Making A Versatile Multipurpose Shooting Board / Plans Available / How To
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- Опубликовано: 15 сен 2024
- Plans can be found here:
RIGHT HAND PLANS - inspirewoodcra...
LEFT HAND PLANS - inspirewoodcra...
A shooting board made long enough to joint edges, with a planing stop for thicknessing material and even a miter box for handsaw work. This do-it-all jig (or appliance) is a must-have for small parts like inlays, but I think is pretty handy all the way around.
TOOLS SEEN IN THIS VIDEO:
Double Sided Tape - lddy.no/m666
CMT Crosscut/Plywood blade - lddy.no/odwa
Pull Saw - amzn.to/3rt9g0B
The BEST .7 Mechanical Pencil - amzn.to/2YVb2eJ
The BEST .9 Mechanical Pencil - amzn.to/3rtZ5cf
Narex Richter Chisels - lddy.no/uprz
SawStop Table Saw - amzn.to/3rvbD3b
#5-1/2 Jack Plane - www.lie-nielse...
Looking for BLEMISHED PEC COMBINATION SQUARES, DOUBLE SIDED TAPE and overall great savings ALL THE TIME? Shop where I shop! lddy.no/go67
YOU CAN SAVE 10% ON STARBOND CA GLUES AND ACCELERATOR!
Use the code “INSPIRE10” at checkout! www.starbond.com
SAVE 10% ON OLIGHT FLASHLIGHTS, TACTICAL LIGHTS AND HEADLAMPS!
Use the code "INSPIRE10" at checkout! www.olightstor...
BANGGOOD WOODWORKING TOOLS: www.banggood.c...
MY HAND TOOLS, POWER TOOLS, CAMERA GEAR AND MORE:
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VISIT THE INSPIRE WOODCRAFT SHOP: inspirewoodcra...
Adjustable Box Joint Jig Plan: inspirewoodcra...
Multipurpose Shooting Board Plan: inspirewoodcra...
All Purpose Tapering Jig Plan: inspirewoodcra...
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Glad you made one for us lefties, cause we are the only ones in our right mind. Keep up the great work. Semper Fi.
Paul Sellars the hand tool master in the UK...made a shooting board that did the compression fence and made it do 45 degree fences , compression as well. I think a new design later incorporating both yours and paul's would be interesting...im going to go to the shop and makes yours and incorporate Paul's 45 degree design...wish me luck
Yup, one of the best instructors on the internet
great to see that someone caters for left handed workers!!!!
Love your communication style. Eloquent, engaging, enthusiastic but also serious about your craft. Great stuff. :-)
Thank you thank you than you!! I’ve had a jewelry box “experiment” with the legs held on with double-stick tape. I made the box in 2011. The legs on that box haven’t let go yet. This is aptly named Inspire Woodcraft. You have inspired me to trust my results of that experiment. I think double-stick tape has lots of uses in the shop! :) I think I’ll be making a new shooting board soon. The wedge system you employed is perfect. I think that’ll solve the problem I have with my current sled where I glued and screwed the fence into the board.
Another excellent build for we lefties! This is on my to-do list!
Well done. I like the face planning idea.
I’m becoming a fan after seeing your videos pop up in my feed, but the fact that you’re also a left handed Jarhead got me to subscribe 😂
Good Job!
Like the wedge technique
Pretty fantastic work, dude! Nicely done! 😃
I'm going to take some of your ideas to make mine!
Stay safe there with your family! 🖖😊
I'm really liking these videos of not using a tape measure or ruler and getting very accurate results.
Side note, I'm left handed but put my watch on my right wrist. I did this because way back when I was in school and did all that writing it felt like the watch was in the way. Plus I copied my Dad who was left handed as well. But if it works for you on the left wrist, cool.
Thanks for another excellent instructional video. I now must build the left-hand version!
I'm glad to see I'm not the only one who hangs my level like that 🤣
Jodee, very practical an useful! Thanks for these tips
Haters gonna hate. I like it when you experiment with different materials and methods. Be sure to let us know how the tape holds up (be it well or not so much...)
Great build & combination of tools. Instead of the wedge effect that can kick off square, you could just double side tape the brown piece securely
Thanks for sharing, love the way you use items for reference instead of measuring, I find I have better success doing things this way and thought I was lacking skill as this is my preferred method both in woodworking and in renovations.
Great video.I always pick up something from your videos.
Great jig...excuse me, appliance 😁. Interested to see how this one holds up over time. I very much appreciate the thought and detail you put into your builds. That left-hand brain is workin! Thanks for what you do. Your stuff always gives me another way to think about my projects. Keep it up!
Thank you, sir.
Thank You!!! Much Appreciated!!!👍😎
Great video!
Thanks
Will have to make one.. great job.. I think I will add a clamping device to mine..
Taylor Toolworks. Cool stuff there, thanks for the tip
A trick I learned using the shooting board for hardwood, wet the end grain of your workpiece with a bit of water. It softens the fibers enough to make cutting easier. (Yes I know - a properly sharpened plane blade shouldn't have a problem, but stopping to sharpen interrupts the flow.)
Very thoughtful; thank you!
Good morning my friend!
thanks for your video
17:45 Shakespeare would be proud... but in all seriousness, this is awesome.
A fellow southpaw woodworker! Subscribed! You do need a respirator though....
Yeah I need to find a better solution. I have a respirator but it makes everything I do take ten times longer. I wish there was an easier to use system that actually offers the same protection as a full respirator.
@@InspireWoodcraft I only wear my full respirator when using the power tools.
Another great jig and video. I have one question for you. I’ve built several jigs using the Baltic Birch plywood and have found that over time they warp. I’ve tried using sealer to help but they still tend to bow or warp even if I leave them flat on my table when not in use. Do you have any suggestions to help that not happen? Thank you.
