A secret for getting perfect depth laps on the table saw (using technique 1 and a scrap of the same thickness) - Raise the blade and make a cut at the very end of the board. Flip it over and take another cut leaving a tiny tenon behind. Keep raising the blade slightly, taking a cut on both sides. When the cut finally takes off the thin bit left behind it is the perfect depth.
Why remove the riving knife at 0:28? The top of the riving knife should be below the crown of the blade and it should not interfere with the cuts you made.
@@brian454454 While riving knives are most important for through-rip cuts, they do offer some kickback protection during any cut. One would have especially been important during the second cutting operation shown in this video (2:57), when a rip was made. A riving knife would help protect the user from kickback that may be caused by that non-through kerf closing upon the blade.... I'm not the safety police. If he doesn't want to use it, that's his decision and I won't nag him for it. I just thought it was strange that he took the time to remove it and I wondered why that was.
Thank you! I thought same thing but I couldn't REALLY recall all the times it was critical vs detrimental... however it seemed like it wouldn't have hurt on any of his applications. I must've learned SMTHN during all those hrs watching your vids ; ) 👍
@@StumpyNubs diffrent countries diffrent safety regulations, as a german trained cabinetmaker and joiner we were taught that the only cut that is allowed with out a riving knive is an undercover cut. But we probably have the strictest guidelines 🙄
^^^ what is this guy on? Anyways, yeah it just takes a momentary slip of the mind and boom no more finger nub. It costs A LOT to reattach. Like 25k, although I could be wrong.
@Praise Jesus, Repent or Likewise Perish your comment reminds me of a guy at Lakewood church, I was a member of the most elite Christian Biker group, wearing my vest in the church restroom, I'm standing at the urinal pisding and he walks up to me trying to hand me a Christian tract. I'm like dude "I'm a Holy Ghost Christian at church on Wednesday night, you supposed to do that out in the highways and hedges. He got on me like you probably will that being in church doesn't make you a Christian. I'd say typing Scripture that doesn't have anything to do with the subject maybe, sometimes, maybe every now and then, possibly turns people, (people who have been hurt by religion) off. I don't mean to be rude but I am responding to your posting the best I can
@@gumecindogarcia1070 I saw the comment and thought maybe he was saying to turn to Jesus in case someone took a finger off and blead to death, lol. Buy yeah, otherwise pretty random and ineffective for most non-believers.
Make sure you buy and have the proper blade before doing this. They are harder to find than you think. They are called flat top or square blades. I had to order one online as all 3 hardware stores did not carry them. They are nice though.
Strong agreement! I recently tried doing this kind of cut with an ATB blade - mistake! It removed the wood just fine, and quickly, but left lots of ridges. It took another couple of hours of plane & chisel work to make it all flat & smooth.
In my experience as a union carpenter, cabinet maker and woodworker hobbyist for 35+ years. I’ve found that to get the proper tools that perform on the level that the video shows. I buy my tools from tool distributors, not Home Depot or similar box stores or hardware stores. Tool distributors sell commercial grade tools, the chains and box stores do not. Online look for Rockler, Veritas, Granger, woodworkers warehouse. Good luck.
Using the rip fence and crosscut slide at the same time is advanced saw work. If you get a bind things are flying out of the back of the saw at hi speed. I wouldn’t want to be in the way or have to patch the hole in the wall.
I think because in this case there weren’t any off cuts, it’s reasonably safe? I would still hesitate to do it, but the waste is all sawdust so I think the risk of a bind is very low.
@@robslifting4life - lol- I have hammers older than you. I have worked on some pretty famous buildings. I have built the best of the best. I still have all my fingers. And things happen on a table saw faster than you can think. I am saying don’t do it. Put a stop block on the fence. But don’t cut with the board on both. It works fine until it doesn’t.
This type of channel is exactly what I look for when I’m looking for wood working tips and instruction. Showing multiple ways of achieving the same result, basically using what you have at your disposal to accomplish the task at hand. I subscribed and liked the video before I even finished watching it.
Just be more careful than this guy is.. there are so many safety rules being broken here.. never touch the blade of a saw while it's plugged in, never grip the router by the base... and never pull out a piece of wood from the table saw in the same direction the blade is spinning.. safety first out there. Machinery is not your friend and it will bite you the first chance it gets. don't give it that chance.
not to mention he has to riving knife on his table saw.. it's only table saw safety device that actually does it job. the riving knife alone will save you from 75 of the stupid things you can do on a table saw.
