only ONE pass for the screw - WOW ! that is impressive... nice work.... i look forward to see the rest of your build..... i want to try this threading too, attempting a new moravian workbench with legvise
Genial, excelente trabajo!!! 😲 El acabado es perfecto, se nota que no hay juego entre rosca y tornillo además de que las roscas son excelentes!!! Genial, simplemente genial, intentaré fabricar un machuelo y una tarraja así de grandes, de unos 10 mm de diámetro, tal vez me quede bien 😆👍🏼👍🏼
Very nice finish, the most threads I see are to fine. This, I think are more appropriate for wood, remembers me the bigger threads of the vinepresses I saw as a child! Very very nice, well done, even I think I will not be able to reproduce it, it was a pleasure to watch!!! :)
This is amazing! So many details, like the plane fixed on the bench, the selfmade tools. I have to try this also! And a very relaxing video! Many greetings from vienna and stay healthy! Christian
Now as i made these Threads, i used them for my new Workbench. Links are in the description. What would you make out of them? I am glad for any further idea, thank you in advance :-)
Quite impressive. Once the tools are built, the wooden bolts and screws probably don't take too long to make. I really hope he's planning on using those to build a workbench. That sawhorse was making me nervous!
Yes now its quite easy to get some screws. These tools work better than would have expected! And like you guessed they are ment to hold wood bit tighter than my sawhorse. The workbench is nearly ready. What a joy to work on something stable!!
Ich habe ^beim Holzgewinde Schneiden immer noch Ausbrüche . Ich Glaube das ich jetzt gesehen habe worin mein Fehler bestand . Ölen heißt das Wundermittel . Mal sehen was dann passiert ! Super Job !
Mein Schneidewerkzeug sollte ich mir auch noch mal anschauen , ich habe noch eine Möglichkeit die ich Kontrollieren sollte . Bei mir war die volle Schnittiefe eingestellt , mal sehen ob man die Verändern kann
Parabéns amigão , pelo projeto . Sempre imaginei como era que se conseguia esse resultado . agora dou sabendo e quero montar a minha marcenaria , já tenho várias " coisas " . Já dei meu like e tô no canal !!! Valeu . Namastê !!!!
I’ve really liked watching these videos on a cool Norwegian night. I watched in your last video of you using a draw knife. I’ve made a few of them from scratch and used and left it with some aboriginal mates in the north west of Australia for making spears and didgeridoos. I’ve since learnt about another tool called a spoke shave that is easier to control and almost a step between the draw knife and you pulling the plane towards yourself. Something to consider. What you have made is beautiful.
Oh yes, i got a spoke shave into my tool chest some time ago. What a nice tool! Enjoy this quite time of the year with the mountains you might have around in Norway!
Excelente. Seria interesante dar detalles sobre los hilos del elemento roscado que determinaron la construccion de la tarraja tratandose que es de madera, tambien que tipo de maderas serian las adecuadas.
Это фантастика, браво. Хочется бросить всё и начать делать такие же штуки! Но я одно не могу понять, откуда у тебя столько свободного времени? Ты делаешь это в отпуске, или это твой основной бизнес?
Hello, I watched all four parts of your work. Beautiful work and very difficult. You didn't use any electric machines (except bench drill). I guess it's a nod to the work of our ancestors. Congratulations and best regards 😀.
Thanx for your feedback :-) To my understanding, dipping the Thread into linseed-oil before cutting it will not only make the cutting-process smoother, but also decrease the growing and shrinking of the wood later on. Let´s see...
This guy has muscles. I'd have taken several passes advancing the cutter on each pass, but I guess you can do it this way too. =) According to James King, soaking the dowel for 7 days in mineral oil is recommended. Great video and great work with the hand-tools.
I didn't understand what you did in the beginning of the video with that fluid that you didn't say what it is. Neither I understood what you did with the box. How did you do to make the thread inside the box? Did you put a sharp object inside?
