I appreciate how much you give to the community. I feel very blessed that there are knowledgable people who share their skills and encourage others to make stuff. Thanks!
I like what you said at the end there Jon. Woodworking IS a slow and deliberate process. Some out there feel the need to slap things together in order to feel productive. But the end result is what usually suffers. Thanks for your high standards.
Leave the jig on and use that as a guide to trim the rounded corners square. Do you find that there is less of a chance of the glue joint done with epoxy telegraphing up thru a paint finish than one done with PVA like Titebond 1? Wouldn't an elliptical patch show less than a rectangular one?
Man, I couldn't help but stare at the high quality of the plywood for your jig. The edge shows no imperfections, and pretty thick, consistent layers. Are you still using Garnica plywood or was that just sponsored at the time? I don't think I can get plywood that good here in Sask, Canada.
Great video - so clearly presented. Also, i noticed that you don't have a riving knife on your table saw. I thought they were always recommended. What is your guidance?
Great video Brutha, my question is why the epoxy and not just some titebond or elmers... oh and I went Mountain biking for the first time in a long time and it reminded me of the rides we use to do when we lived in Pompton...
Nicely done repair Jon. At first, I thought that you were going to butterfly the section that you were repairing. Either way, it looks great.............. :)
Dang Son. Showin off da skillz Jon. Very well done. All joking aside I got a dumb question. Did you use the router 7 jig for speed & efficiency over doing it all with a chisel. Or would attempting it with a chisel make a mess of things?? Either way it was a very cool video Bud. Hope all is well & Dirty Jersey out!!!
Disregard my comment in the sanding video, you answered my question in this video. And call me a weirdo but, every time you video from inside your home I pause it to see all the trim work inside. You home is Stupid Dope Fresh Bud!!! Very much an inspiration for what we're going to attempt in out house. One project at a time right Bud... Problem is I'm from Jersey and we're not the most patient ppl. Hope all is well & Dirty Jersey out again!!!
Dutchman comes from the Shipwrights, it’s for repairing worm holes and rot. Made lots in my time. You can drop the joint part. I’m surprised you didn’t reverse the router jig, round corners are nice.
Hi Jon, enjoyed this video a lot. And, I learned much. Thank you! ****Jon, I have a question: Recently while watching one of your videos on Framing, you mentioned the name of an Artist and friend of yours whom you make Frames for his art. I am an artist working in water color and mixed media. I can not recall the artist name. He is known for his work with high horizon lines. Please remind me so I may view his art. Thank you again!
do you mean the Vermont Artist view of Mt Mansfield at ruclips.net/video/tMLVkNGgQ5s/видео.html whole series of frame making near this site... use search for jon peters picture frame for others. excellent work...
@@WolfKat9 The video link you provided very briefly shows 2 paintings that were placed in the artist's home recently. Both had very high horizon lines in the paintings. No, I do not believe it is the Mt Mansfield artist. Thank you for your help earlier.
Interesting. I never heard about joke regarding being cheap/dutch. But there are thousands of joke here about it regarding scotish. I never understood why.
Something wrong with them machines, only a hum or a hiss. You need new batteries to power them up. When woodchips fly around they have to do that with sound!
The British made up lots of phrases to degenerate the Dutch who they were always fighting with, so someone making no sense when they were speaking were said to be talking double Dutch, a person who was only brave when they were intoxicated was said to be full of Dutch courage and a host who insisted on his guest splitting the bill was said to be going Dutch, I wonder if the Dutchman joint was just another way of pointing out their imperfections.
I appreciate how much you give to the community. I feel very blessed that there are knowledgable people who share their skills and encourage others to make stuff. Thanks!
Your belt sander reminds me of Fred Flintstone's car. What a beast that thing is.
That's the best way of making a router jig I've seen in a long time. Some much easier than cutting and shaping a cutout.
Nice patch. Good tutorial
I had a fully-equipped woodshop for 25 years. Now, I have a Japanese saw and a couple of planes. Withdrawal is hard, so I watch these videos.
and you probably would have done that twice as fast with just a chisel and a mallet ;)
Hi John! I see a Blåkläder sign on your fence! I`ve been working in Blåkläder for over 30 years and its great!
Love to see an old fashioned repair like this. The fit was perfect!
I like what you said at the end there Jon. Woodworking IS a slow and deliberate process. Some out there feel the need to slap things together in order to feel productive. But the end result is what usually suffers. Thanks for your high standards.
Curious to know how to decide epoxy vs. simple wood glue in a case like this? Thanks Jon!
Epoxy handles gaps better, wood glue requiers a tight joint
Thank you Jon, for an excellent tutorial; great job! I actually learned something today 👍.
Very good. I use a Freud FT1500 Inlay template guide set with router bit. Don"t know if its any faster but it works
Nicely done Jon. You did a very good job explaining all the steps.
Leave the jig on and use that as a guide to trim the rounded corners square. Do you find that there is less of a chance of the glue joint done with epoxy telegraphing up thru a paint finish than one done with PVA like Titebond 1? Wouldn't an elliptical patch show less than a rectangular one?
nice job but why not flip it so the grain direction matches?