You have to remove the knife for the technique he showed, and lots of other techniques such as running a dado. It’s perfectly fine to remove it under the correct circumstances.
@@randazzoworld8940 fair enough habits to promote and remember but keep in mind this guy knows a bit of what he’s doing. The table saw he’s using is a SawStop tablesaw. It literally can’t come on when he’s touching the blade, or for 5-10 seconds after. There is a safety trip function in the switch. He would know this and feel perfectly safe touching the blade. That being said: you should always unplug your saw when changing blades and NOT touching the blade is still safer habit to keep. As most shops won’t have the SawStop saw. As for the router many small palm routers like his have finger grooves molded into the base, and it helps keep the router from wobbling. It’s very hard to control with only one hand. The only thing he did that I wouldn’t have was place his finger under the still running router to showcase the gap there… I cringed a bit. As for pulling the work stock from the blade backwards, you are correct that it’s bad practice, but again, the techniques he’s using somewhat force this method. If the operator is careful, skilled, and practiced, it can be done with relative safety. Is still a great video, and earned a sub here!
I hope safety is not stereotyping. Please don’t let that go by removing the riving knife. The riving knife doesn’t interfere with any of the operation in this video.
Thank You for this video.very nicely done even without narration. These are great techniques which I will start using. Will make these joints easier and faster as well as more accurate. Greetings from Maine.
на 4:45 руки немощные прижать фрезер или увеличь площадку чтобы удобнее было прижимать. Всё равно на 5:22 когда делал ты проход с краю вильнул фрезером. И стамеской всё равно резанул край на 5:43.
Wow. I am now a old woman that had aspersions of designing and build furniture when I was a teen. If I was given the opportunity to learn from your instructions, … if only.
So many ways to skin a cat but yet us mortals still manage to constantly screw it up! 🤣 Beautiful work, doesn't matter how its done, as long as it works in the end! 🤙
I love this video. It addresses my biggest pet peeve on wood working videos I get really frustrated when I see someone use a single table saw blade to chip away a dado cut and then waste lots of time to chisel and maybe even sand that dado cut smooth. I prefer to take extra time to use a router table as I can make a pass on the table saw, then move it to a separately set up router table. I feel I get a much better dado cut and the fit is much more secure. But I also saw a few ideas I will try for the table saw. So long as I don't waste lots of time chiseling the jagged table saw cuts away.
Never have so many fingers been risked to make a simple joint. It looks easy until you imagine one of the pieces flying off into space-dragging your fingers where they don’t want to be.
Прикольно. Пользовался циркуляркой подобным образом несколько раз. Проще использовать самый примитивный фрезерный стол. Приятно было посмотреть на результаты😀
You can tell he's a master craftsman not only by the roughness of his hands, but also the way he casually runs his finger through the empty space under his router inches from the bit while his router is running @4:40. I'm comfortable with my tools but that would still freak me out a bit lol Great vid man!
Здравствуйте. Благодарю за видео, у вас очень качественный контент. Подскажите, пожалуйста, какое масло вы используете? И, правильно я понимаю, что вы работаете только с дубом? Если нет, то подскажите какое масло для других пород используете. Буду очень вам благодарен за помощь, как начинающий совету мастера.
I'm very impress with the work u did, even though I know nothing about woodworking. But what shock me most is that u can reply the comments with hundreds or thousands of languages.😂
With the router when you did it, I saw the immediate problem - which you showed - about it "rocking". My solution would be to start at the other "end" of where you were wanting to cut away the material/wood so both sides would be supported. Kind of how you did it in your solution: leaving the ridges then removing them with the chisels. But instead my way would be that you also have a "stand" that you put under the router to keep the correct height as the gap becomes too wide for the router's support. However: very nice job.
Brilliant! That stuff you're cutting up....timber I think its called....where do you get it? Im forced to make furniture from gold, silver, and other cheap metals. I can't afford timber anymore.
The second technique where he rips into the wood then flips it over to get the other side, will produce a lap that is 1/2 of the saw blade width too thin on each piece. The resulting lap will be 1 full saw blade thickness too thin.
Yet you saw that it came out perfectly so you must be wrong or he cheated and used special effects or deceptive editing. It's the former, you're wrong. You're ignoring two facts: he first lined up the side of the saw blade with the line he made on the timber so the first two cuts are to the required width exactly when he flipped the timber over he adjusted his fence to align the existing cut with blade
So it doesn’t matter what tool you use, as long as it does the job, you’re using the tool correctly? Sir I like the way you think. I’m taking this knowledge to college.