@@littleforest yeah, I'm really sorry. I hadn't watched the full Playlist when I commented this. But there's something I don't understand yet. The threads inside the screwbox are made with the piece of dull file you attached to the tap? At the end when you pull out the screw from the screwbox and show it to the camera, the piece of dull file doesn't seem to fit in the grooves. Am I missing something? I apologize if my first comment came out as rude, it wasn't my intention, I was really confused and frustrated because in my country there's nobody that does this so I don't have anybody to ask for help, and I really need to learn this to make a bookbinding press that I can't afford. I sincerely apologize, and I wish you a happy new year. Greetings from Chile.
Hey Cristian! No worries, i understand, it can be frustrating looking for something in internet as there is so much... Just know, that it took me about one year of research and inventing before i was able to make my thread-cutting-tools. And to build them took me a winter (which is quite long here up north) About your question: The file does not make the grooves, it makes the hills. Take a closer look, the shape is exact the same than the hills. The grooves are cutted by the two blades i made in the screwbox video. Hopefully it is now more clear. Good luck with your own project, and let me know, if it worked out. I would be curious ;-)
@@littleforest no, I mean the grooves inside the screwbox, that's the part I don't understand. The grooves inside the screwbox are (or is) done with the piece of dull file you attached to the tap? Is that little metal piece you tapped with the hammer to make it stick out of the tap? The hole in the tap has that little metal piece and a piece of wood to keep the metal in place as you carve the interior of the screwbox. That's what confuses me a little. When you show the metal piece with the scheme of the tap in that paper with the angle of the thread, it looks different from the shape of the groove inside the screwbox. I wish there was a more direct way to communicate. If I could use images from your videos I could explain what I'm trying to say. Do you have an email where I could write to you? It's okay if you don't want to talk via email, I understand that you might get spammed with a million questions if you had a public email. Anyway, thank you so much for your help. Have a great 2022.
The blade inside the screwbox is not the same than in the tap. For the Tap i used this file you mentioned, but for the screwbox i made two own blades. I t is shown in the screwbox video. Did you see, that there is one video for the TAP, one for the Screwbox and then one more, showing how they are performing?
Great videos, congratulations from the UK. Love the space and stillness through your film-making. I also wondered what woods you used to make the threaded screws, it looks like pine but when you stripped the bark it looked more like birch? You made some of the nain cutter boxes from maple. You live in a beautiful part of the world and seem to enjoy the environment. Thanks, inspiring.
Thanx for your nice comment ! Yes, your guess with the woods are correct. Here, we do not have so many wood species like in the UK. But i like to use what i find nearby, if possible just in own forest or yard. I made screws out of Birch and Rowan. There is also some maple drying, which is maybe the hardest and also most regular wood i can find here. All the Best!
Yes, Ive been planning to put log legson half-log benches. Cant figure how to keep legs in ,if they dontgo all way through. Think big threads work? 4" diameter,and 6" deep.Dont know any other way.Help? Well done, BTW!!
Hey, my name is Florian and I'm studying civil engineering and I'm writing my master's thesis this year. Among other things, my topic will be about the tensile strength of the threads of wooden screws. Do you know any literature on the subject of wooden threads or screws made of wood? This would help me a lot with my research.
I wonder if you had the blade take a smaller bite when making the screw and some a few passes to get full depth, if that would have given s slightly cleaner finish without that slight slop you show at a couple points.
It would be a nice idea, but unfortunately it does not work. I need a ready thread right behind the blade to ensure the screw to be transported forward. Just for the bolt, there this idea works out well. Let's see, if there will be a new idea coming up, where the blade can be flexible, like you suggested...
Ironwoods (a category of high density wood) are normally used for gears and screws because soft woods like birch would fail. have you tried your tools on the harder woods?
