Without explaining how you laid out and cut the initial kerf, you stop the whole process there. Without that, the rest of the video is without purpose.
Great Job would you consider oling the wood first to make the cut cleaner ? and how did you cut the groove in the dowel used to cut the nut we all wont to know agai well done
You can soak the nut in linseed oil after drilling the hole. It would help with the cutting but since you take such small bites it leaves a pretty clean surface as is. For the dowel I marked out the pitch using the right size piece of paper taped to it and cut the groove with a handsaw.
Roy Underhill said that the tear-off edge of pin-feed printer paper made an excellent guide for the thread progression. Yeah, try finding pin feed printer paper these days! Hah!
Any 1/2" wide strip of paper or poster board will work. Just wrap it around like a barber pole and trace it. You will get two wraps in one inch( 2tpi).
Another way to go is to wrap a 1/2" wide strip of thick paper or poster board around the dowel at an angle like a barber pole. That will give you two wraps in one inch or 2 tpi. Wrap the paper so that the edges butt up against each other. Tape the ends. Trace in between the strips.
You didn't really show how you got the initial spiral groove used to advance the shaft when turned. I figured it out by stopping the video. It's all in the angle at which you mounted the old saw blade. That would be the lead angle and sets the lead = distance the nut travels after one turn (for a single thread). You should emphasize that. It's the most important part and your starting point.
Just use tape and any proper angle. You'll get it really easier that way. You can also use a drill to turn it out and stand the angle if you're too lazy like me.
When drilling with a hole saw, if you drill a few relief holes for the sawdust to drain away then it will be easier. Try marking out you hole, and the drill the relief holes with a 1/4" bit, or maybe a somewhat larger one. When cutting the threads , oil or wax will help with lubrication.
There are few other techniques on YT but they require immersing the wood in oil for 2 weeks. This method does not require such effort. Well done! The final result is nice.
You would want to saturate the wood with oil in any case as it makes the wood much more resilient to wear (both hardens the fibres and self lubricates)
Nice job. It would be cool, too, making a thread box (aka die) to make the spindle rod threads as well. While I like metal acme screws just fine I have often thought of Mike Dunbar’s bench with its wooden screws and I think my ‘next’ bench will have wooden screws in the vises. For 25+ years I’ve been using a barely 52” long cobbled-together bench made with scraps from a jobsite dumpster. The vise screw came from a shattered metalworking vise that a ski area shop was throwing out with an 18” piece of LVL for a jaw. It works but I’d like to remake it a little more ‘professional’ to appear commensurate with my quality of work. Nice wooden screws in a bench that doesn’t look like it came from a dumpster (ha ha!)
I recommend using an olld wool sock or pantyhose for the final buffing. They will shine whatever you have made to a nice gloss and really sets the wax into the wood especially if you generate enough heat from friction while buffing. Cheers.
Thumbs down cause you did not show you make the initial thread pattern? You did not explain the cutters how you made it? Try a tooth brush or a finger nail brush to apply the oil and waxing processes. A shoe polish brush would work for the hard wax also for buffing out! Good results though!
He already explained above that he wrapped a thin piece of paper around the dowel to make the spiral and mark it and then cuts the groove with a hack saw.
Depois de um ano, provavelmente já encontrou algumas maneiras para fazer. Mesmo aqui nos comentários podemos encontrar boas dicas, mas também em outros vídeos que mostram e então complementam o que possa ter faltado neste. Este vídeo me foi muito útil, mas já separei uma pequena lista para aprender o máximo de todas as etapas. Boa sorte e bons projetos, Vilma!
Thank you.
I'm just getting into woodworking, and videos like this one are why I found an interest in the first place.
👍🐯👍, the way the nut is cut is a traditional method. Good job. Thanks for sharing. Cheers.
Hi Jimmy, how did you set out the initial kerf on the blank you use to tap the screw box?
Without explaining how you laid out and cut the initial kerf, you stop the whole process there. Without that, the rest of the video is without purpose.
Clever way to incorporate the router in making the screw threads!
Nice Work Jimmy!!!
Brilliant and very well thought out for a great result.
You should leave the wood soaking in oil over night. Then when you cut the threads. You will get a way cleaner and smoother cut.
Nice video!
It`s very cool job!
Amazing!
Great Job would you consider oling the wood first to make the cut cleaner ? and how did you cut the groove in the dowel used to cut the nut we all wont to know agai well done
You can soak the nut in linseed oil after drilling the hole. It would help with the cutting but since you take such small bites it leaves a pretty clean surface as is.
For the dowel I marked out the pitch using the right size piece of paper taped to it and cut the groove with a handsaw.
@@Jimmy-O-Show thanks mate i understand now
@@Jimmy-O-Show Practical. Creative. Simple. Wonderful.