So that's how you use the router I often mess it up like how you shown it at first and even if I didn't, it has an uneven surface that I just have to sand or chisel it by hand
No annoying music, no talking, plenty of info, beautiful shots, masterful work.
I approve of this comment
Just annoying sped up audio
A secret for getting perfect depth laps on the table saw (using technique 1 and a scrap of the same thickness) - Raise the blade and make a cut at the very end of the board. Flip it over and take another cut leaving a tiny tenon behind. Keep raising the blade slightly, taking a cut on both sides. When the cut finally takes off the thin bit left behind it is the perfect depth.
I’ll do that. Cheers.
Why remove the riving knife at 0:28? The top of the riving knife should be below the crown of the blade and it should not interfere with the cuts you made.
I was wondering the same thing. No harm it’s not a through cut, but I’d still leave it on.
@@brian454454 While riving knives are most important for through-rip cuts, they do offer some kickback protection during any cut. One would have especially been important during the second cutting operation shown in this video (2:57), when a rip was made. A riving knife would help protect the user from kickback that may be caused by that non-through kerf closing upon the blade.... I'm not the safety police. If he doesn't want to use it, that's his decision and I won't nag him for it. I just thought it was strange that he took the time to remove it and I wondered why that was.
You don't need a knife for this job and it gets in the way.
Thank you! I thought same thing but I couldn't REALLY recall all the times it was critical vs detrimental... however it seemed like it wouldn't have hurt on any of his applications.
I must've learned SMTHN during all those hrs watching your vids ; ) 👍
@@StumpyNubs diffrent countries diffrent safety regulations, as a german trained cabinetmaker and joiner we were taught that the only cut that is allowed with out a riving knive is an undercover cut. But we probably have the strictest guidelines 🙄
If you go buy a table saw to do this watch that finger! I've known 3 masters that are missing it!
^^^ what is this guy on? Anyways, yeah it just takes a momentary slip of the mind and boom no more finger nub. It costs A LOT to reattach. Like 25k, although I could be wrong.
@Praise Jesus, Repent or Likewise Perish your comment reminds me of a guy at Lakewood church, I was a member of the most elite Christian Biker group, wearing my vest in the church restroom, I'm standing at the urinal pisding and he walks up to me trying to hand me a Christian tract. I'm like dude "I'm a Holy Ghost Christian at church on Wednesday night, you supposed to do that out in the highways and hedges. He got on me like you probably will that being in church doesn't make you a Christian. I'd say typing Scripture that doesn't have anything to do with the subject maybe, sometimes, maybe every now and then, possibly turns people, (people who have been hurt by religion) off. I don't mean to be rude but I am responding to your posting the best I can
Definitely helps that he has a SawStop Table saw.
@@gumecindogarcia1070 I saw the comment and thought maybe he was saying to turn to Jesus in case someone took a finger off and blead to death, lol. Buy yeah, otherwise pretty random and ineffective for most non-believers.
Most missing finger stories are table saw accidents.
5:28
I love that you showed how you left a ridge to keep the router level meanwhile, and then knocked it off!!! Beautiful!!
👍😁
That was my favorite tip in this video! I love router techniques, they can be as helpful as they are satisfying to watch!
Make sure you buy and have the proper blade before doing this. They are harder to find than you think. They are called flat top or square blades. I had to order one online as all 3 hardware stores did not carry them. They are nice though.
Plane it with the blade like they do at 1:40 but be really careful not to stick ur hand in the blade.
Strong agreement! I recently tried doing this kind of cut with an ATB blade - mistake! It removed the wood just fine, and quickly, but left lots of ridges. It took another couple of hours of plane & chisel work to make it all flat & smooth.
⁰
FLAT TOP BLADES ARE AS EASY AS GOING TO AMAZON.... LOCAL STORES ARE HISTORY NOW !!!!!!!
In my experience as a union carpenter, cabinet maker and woodworker hobbyist for 35+ years. I’ve found that to get the proper tools that perform on the level that the video shows. I buy my tools from tool distributors, not Home Depot or similar box stores or hardware stores. Tool distributors sell commercial grade tools, the chains and box stores do not. Online look for Rockler, Veritas, Granger, woodworkers warehouse. Good luck.
