Good build video. During the first few cuts at the miter saw I noticed that you were trying to hold the wood on the right side of the saw blade with your left hand while using your right hand to guide the saw. That is a bit awkward, and places your left arm in the path of the saw blade if the saw jumps during the cut. Later in the video you switched to holding the wood to the right of the saw blade with your right hand and using your left hand to guide the saw - this is a much safer approach, but likely feels a bit odd if your right hand is your dominate hand. You found the safer approach, though I thought that I would point this out to viewers in case the switch over to the safer approach was not noticed. I use a radial arm saw more frequently than a miter saw (I own four radial arm saws, but only three are currently usable). With those types of saws, you must absolutely make certain that no portion of an arm ever crosses the cutting path of the saw blade. As such, when possible I try to have the cut off piece that needs to be held positioned to the left of the saw blade so that I am able to use my right arm to both pull and hold-back the saw as it cuts a board, and hold the trapped board with my left hand. Unfortunately, radial arm saws have much less usable table space to the left of the saw blade than to the right, so it is somewhat common to have to set up the stop block on the right side of the saw blade, thus requiring the left arm to both pull and hold-back the saw as it cuts a board while holding the board that is trapped between the saw blade and stop block with the right hand.
Can’t remember if you have or have said if you have a dedicated shed or have room on your property for one, like a Home Depot type prebuilt so you could store spare wood that way. I’ll bet if you did have the room you would have already thought of it seeing how your thoughts work. That cart will get super heavy and unwieldy but it’s not like you are going to be moving it far or that much so it’s definitely worth the efforts.
Good build video.
During the first few cuts at the miter saw I noticed that you were trying to hold the wood on the right side of the saw blade with your left hand while using your right hand to guide the saw. That is a bit awkward, and places your left arm in the path of the saw blade if the saw jumps during the cut. Later in the video you switched to holding the wood to the right of the saw blade with your right hand and using your left hand to guide the saw - this is a much safer approach, but likely feels a bit odd if your right hand is your dominate hand. You found the safer approach, though I thought that I would point this out to viewers in case the switch over to the safer approach was not noticed.
I use a radial arm saw more frequently than a miter saw (I own four radial arm saws, but only three are currently usable). With those types of saws, you must absolutely make certain that no portion of an arm ever crosses the cutting path of the saw blade. As such, when possible I try to have the cut off piece that needs to be held positioned to the left of the saw blade so that I am able to use my right arm to both pull and hold-back the saw as it cuts a board, and hold the trapped board with my left hand. Unfortunately, radial arm saws have much less usable table space to the left of the saw blade than to the right, so it is somewhat common to have to set up the stop block on the right side of the saw blade, thus requiring the left arm to both pull and hold-back the saw as it cuts a board while holding the board that is trapped between the saw blade and stop block with the right hand.
Can’t remember if you have or have said if you have a dedicated shed or have room on your property for one, like a Home Depot type prebuilt so you could store spare wood that way. I’ll bet if you did have the room you would have already thought of it seeing how your thoughts work. That cart will get super heavy and unwieldy but it’s not like you are going to be moving it far or that much so it’s definitely worth the efforts.