Love your videos and the way that you teach. I'm a hobbyist and it's easy to forget technique between projects. 30 minutes with Sedge and a cup of coffee gets me right back into it, THANK YOU!
Excellent primer Sedge on what, at first glance, looks like a simple build. A lot of good nuggets here; wrapping grain, use of a card scraper, repeatable cuts, checking pre- finish with mineral spirits… A new woodworker would do well to watch this video numerous times to ingrain these techniques into their knowledge base. Thanks, coming from a cabinet maker for 50 years, you are a master craftsman!
Very nice project! I should have done that for my gear many years ago when I still had it. BTW, that Tom Silva postcard brought a smile...I remember retired Festool dealer Bob Marino telling me about his interactions with Tom long ago.
@@sedgetool , Yea, I really miss "Uncle Bob" being in the business. We had some good times including some pre-release frolic with the OF1400 and a "Festool-val" in my old shop with a bunch of woodworking friends getting demos and, um....er...spending some money. LOL
Love your videos Sedge 😊 One Word of caution (comming from an engineer): The odd metal things on the left side of the server are heat sinks. They need airflow to be able to cool the server. Without airflow the server may overhead...
Audio gear usually has a much lower power density so cooling isn't as much of an issue, versus servers where a medium power usage of a 48u rack is about 15kW. Road cases for touring with 19" racked audio gear pretty much always have enclosed sides, but have removable doors for the front and back.
One tip with these rails is that they do the powder coating after the threads are cut, so if you chase them with a tap or drive the screw in and out a few times with a drill, it will make installing the gear much nicer.
This is a great project video and your technique works for many different types of boxes. I would think that the TSV 60 KEB-F-Plus might be the best saw for the thin veneer Walnut plywood.
Sedge, great video. Very informative. Have you made a video about adjusting the alignment of the MFT factory set stops? When I set my table up for cutting with the fence, the track does not line up with the pin at the front of the table. Thanks
Another great video! Thank you! Do you have any tips on how to take the “wobble” out of the MFT table? Mine rocks a little from side to side when a little bit of force is applied to it. Maybe I just haven’t set it up correctly?
Well done Professor Sedge!
Thanks !!!!!
Thanks Sedge and Chris! I have to watch this again to wrap my head around it. Thanks Again
Our pleasure!
These days, building server / audio racks is a more useful skill than cabinets. Lol. Welcome to 2023. Thanks for doing this, sedge!
You bet!
Its great to see you do an actual build instead of a tool demo! Pleas do more !!!!!!
ok
Love your videos and the way that you teach. I'm a hobbyist and it's easy to forget technique between projects. 30 minutes with Sedge and a cup of coffee gets me right back into it, THANK YOU!
Awesome, thank you!
Excellent primer Sedge on what, at first glance, looks like a simple build. A lot of good nuggets here; wrapping grain, use of a card scraper, repeatable cuts, checking pre- finish with mineral spirits…
A new woodworker would do well to watch this video numerous times to ingrain these techniques into their knowledge base.
Thanks, coming from a cabinet maker for 50 years, you are a master craftsman!
Thanks 👍
Another Great Video and Tip from Sedge .
Thank you 👍and happy Sunday
Thanks! You too!
“Wiggability” definitely going into my vocabulary
wicked
Very nice project! I should have done that for my gear many years ago when I still had it. BTW, that Tom Silva postcard brought a smile...I remember retired Festool dealer Bob Marino telling me about his interactions with Tom long ago.
Very cool! Bob Marino ...what a GREAT guy !!!!
@@sedgetool , Yea, I really miss "Uncle Bob" being in the business. We had some good times including some pre-release frolic with the OF1400 and a "Festool-val" in my old shop with a bunch of woodworking friends getting demos and, um....er...spending some money. LOL
Even though I have no intentions of ever making any rack cases… this was still super helpful. Learned a lot. Thanks for sharing.
Thanks !!!!
Love this video, Sedge! Thank you sir!
My pleasure!
Fantastic video Sedge. Love that you showed the learning and corrective process when the ply turned out to be 17.8mm instead of 18mm.
Glad it was helpful!
Love your videos Sedge 😊 One Word of caution (comming from an engineer): The odd metal things on the left side of the server are heat sinks. They need airflow to be able to cool the server. Without airflow the server may overhead...
Audio gear usually has a much lower power density so cooling isn't as much of an issue, versus servers where a medium power usage of a 48u rack is about 15kW. Road cases for touring with 19" racked audio gear pretty much always have enclosed sides, but have removable doors for the front and back.
Thanks for the tip!
Brilliant video Sedge 👏
Thanks 👍
Some greats tip as usual. Thanks Sedge.
Glad you liked it!
We need a episode with your wife agreeing that you need more tools.😂😂
Wicked cool idea !!!
One tip with these rails is that they do the powder coating after the threads are cut, so if you chase them with a tap or drive the screw in and out a few times with a drill, it will make installing the gear much nicer.
Thanks for that GREAT tip !!!
This is a great project video and your technique works for many different types of boxes. I would think that the TSV 60 KEB-F-Plus might be the best saw for the thin veneer Walnut plywood.
Great point!
Thank you !
Wicked !!!
Sedge, great video. Very informative. Have you made a video about adjusting the alignment of the MFT factory set stops? When I set my table up for cutting with the fence, the track does not line up with the pin at the front of the table. Thanks
Not yet!
Another great video! Thank you! Do you have any tips on how to take the “wobble” out of the MFT table? Mine rocks a little from side to side when a little bit of force is applied to it. Maybe I just haven’t set it up correctly?
There is an accessory for the MFT/3 called cross members... it definitely takes the wobble out.
Great stuff! Maybe I missed it but I’m assuming you’re utilizing the scoring blade on the new track saw?
That is correct ... That is the saw I am using in the video .
Sedge, just admit to us and your friend that you had to wait for the ts60 to come out. We all understand 👊
OK
which size of Vick bit are you using in this project ?thanks
5/64
Great video as usual Sedge!❤.
Thanks! 😁
Data racks standardized dimensions from the much older (1000 internet years) rackable equipment customers - the phone system.
OK
Hey Moe, where's Curly in this episode? woob woob woob....
Nyuk...Nyuk