Using the rip fence and crosscut slide at the same time is advanced saw work. If you get a bind things are flying out of the back of the saw at hi speed. I wouldn’t want to be in the way or have to patch the hole in the wall.
I think because in this case there weren’t any off cuts, it’s reasonably safe? I would still hesitate to do it, but the waste is all sawdust so I think the risk of a bind is very low.
You should only use both when making non-through cuts like cutting a rabbet or dado.
My bet is I have 10x the time on a saw as you. Most of the stories from people with missing fingers start out the same as yours…
Let the pros handle that process, my fave way of doing tenons.
@@robslifting4life - lol-
I have hammers older than you.
I have worked on some pretty famous buildings. I have built the best of the best.
I still have all my fingers.
And things happen on a table saw faster than you can think.
I am saying don’t do it.
Put a stop block on the fence. But don’t cut with the board on both.
It works fine until it doesn’t.
This type of channel is exactly what I look for when I’m looking for wood working tips and instruction. Showing multiple ways of achieving the same result, basically using what you have at your disposal to accomplish the task at hand. I subscribed and liked the video before I even finished watching it.
Just be more careful than this guy is.. there are so many safety rules being broken here.. never touch the blade of a saw while it's plugged in, never grip the router by the base... and never pull out a piece of wood from the table saw in the same direction the blade is spinning.. safety first out there. Machinery is not your friend and it will bite you the first chance it gets. don't give it that chance.
not to mention he has to riving knife on his table saw.. it's only table saw safety device that actually does it job. the riving knife alone will save you from 75 of the stupid things you can do on a table saw.
You have to remove the knife for the technique he showed, and lots of other techniques such as running a dado. It’s perfectly fine to remove it under the correct circumstances.
@@randazzoworld8940 fair enough habits to promote and remember but keep in mind this guy knows a bit of what he’s doing.
The table saw he’s using is a SawStop tablesaw. It literally can’t come on when he’s touching the blade, or for 5-10 seconds after. There is a safety trip function in the switch. He would know this and feel perfectly safe touching the blade. That being said: you should always unplug your saw when changing blades and NOT touching the blade is still safer habit to keep. As most shops won’t have the SawStop saw.
As for the router many small palm routers like his have finger grooves molded into the base, and it helps keep the router from wobbling. It’s very hard to control with only one hand. The only thing he did that I wouldn’t have was place his finger under the still running router to showcase the gap there… I cringed a bit.
As for pulling the work stock from the blade backwards, you are correct that it’s bad practice, but again, the techniques he’s using somewhat force this method. If the operator is careful, skilled, and practiced, it can be done with relative safety.
Is still a great video, and earned a sub here!
Great safety concerns explained. Thank you all. My guess is video intent is to demo the different possible approaches.
Excellent video and techniques!
Cheers from London England 👍🏴
" If You Let Go Of Stereotypes, Your Level Will Go Up"
A Piece Of Life Wisdom That Goes Far Beyond Just Woodworking 😏
Yes, that is true😊😊👍👍
@Praise Jesus, Repent or Likewise Perish ratio
I hope safety is not stereotyping. Please don’t let that go by removing the riving knife. The riving knife doesn’t interfere with any of the operation in this video.
@@iknowgamingikg4025 well that didn't work
@@ipick4fun27 if you know what the riving knife is for then you should understand why removing it isn't an issue
Ça a toujours l’air si simple quand ce sont des " gens de métier " avec des années d’expérience et du matériel pro ... 😍
Спасибо что делитесь опытом, мне как новичку было очень полезно это видео
Спасибо за просмотр
Вредно оно тебе, как новичку
A master of lateral thinking. 👍
I don't even wood work. I just subscribed because of his high quality skills haha
Thank you very much.😊😊😊
디테일한 작업에 많은 정성과 노력이 있었음이 엿보입니다. 창의적이고 센스있으십니다. 영상을 보는 것만으로도 기분이 좋습니다.
감사합니다😊😊
Outstanding craftsmanship 👍👍👍👍👍
thank you
I don't even work wood. Why is this so satisfying!
😂😂
Happy New Year👍😉
I appreciate that you use an appropriate amount of glue and not just drowning the wood in it.
سلام دوست هنرمند من،بی نظیر بود کار شما،همیشه موفق باشید👏👏
😁متشکرم. روز خوبی داشته باشید.
This guy is absolutely talent-free 😂🤷♂️
Amazing video, amazing craftsmanship!!
First choice would be band saw but if you only have a table saw then why not! It obviously works!