I would not say, that birch will fail. Here, all old, antique benches are made with a birch screw. And they have been used, for long time and are still working well. What is nice with this wooden screws is, that they will still work, even, if they are used, and not tight any more. And yes, i have tried on maple, it worked great!
Спасибо, уважаемый мастер, за резьбу здорового человека. Ваш коллега из российского города Пестово тоже сделал подобный гайд. Предлагаю Вам ознакомиться с этим шедевром. Без улыбки не взглянешь)
Я посмотрел видео с удовольствием. Надеюсь, скоро здравомыслие вернется в умы, и граница между нашими странами станет местом дружбы, а не страха. Я желаю вам всего наилучшего.
Here you find some of my SCREWS ON SALE:
www.etsy.com/de/shop/LittleForestSuomi?ref=seller-platform-mcnav
МОЛОДЕЦ УМНИЦА давно забытое старое вспомнить не мешает УДАЧИ
Probably the best carpentry video I’ve seen on RUclips using hand tools, thanks very much
Glad, you enjoyed! And thanx for this motivating comment!
I think my pig whistles. Everything done by hand? This is a work of art.
A whistleling pig - so nice to translate straight. Mein pfeifendes Schwein :-)
@@littleforest 👍👍🤣
Finally!!! A video teaching how to make your own threading tools!!!!!
Thank you!!!!! I´m going to make mine!!!
Best regards
Carlos
My God, take a look at that perfect wood cylinder done with handtools only. No machine at all. Outstanding 07:56
Strong man who can bite off big chunks of wood with short handles.
Understood your comment only after seeimg, maybe long handles would b too much force,torque.
Выше всяких похвал ! Молодец !
Above all praise! Well done !
It was great to see that thread emerge from the top of the screw box! 😅😅👏👏👏 A class ‘A’ thread!
Отличная работа !! Чем больше диаметр , тем легче сделать !!!
Mądre spostrzeżenie, pozdrawiam 😀.
I'm really interested in hand tools old world ...awesome
Que tornillo tan hermoso!!! 100% hecho a mano, excelente trabajo, muchas gracias por compartir tu conocimiento, un abrazo desde colombia
only ONE pass for the screw - WOW ! that is impressive... nice work.... i look forward to see the rest of your build..... i want to try this threading too, attempting a new moravian workbench with legvise
Excelente estimado, gracias por compartir tus conocimientos.
bravo , beau travail pas facile à réaliser , le coup de l'huile , c'est pas mal , merci
Impressive perseverance 🫡
Genial, excelente trabajo!!! 😲
El acabado es perfecto, se nota que no hay juego entre rosca y tornillo además de que las roscas son excelentes!!!
Genial, simplemente genial, intentaré fabricar un machuelo y una tarraja así de grandes, de unos 10 mm de diámetro, tal vez me quede bien 😆👍🏼👍🏼
Great landscape! and great job!!! Greetings from Buenos Aires!
Thanks a lot! A best greetings back to Buenos aires!
Very nice finish, the most threads I see are to fine. This, I think are more appropriate for wood, remembers me the bigger threads of the vinepresses I saw as a child! Very very nice, well done, even I think I will not be able to reproduce it, it was a pleasure to watch!!! :)
That was very impressive. A lot of skill and attention.
That's the hardest I have seen anyone work to make a bolt, however it looks great and must have been very satisfying. Great job.
Hallo
Great series, amazing you did all that using a saw horse as a work bench amazing to me!
It would be wonderful to see a video about the sawhorses you use in many of your videos. Either a build video or just a better look!
Incredible work, mate.
Capo total . Un fenómeno . Felicitaciones
That is very nice!
Awesome job, thanks for showing us how is done.
really fantastic work!
Fantastic work. 👏👏👏👏👍👍👍
I just saw a video where a guy bought two of those...$175 US! EACH! Start cranking 'em out, literally! LOL. Great work.
We'll thought out process. I'm glad I found your channel. Subbed.
It turns out beautifully! Good luck!
