw and doesn't freehand..
Talk about the ultimate paper cut
Hey brother. You’re so talented. Thanks for the video!!
A protractor is like a ruler that you can draw angles up to 180°. You want a compass that draws circles.
You ain't never seen a floor guy if you haven't seen freehanding on the tablesaw 🤣
The taste test on the wood was hilarious
*me looking around innocently when listening about how dangerous free handing on a table saw is*
yeah i don't really see it ... sure you can slip and get hurt, but life's dangerous if you slip anyway
It's not about slipping, it's about keeping the workpiece from twisting as you feed it, which could cause a dangerous kickback and lead to amputations and/or board missiles.
The cohesion of your team is palpable!! 😋 Nice video!
These are cool, the last one probably got all the views from safety meetings where the speakers show what not to do🤣😂🤣