I recommend a table saw rather than a band saw.
Another vote for the bandsaw here.
Excelente, sempre com conteúdos, aprendi uns truques com o amigo, fabuloso essa ideia!
Abraço aqui do Brasil 🇧🇷
obrigado por assistir
Brilliant!
Thanks for sharing these tricks
thank you for watching
Thank You for this video.very nicely done even without narration. These are great techniques which I will start using. Will make these joints easier and faster as well as more accurate. Greetings from Maine.
Thank you for watching.
I am cheering for you.👍👍👍
на 4:45 руки немощные прижать фрезер или увеличь площадку чтобы удобнее было прижимать. Всё равно на 5:22 когда делал ты проход с краю вильнул фрезером. И стамеской всё равно резанул край на 5:43.
Beautiful craftsmanship 🙌🏼
Btw i agree with your caption 🔥
❤️ From Bangladesh 🇧🇩
Wow. I am now a old woman that had aspersions of designing and build furniture when I was a teen. If I was given the opportunity to learn from your instructions, … if only.
So many ways to skin a cat but yet us mortals still manage to constantly screw it up! 🤣
Beautiful work, doesn't matter how its done, as long as it works in the end! 🤙
В этом видео прекрасно всё, особенно красивые и идеальные досочки.
Спасибо за просмотр
I've just watched 2 of his videos and smashed the subscribe button...looking forward to watching lots more!
Subscribers are precious.
Thank you for being a valuable person.👍👍
Now this is great woodworking video👍 I just subscribed!!
thank you for subscribing👍
amazing work. as usual.
A pleasure to watch.🦊
Nice looking table saw
Could you use a trim router bit for the last part?
Many approaches, same goal.👍 Thank You 🙏
More importantly, same result
👍😊
Learning so much without a single word!
That last one I really liked. Cheers.
😊👍
I like the first method best... So simple!
Wish I saw this earlier than last month before making many of the same mistakes… thanks for showing corrections
I love this video.
It addresses my biggest pet peeve on wood working videos
I get really frustrated when I see someone use a single table saw blade to chip away a dado cut and then waste lots of time to chisel and maybe even sand that dado cut smooth.
I prefer to take extra time to use a router table as I can make a pass on the table saw, then move it to a separately set up router table. I feel I get a much better dado cut and the fit is much more secure.
But I also saw a few ideas I will try for the table saw.
So long as I don't waste lots of time chiseling the jagged table saw cuts away.
This video isn’t about the tools you do have, but about the tools you maybe just don’t have.
@@firewing1319 exactly. Not everyone has all the tools and this video shows a variety of methods to cut dado.
I absolutely agree. Excellent video. Thank-you.
Thank you. Happy New Year👍😉
Dado stack?
Good idea! Simple idea but very effective
👍😉
I appreciate the precision! 😍😍
Сначала думал херня будет, но с момента когда оставил ступеньки для фрезера - это было оч круто.
Лайкос заслуженный
Вы правы херня полная.
Мне с начала показалось херня полная...
Пригляделся,нет...не показалось 😂😂😂
Eline yüregine sağlık olsun süpersin👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
teşekkür ederim👍😊
The half lap is an under appreciated joint.
I never do any carpenting. I dont even know the name of the tool. But it was good recommendation, I watched it all.
Thank you for watching.
Awesome, now for the next 500 boards on my living room floor
Loved these, thanks!
Fingers waiting to be lost. Practice counting in Octal.
Never have so many fingers been risked to make a simple joint. It looks easy until you imagine one of the pieces flying off into space-dragging your fingers where they don’t want to be.
That router idea, great idea!
😊👍
Grate techniques, beautiful work! 👍🏻
😉👍
Nice, good work.
Amazing 🤩🤩🤩
Excellent, thank for sharing.
thank you for watching
Great techniques!!!
J'ai pas de scie sur table mais j'ai un routeur, j'ai beaucoup appris dans cette vidéo merci 👍👨🦽💨
Merci d'avoir regardé
the router one was so good. using that now.
이런 센스와 노하우라니!👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
😊👍감사합니다.
Why do you scratch it lightly with your square when you are dry fitting it?
I imagine that was to demonstrate that the fit is tight and flush.