This is amazing! So many details, like the plane fixed on the bench, the selfmade tools. I have to try this also! And a very relaxing video! Many greetings from vienna and stay healthy! Christian
You need to make a video of how you made your tap and die.I would very much like to know how to do that.
Lee Gibbs
I made these videos. You´ll find them if you check my channel or the links in the description.
Das ist seeehr gut, ich bin begeistert! :)
Well done! You did a great job, and showed so much detail.
Beautiful! I love it. Your ingenuity is impressive.
Now as i made these Threads, i used them for my new Workbench. Links are in the description.
What would you make out of them? I am glad for any further idea, thank you in advance :-)
Traditional bookbinding equipment probably. A finishing press, backing press and sewing frame.
I would go for a juice press. Where you live might be lots of forest berries to collect...
Homo ergaster ( artisan ) ou Homo habilis , avec la régression de la civilisation , adieu les outils électriques .
Bravo pour on talent
Marvelous ! Amazing ! Incredible !
😃👍👏
Love this and will have to try it
Quite impressive. Once the tools are built, the wooden bolts and screws probably don't take too long to make. I really hope he's planning on using those to build a workbench. That sawhorse was making me nervous!
Yes now its quite easy to get some screws. These tools work better than would have expected! And like you guessed they are ment to hold wood bit tighter than my sawhorse. The workbench is nearly ready. What a joy to work on something stable!!
un trabajo con mucha habilidad el maestro CARPINTERO.
супер идея.хорошая работа
Молодец парень!!! 👍👍👍
Ich habe ^beim Holzgewinde Schneiden immer noch Ausbrüche . Ich Glaube das ich jetzt gesehen habe worin mein Fehler bestand . Ölen heißt das Wundermittel . Mal sehen was dann passiert ! Super Job !
Ja, bei mir das hilft ungemein. Hast Du schon probiert?
@@littleforest Bin gerade Umgezogen und muss meine Werkstatt komplett neu Aufbauen und Installieren . Es wird also noch etwas Dauern .
Mein Schneidewerkzeug sollte ich mir auch noch mal anschauen , ich habe noch eine Möglichkeit die ich Kontrollieren sollte . Bei mir war die volle Schnittiefe eingestellt , mal sehen ob man die Verändern kann
Parabéns amigão , pelo projeto . Sempre imaginei como era que se conseguia esse resultado . agora dou sabendo e quero montar a minha marcenaria , já tenho várias " coisas " . Já dei meu like e tô no canal !!! Valeu . Namastê !!!!
Thanks again that was awesome to see keep up the good work we love you and we love your videos,,,you are master
Thanks 👍
Well done. Excellent job.
Вот это высший класс! Браво маэстро!.
Beautiful work, really helpful especially as I live at this part Canada and birch is basically the easy wood I could get
Birch, its so nice to work with it!
Acme style threads are awesome.
Großartig. Endlich geht mal wieder einer dieses Thema an! Viele haben es probiert, Izzy Swan und John Heisz. Tolle Serie! Weiter so!
I’ve really liked watching these videos on a cool Norwegian night. I watched in your last video of you using a draw knife. I’ve made a few of them from scratch and used and left it with some aboriginal mates in the north west of Australia for making spears and didgeridoos. I’ve since learnt about another tool called a spoke shave that is easier to control and almost a step between the draw knife and you pulling the plane towards yourself. Something to consider. What you have made is beautiful.
Oh yes, i got a spoke shave into my tool chest some time ago. What a nice tool!
Enjoy this quite time of the year with the mountains you might have around in Norway!
Thank you for this video.
Found your channel through this series! Really well done and inspiring! Subscribed!
Felicitaciones maestro.
Excelente. Seria interesante dar detalles sobre los hilos del elemento roscado que determinaron la construccion de la tarraja tratandose que es de madera, tambien que tipo de maderas serian las adecuadas.
