Great video , very creative and resourceful way to sand juice grooves. Tools designed for many different applications.Will definitely try this. Thx. Brother!!
Greetings. I have enjoyed to see all the ideas that you came out with. I can tell that you are a very bright and full of innovations. It looks like that any field that you are going to pursue will have a great success and satisfaction. I wish you luck and continue with your great work.
great tip on raising the grain on the juice groove then hit it again with the router at the same depth.. question about the thin strips. Are they face grain? Are all your pieces face grain to face grain? I am confused about putting face grain to edge on cutting boards. is that ok over time? I know not to ever mix end grain with face or edge but I can't get a definitive answer on face to edge glue ups. both long grain so should be ok?? anyway your boards are beautiful and definitely going to try one.
Thank you! The cutting boards in the video are face grain. I’ve made face grain, edge grain, and end grain cutting boards. I am by no means an expert, but I think you’re right on never mixing end grain with face/edge grain, mainly because of the issue of - when it comes time to flatten the board; unless you sand it flat, you don’t want to send a piece of end grain through the planer. I don’t see a problem with mixing face and edge grain. I’m sure some of my ‘edge grain’ boards have a couple of pieces of edge/faces glued together because I’m not the best at differentiating the two, and they have held up well. Regardless of the orientation of the boards, i.e., face grain glued to edge grain or vice versa, I think the most significant factor in determining a wood cutting board’s longevity is the quality of the glue joints.
Dude, these are clever ideas. Sanding juice grooves is such a pain
Great video , very creative and resourceful way to sand juice grooves. Tools designed for many different applications.Will definitely try this. Thx. Brother!!
Great tips that will keep me in the groove, thanks.
These are both inspired ideas - and useful for much more than just the juice grooves. Thanks for sharing.
Thank you, I use the multi-tool sander for sanding inside of curves or odd shapes
Awesome ideas especially for multi tool 👍
Amazing idea 💡 and thank you for sharing. 🙏
You're a genius!
Thank you!
Greetings.
I have enjoyed to see all the ideas that you came out with.
I can tell that you are a very bright and full of innovations.
It looks like that any field that you are going to pursue will have a great success and satisfaction.
I wish you luck and continue with your great work.
Thank you for this excellent and very helpful information.
Good method worth trying...thanks!
Wow! This is so much better than how I've done it. Thanks! You've got a new subscriber.
It’s definitely saved me a lot of time and frustration 😅
Some good ideas. I’ve struggled with sanding them. I recently got a cnc and I’m hoping that will significantly improve my grooves.
Awesome tricks! Thanks!
Very clever, will defiantly be trying this
Very good idea with a multifunctional machine, my problem is the hardness of the wood, the router starts
Brilliant man. Thanks for the tip!
Wonderful tutorial Bro.thanks a lot
Harbor freight makes some little rolls of sandpaper like you made for the rotary tool you should check out
I’ll have to check that out 👍🏼
Que ideia top amigo! Parece até brasileiro fazendo nossas gambiarras! 😂😂😂😂
great tip on raising the grain on the juice groove then hit it again with the router at the same depth.. question about the thin strips. Are they face grain? Are all your pieces face grain to face grain? I am confused about putting face grain to edge on cutting boards. is that ok over time? I know not to ever mix end grain with face or edge but I can't get a definitive answer on face to edge glue ups. both long grain so should be ok?? anyway your boards are beautiful and definitely going to try one.
Thank you! The cutting boards in the video are face grain. I’ve made face grain, edge grain, and end grain cutting boards.
I am by no means an expert, but I think you’re right on never mixing end grain with face/edge grain, mainly because of the issue of - when it comes time to flatten the board; unless you sand it flat, you don’t want to send a piece of end grain through the planer. I don’t see a problem with mixing face and edge grain. I’m sure some of my ‘edge grain’ boards have a couple of pieces of edge/faces glued together because I’m not the best at differentiating the two, and they have held up well. Regardless of the orientation of the boards, i.e., face grain glued to edge grain or vice versa, I think the most significant factor in determining a wood cutting board’s longevity is the quality of the glue joints.
Great information, thanks!
Love these
Great video!!
Thank you!
Genius!
Clever,great idea,Thanks
Great ideas!
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