Popped on here hoping to see some hand tool woodworking, but the results were still interesting to see.
As a true Dutchman: geweldig project. Vakmanschap
Great instruction for that method, Jon.
Thanks for sharing that
Flawless
Pretty cool tip!
I enjoy your work and teaching ability. That is why I joined the 'Makers Mob'.
Thank you,
Rick Harrell.
Thanks Rick!
Awesome work Jon! 😃👍🏻👊🏻
Jon, Nice work.
Man, I couldn't help but stare at the high quality of the plywood for your jig. The edge shows no imperfections, and pretty thick, consistent layers. Are you still using Garnica plywood or was that just sponsored at the time? I don't think I can get plywood that good here in Sask, Canada.
Great video!
@Jon Peters Nice work! A clean repair and the table turned out great! Cheers 🙂🍺
Great video - so clearly presented. Also, i noticed that you don't have a riving knife on your table saw. I thought they were always recommended. What is your guidance?
Nice job Jon! Thanks for sharing the video.👍👌😎JP
Great video Brutha, my question is why the epoxy and not just some titebond or elmers... oh and I went Mountain biking for the first time in a long time and it reminded me of the rides we use to do when we lived in Pompton...
Excellent, Jon. Thank you.
Very satisfying 👌.
Thank you !
I already know how to make a Dutch mans joint 😉
Nice!
Great work! You are my biggest inspiration, whenever I build something I use your techniques. Keep on going
Could this be done to IPE tongue and groove flooring?
Like 300 from Italy !👍👍👍👍. 👏👏👏. 👋👋👋
Excelente!, gracias a tu video👍
Nicely done repair Jon. At first, I thought that you were going to butterfly the section that you were repairing. Either way, it looks great.............. :)
Is there any specific reason why to use epoxy, rather than plain wood glue?
In this case I just wanted it to set up fast so I could continue to work. But if you have the time would glue would work as well.
Dang Son. Showin off da skillz Jon. Very well done. All joking aside I got a dumb question. Did you use the router 7 jig for speed & efficiency over doing it all with a chisel. Or would attempting it with a chisel make a mess of things?? Either way it was a very cool video Bud. Hope all is well & Dirty Jersey out!!!
Disregard my comment in the sanding video, you answered my question in this video. And call me a weirdo but, every time you video from inside your home I pause it to see all the trim work inside. You home is Stupid Dope Fresh Bud!!! Very much an inspiration for what we're going to attempt in out house. One project at a time right Bud... Problem is I'm from Jersey and we're not the most patient ppl. Hope all is well & Dirty Jersey out again!!!
Very Nice.!..........DD
Dutchman comes from the Shipwrights, it’s for repairing worm holes and rot. Made lots in my time. You can drop the joint part. I’m surprised you didn’t reverse the router jig, round corners are nice.
Hi Jon,
Why did you hang the Milwaukee drill bit box on the outside of your cabinet?
Love you’re work think I’ll join
Hi Jon, enjoyed this video a lot. And, I learned much. Thank you! ****Jon, I have a question: Recently while watching one of your videos on Framing, you mentioned the name of an Artist and friend of yours whom you make Frames for his art. I am an artist working in water color and mixed media. I can not recall the artist name. He is known for his work with high horizon lines. Please remind me so I may view his art. Thank you again!
do you mean the Vermont Artist view of Mt Mansfield at ruclips.net/video/tMLVkNGgQ5s/видео.html
whole series of frame making near this site... use search for jon peters picture frame for others. excellent work...
@@WolfKat9 The video link you provided very briefly shows 2 paintings that were placed in the artist's home recently. Both had very high horizon lines in the paintings. No, I do not believe it is the Mt Mansfield artist. Thank you for your help earlier.
Hi Bob, I found the Artist through viewing another video from Jon. It is Elwood Howell from East Hampton. Thank you again!
Thanks Tay....yes Elwood Howell
In the U.K. they are known as little joiners.
👍
😎👍
Is it called a Dutchman joint because you're too cheap to get another piece of wood? ;-) I'm Dutch, so I can say that.
cjpenning it was slang for dovetail in the old time.
Cjpenning: hahaha. I was just going to ask if that is what “Dutchman” is referring to.
Interesting. I never heard about joke regarding being cheap/dutch. But there are thousands of joke here about it regarding scotish. I never understood why.
Hahaha me as a dutchman think oo what kind of joint hi is gone roll
Pardon me Jon but it's a Dutchman _patch_ surely? Calling it a joint just helps confuse what these are for.
Something wrong with them machines, only a hum or a hiss. You need new batteries to power them up.
When woodchips fly around they have to do that with sound!
So a butterfly?!.
My lament = there is nothing fast about woodworking.
-carpenter
The British made up lots of phrases to degenerate the Dutch who they were always fighting with, so someone making no sense when they were speaking were said to be talking double Dutch, a person who was only brave when they were intoxicated was said to be full of Dutch courage and a host who insisted on his guest splitting the bill was said to be going Dutch, I wonder if the Dutchman joint was just another way of pointing out their imperfections.
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