Biutful, Very good , fantastic Brasil 🇧🇷🇺🇸
Это фантастика, браво. Хочется бросить всё и начать делать такие же штуки! Но я одно не могу понять, откуда у тебя столько свободного времени? Ты делаешь это в отпуске, или это твой основной бизнес?
Excellent. First time on channel, and I subscribed 👍
You are master class. Good on ya!
Excellent work !
Hello, I watched all four parts of your work. Beautiful work and very difficult. You didn't use any electric machines (except bench drill). I guess it's a nod to the work of our ancestors.
Congratulations and best regards 😀.
Thank you for the like 😀.
längere Hebel würden einiges erleichtern - schöne Arbeit
Very good thread. My thread is more loose because humidity changes.
Thanx for your feedback :-)
To my understanding, dipping the Thread into linseed-oil before cutting it will not only make the cutting-process smoother, but also decrease the growing and shrinking of the wood later on. Let´s see...
Fantastic work 👍👍👍
Amazing skill... 👍👍👍 I like your video?
This guy has muscles. I'd have taken several passes advancing the cutter on each pass, but I guess you can do it this way too. =)
According to James King, soaking the dowel for 7 days in mineral oil is recommended.
Great video and great work with the hand-tools.
Beautiful.
Very nice!! I tried making some a while back. Let's just say I wasn't as successful as you.
Well done!
Hopefully this series will help you to be more successful the next time.
I have to say, that it has been one of my most difficult projects till now...
Excellent!👏👏👏
Está increíble felicidades
Fantastic!!!!
Very well done.
Bad Ass! That's so cool
Super great, congratulations.
Uma marcenaria totalmente artesanal!!
Great idea
Caro amigo gostaria de saber o nome dessa madeira que você esta usando para fazer roscas torneadas?
Betula pendula
nice one finland
Thais a biytiful !! Já me inscrevi e laiky !!!
E compartilhei também !!!
Como se llama o hace esa herramienta
I didn't understand what you did in the beginning of the video with that fluid that you didn't say what it is. Neither I understood what you did with the box. How did you do to make the thread inside the box? Did you put a sharp object inside?
Did you watch it till the end?
Did you see, that there are 3 other movies about this topic?
Your questions might be answered there, god luck :-)
@@littleforest yeah, I'm really sorry. I hadn't watched the full Playlist when I commented this. But there's something I don't understand yet. The threads inside the screwbox are made with the piece of dull file you attached to the tap? At the end when you pull out the screw from the screwbox and show it to the camera, the piece of dull file doesn't seem to fit in the grooves. Am I missing something?
I apologize if my first comment came out as rude, it wasn't my intention, I was really confused and frustrated because in my country there's nobody that does this so I don't have anybody to ask for help, and I really need to learn this to make a bookbinding press that I can't afford.
I sincerely apologize, and I wish you a happy new year. Greetings from Chile.
Hey Cristian!
No worries, i understand, it can be frustrating looking for something in internet as there is so much... Just know, that it took me about one year of research and inventing before i was able to make my thread-cutting-tools. And to build them took me a winter (which is quite long here up north)
About your question:
The file does not make the grooves, it makes the hills. Take a closer look, the shape is exact the same than the hills. The grooves are cutted by the two blades i made in the screwbox video.
Hopefully it is now more clear.
Good luck with your own project, and let me know, if it worked out. I would be curious ;-)
@@littleforest no, I mean the grooves inside the screwbox, that's the part I don't understand. The grooves inside the screwbox are (or is) done with the piece of dull file you attached to the tap? Is that little metal piece you tapped with the hammer to make it stick out of the tap? The hole in the tap has that little metal piece and a piece of wood to keep the metal in place as you carve the interior of the screwbox. That's what confuses me a little. When you show the metal piece with the scheme of the tap in that paper with the angle of the thread, it looks different from the shape of the groove inside the screwbox.