@@Lawrence330 thanks I was also looking for this
Прикольно. Пользовался циркуляркой подобным образом несколько раз. Проще использовать самый примитивный фрезерный стол. Приятно было посмотреть на результаты😀
You can tell he's a master craftsman not only by the roughness of his hands, but also the way he casually runs his finger through the empty space under his router inches from the bit while his router is running @4:40. I'm comfortable with my tools but that would still freak me out a bit lol Great vid man!
Thank you for a good look. Have a nice day.😊👍👍
Indeed. Safety should always number 1 priority, no joke. Accident comes with bad habits.
Does anyone know what that tool was called that he used to mark a perfect line along the side of the board? I need to get one.
Marking gauge
@@lectricdolphin7265 thank you
How to cut three oversized inaccurate lap joints.
선생님 아니 스승님으로 모시렵니다
유익한 영상 감사합니다 👍
Great demonstration on how useful a good tablesaw can be. As well as some good tips to avoid mistakes with a hand router. Thanks 😀👍
👍😊
Love watching you its so cool what you do
You make drawing the lines look easy. Im still in practice mode
Здравствуйте. Благодарю за видео, у вас очень качественный контент. Подскажите, пожалуйста, какое масло вы используете? И, правильно я понимаю, что вы работаете только с дубом? Если нет, то подскажите какое масло для других пород используете. Буду очень вам благодарен за помощь, как начинающий совету мастера.
Master said in another video comment that he uses linseed oil & tung oil...
😎👍☘️🍺
@@peterfitzpatrick7032 Bro, thank you so much! 🙏🥳🥳🥳
Gracias , me sirvió bastante este vídeo, saludos
Gracias por ver
I'm very impress with the work u did, even though I know nothing about woodworking.
But what shock me most is that u can reply the comments with hundreds or thousands of languages.😂
thanks for google translator😂😂
У нас в России каждый ПТУшник такое исполнить может,давай что нибудь посложнее
😁😆😆
Good skills. Thans for share.
thank you for watching
Just so good 👏
With the router when you did it, I saw the immediate problem - which you showed - about it "rocking".
My solution would be to start at the other "end" of where you were wanting to cut away the material/wood so both sides would be supported. Kind of how you did it in your solution: leaving the ridges then removing them with the chisels.
But instead my way would be that you also have a "stand" that you put under the router to keep the correct height as the gap becomes too wide for the router's support.
However: very nice job.
1:07 the forbidden chocolate cookie
Mantap dan keren👍
Brilliant! That stuff you're cutting up....timber I think its called....where do you get it?
Im forced to make furniture from gold, silver, and other cheap metals.
I can't afford timber anymore.
😢😢😒
What brand and model table saw are you using?
So much time, energy and noise for the simplest joinery.
Loved the ending. Wasn’t big fan of the first few techniques although I have seen them before.
These are good tips. Is that router blade dull enough or do you think we should try to cut some gravel with it before tackling a fine project?
Good video !
The second technique where he rips into the wood then flips it over to get the other side, will produce a lap that is 1/2 of the saw blade width too thin on each piece. The resulting lap will be 1 full saw blade thickness too thin.
Yet you saw that it came out perfectly so you must be wrong or he cheated and used special effects or deceptive editing.
It's the former, you're wrong. You're ignoring two facts:
he first lined up the side of the saw blade with the line he made on the timber so the first two cuts are to the required width exactly
when he flipped the timber over he adjusted his fence to align the existing cut with blade
He reset the fence
Somebody get this man a track saw
Two words: dado set.
I'm a bit confused of why let go of stereotype is a woodwork related thing...... But I will take those words to my heart just for living
😂😂😂👍
My biggest suprise was that laminate router going thru that much hardwood in one pass,. Thanks for the video🔨
thank you for watching👍😊
Laminate is harder than wood
와...남는부분 손질 너무 좋아요...
난 왜 이런거보면 막 설레일까 ㄷㄷ
😁😁👍
Ok, but what were you making?
방금 뻘짓하고 이 영상을 보게 되니 화가 나네요TT 별 거 아닌게 아닙니다~ 잘 배우고 갑니다!
시청해 주셔서 감사합니다😁😁👍
So it doesn’t matter what tool you use, as long as it does the job, you’re using the tool correctly? Sir I like the way you think. I’m taking this knowledge to college.
I need to get a router…for a lot of reasons nice work sir
Brilliant 👍 thanks for sharing, This has helped me
Stereotypes hold us back so much
Yes, that's right
So that's how you use the router
I often mess it up like how you shown it at first and even if I didn't, it has an uneven surface that I just have to sand or chisel it by hand