Jason
Looks like I have a new project to make
Nice video explaining a certainly unconventional and interesting approach. Have been using that double sided tape for several years now and liking it. Will be interesting to see how well it holds under the shear stress. I may have used Fastcap Speedtape on the outfeed ply as it seems to hold forever. Only time will tell.
Hi Jodi. Could you do a video about an art easel that can support painting frame? Not necessarily complicated but rather easy to build but still provide good support on artwork and adjustable. Thanks.
thanks for sharing that
Thanks for the tip about dents in the face of the fence and the need to resurface it. Resurfacing only a portion of your fence seems to be akin to making a rabbit joint. I do not have a rabbit plane so I would have to flatten the entire face of the fence and probably need screws to hold the fence in place. Most of my mitre jigs end up with the saw cutting into the surface. Wouldn't that also happen with your design? How does that affect the shooting board's squaring function?
Oh god yes please, talk about bowe issue, I have construction table saw and no mater what I do I always get a bowe even when I use long solid aluminium attached to the existing fence, even tho I make the board is fully touching the aluminium both ends I keep getting a tiny bowe
How is this holding up after this much time? Especially the tape, but also curious about if you've had issues with the saw kerfs making the fence uneven for shooting, and if the lack of dust relief groves has been an issue at all.
Overall, I like the design, but was wondering about those couple things.
Thanks!
One solution to the 45 degree bevel I have seen is to cut a groove in the top of the upper table that allows for the foot of a speed square which can then be registered against the fence.
That's a good idea. I believe I once saw someone make a jig of sorts that fit on their speed square as well.
This is great to get people incorporating hand tools with their power tools.
Quick question though. In another video didn't you make a jointer for the table saw? Why didn't you just use that to joint the fence?
I have a jointing jig that I thought about using, but I didn't want to bother with adjusting the toggle clamps and this setup was just more convenient. If I remember right it's set up for not as tall material.
Great video again you are awesome explaining things do you sell stickers at your store all I see are shirts
This is most likely more theoretical than practical, and probably overthinking the whole process, but if the sole of your plane in front of the blade is longer than your fence is wide and the raised table in front of the fence is angled (admittedly not very much), couldn't the front part of the base push the front of the plane away from the main part of the raised table causing a slight angle on the end of the workpiece equal to the difference between the width of the fence and the distance of the blade from the front of the plane?
To be honest, if this were a great concern, you could "shoot" the front part of the raised table with a long enough plane to maintain registration on the main part of the main table.
In any event, this is a well thought out and executed plan for an essential appliance for any workshop. Thanks for the effort to put it out there.
Thanks for suffering through the long watch. You are absolutely correct and I was going to address this in the video, but I knew it was already going to be too long for most folks. The fence ended up being a whole 2" wide, so there's 2-1/4" difference between when the front edge of the sole reaches the back of the fence and when the blade exits the cut. I'm sure there is some fancy math formula to determine how off that would make things based on a 5-1/4" deep back table and .004-.005" out over 14" of width, but that's too complicated for me to figure out right this second. In practical use I can't tell any issue so far, but I'm sure there is some degree of "off".
@@InspireWoodcraft If the back table is 11" or so wide, the protrusion at the end would be about .002-.0025".
The link to the plans doesn't work. Is there perhaps a new link? (Especially the one for left-handers😉)
@@holzmotte I’m so sorry! We are still working on getting some old links onto our new website. Please shoot me an email at inspirewoodcraft@gmail.com, and I will send you the PDF.
Great video. Looks ideal. How did you make the miterbox pull saw kerfs?
Great question. I don't know how I didn't actually get the footage of this part. I used a thick bladed square to get me at 90 and 45 and then used the cutoff from the fence to help guide me plumb. The 90 and one of the 45's came out perfect, but the other 45 got a little sideways. Still cuts true enough, but it isn't perfect.
Thanks for your content, allways extremly thorough and well explained. On your cuttingboard you talk about end grain glueups being frowned upon. Isnt also gluing up crossing grain direction also frowned upon because of wood movement? Are those problems negated with your inlay tactics? In comparison to lets say... a frame around the cuttingboard?
I had the exact same question as I am looking at an inlay in a board that I am making right now. I am a little worried about the consequences of non-parallel grain directions being mixed and the effect on durability.
@@tonyblanco305 yeah, would be interesting with some enlightment. 🙂
VERY COOL. where do you get double sided tape?
I get it from Taylor Toolworks. lddy.no/m666
Are the drawings still available? The link did not work.
@rjrotermund Shoot me an email at inspirewoodcraft@gmail.com and I will send them to you. We had some website issues a little while back and haven’t gotten everything back to normal yet.
Thank you so much. I built the box joint jig and it works great! love your videos.
You could’ve just planed it true in less time to set up the table saw
Maybe, but there really wasn't any time lost on setting anything up. It takes way longer to explain some of this stuff than it takes just to do it. I was already at the saw though and doing it this way lets the machine do the bulk of the work in a few passes, and the hand plane can do the finessing.
@@InspireWoodcraft I hear you. I’m a hand tool guy, but I really appreciate your explaining what a shooting board is for people that might want to try it. I like that you incorporated the other features into your board for other applications.
Too long winded and boring. Get to the point a little quicker. Unsubscribed
I'm not sure how long you were subscribed, but all my videos are long winded and boring. Interesting that this is the one that did it for you.
Counterpoint: very thoughtful and careful preparation and presentation, with many anticipated questions anticipated and answered during the presentation. Moved the presentation ong at a reasonable pace, only skipping details where there is reference to another video on that specific point