I wish there was a more direct way to communicate. If I could use images from your videos I could explain what I'm trying to say. Do you have an email where I could write to you?
It's okay if you don't want to talk via email, I understand that you might get spammed with a million questions if you had a public email.
Anyway, thank you so much for your help. Have a great 2022.
The blade inside the screwbox is not the same than in the tap.
For the Tap i used this file you mentioned, but for the screwbox i made two own blades. I t is shown in the screwbox video. Did you see, that there is one video for the TAP, one for the Screwbox and then one more, showing how they are performing?
Great videos, congratulations from the UK. Love the space and stillness through your film-making. I also wondered what woods you used to make the threaded screws, it looks like pine but when you stripped the bark it looked more like birch? You made some of the nain cutter boxes from maple. You live in a beautiful part of the world and seem to enjoy the environment. Thanks, inspiring.
Thanx for your nice comment !
Yes, your guess with the woods are correct. Here, we do not have so many wood species like in the UK. But i like to use what i find nearby, if possible just in own forest or yard. I made screws out of Birch and Rowan. There is also some maple drying, which is maybe the hardest and also most regular wood i can find here.
All the Best!
Yes, Ive been planning to put log legson half-log benches. Cant figure how to keep legs in ,if they dontgo all way through. Think big threads work? 4" diameter,and 6" deep.Dont know any other way.Help? Well done, BTW!!
I would be happy to help you, but to be honest, i simply do not understand your question...
Hidden wedge into a slot then hammer In and wedge will spread the wood and hold the leg in
What did you pour into the cup you glued on?
It's raw linseed oil to soften the wood before cutting it.
Excelente trabajo de artesano
Hey, my name is Florian and I'm studying civil engineering and I'm writing my master's thesis this year. Among other things, my topic will be about the tensile strength of the threads of wooden screws. Do you know any literature on the subject of wooden threads or screws made of wood? This would help me a lot with my research.
There has been one article in a woodworking magazine. Unfortunately i can't tell you exactly which one, but hopefully it helps you.
Minulla on ollut ruuvinvalmistuslaatikko useita vuosia. Teen nyt lankanapautusta. Kiitos.
Absolutely fantastic ...would there be any chance of putting up plans for tools .. always wanted to make treads like these ..cheers from Ireland
Sorry gust seen other posts thanks again
Quite a workout but that screw will be able to withstand a whole lot of torque.
I wonder if you had the blade take a smaller bite when making the screw and some a few passes to get full depth, if that would have given s slightly cleaner finish without that slight slop you show at a couple points.
It would be a nice idea, but unfortunately it does not work. I need a ready thread right behind the blade to ensure the screw to be transported forward.
Just for the bolt, there this idea works out well.
Let's see, if there will be a new idea coming up, where the blade can be flexible, like you suggested...
Beautiful 👍
Ironwoods (a category of high density wood) are normally used for gears and screws because soft woods like birch would fail. have you tried your tools on the harder woods?
I would not say, that birch will fail. Here, all old, antique benches are made with a birch screw. And they have been used, for long time and are still working well. What is nice with this wooden screws is, that they will still work, even, if they are used, and not tight any more. And yes, i have tried on maple, it worked great!
Очень хорошо.
Really good result. Are you planning to make a vise from these?
Thanx :-) And yes, thats the plan. I still bit wait, that the wood for the workbench is dry.
What oil or stabilizer did you use prior to cutting the threads?
Great series of videos. Thank you.
Linseedoil does a great job!
thank you 😢
Спасибо, уважаемый мастер, за резьбу здорового человека. Ваш коллега из российского города Пестово тоже сделал подобный гайд. Предлагаю Вам ознакомиться с этим шедевром. Без улыбки не взглянешь)
Я посмотрел видео с удовольствием.
Надеюсь, скоро здравомыслие вернется в умы, и граница между нашими странами станет местом дружбы, а не страха.
Я желаю вам всего наилучшего.
awesome!