Class.
What is the method of marking and scribing the original dowel that cut the nut?
Roy Underhill said that the tear-off edge of pin-feed printer paper made an excellent guide for the thread progression. Yeah, try finding pin feed printer paper these days! Hah!
Any 1/2" wide strip of paper or poster board will work. Just wrap it around like a barber pole and trace it. You will get two wraps in one inch( 2tpi).
but how did you cut the groove in the dowel used to cut the nut
I marked out the correct pitch with a specific size piece of paper wrapped around the dowel at an angle and then cut that groove with a hand saw
Yeah that is kind of a crucial step don't you think? Your explanation is fairly minimal throughout. Just saying.
@@orbodman You're being generous, at that. Maybe I just missed it, but that crucial point seemed to be absent altogether.
So beautiful
This is great.
“Oh, like a screw” 😎
these nuts!
@Дмитрий Бербраер, кажется тут для тебя видос запилили ) Вовремя конечно )
Me gustaría APRENDER Hacerroscas
on a lathe at an increased thread pitch is done without problems ...
"I just made a dowel with a groove in it..." Well, that's a mystery!
I was about to ask the same thing how he made that dowel
Another way to go is to wrap a 1/2" wide strip of thick paper or poster board around the dowel at an angle like a barber pole. That will give you two wraps in one inch or 2 tpi.
Wrap the paper so that the edges butt up against each other. Tape the ends. Trace in between the strips.
If you mix the linseed with turpentine to about 50/50 and brush it on, the oil penetrates in to the wood more deeply. Let it dry before waxing.
When I made my wooden screw I didn't use a router, just carved them with a chisel and file. Took a lot longer than yours, but it worked.
You didn't really show how you got the initial spiral groove used to advance the shaft when turned. I figured it out by stopping the video. It's all in the angle at which you mounted the old saw blade. That would be the lead angle and sets the lead = distance the nut travels after one turn (for a single thread). You should emphasize that. It's the most important part and your starting point.
Yes the pitch of the thread matches in both the block and on the screw itself. You can make it whatever you want but 2tpi works good for me
Just use tape and any proper angle. You'll get it really easier that way. You can also use a drill to turn it out and stand the angle if you're too lazy like me.
When drilling with a hole saw, if you drill a few relief holes for the sawdust to drain away then it will be easier. Try marking out you hole, and the drill the relief holes with a 1/4" bit, or maybe a somewhat larger one. When cutting the threads , oil or wax will help with lubrication.
There are few other techniques on YT but they require immersing the wood in oil for 2 weeks. This method does not require such effort. Well done! The final result is nice.
all depends if you want to do by hand or not.
You would want to saturate the wood with oil in any case as it makes the wood much more resilient to wear (both hardens the fibres and self lubricates)
You totally lost me.
10:00 looks like a brush would be helpful.
i am interested in making one of these but i cant really follow your beginning process. you have to spell it out for us newbes
thanks
Nice job. It would be cool, too, making a thread box (aka die) to make the spindle rod threads as well.
While I like metal acme screws just fine I have often thought of Mike Dunbar’s bench with its wooden screws and I think my ‘next’ bench will have wooden screws in the vises.
For 25+ years I’ve been using a barely 52” long cobbled-together bench made with scraps from a jobsite dumpster. The vise screw came from a shattered metalworking vise that a ski area shop was throwing out with an 18” piece of LVL for a jaw. It works but I’d like to remake it a little more ‘professional’ to appear commensurate with my quality of work. Nice wooden screws in a bench that doesn’t look like it came from a dumpster (ha ha!)
Thanks for sharing your knowledge we except more.
God bless
I recommend using an olld wool sock or pantyhose for the final buffing. They will shine whatever you have made to a nice gloss and really sets the wax into the wood especially if you generate enough heat from friction while buffing. Cheers.
The so called ‚underwear shine‘ 😎
@@bruettingmarcus I think he could be hose lover
She's going to search for these underwears everywhere and never find it out.😅 @@bruettingmarcus
Nicely done. Also check out Carter's Whittling, he uses the same method.
I think I'll do it myself this week. I just got instructions from Woodglut and I'm ready for it: D
Thanks I've been looking for help on that thing for long time it's really helpful man !
você conseguiu mais um inscrito🙏🙏🇧🇷💯
Nice work but short on explanations. Hard to follow.
Woodglut Blueprints has some very useful blueprints with all the details you need.
Very good job, congratulations and best regards. Thank you 😀.
Thank you for the like 😀.
But how do you lay out the thread width and angle in the first place??
Depends on the pitch you want. 2 tpi means across the width of the screw the threads would move up .25" that should give you your angle
Well done!
You didnt tell how you made those metal slicers and what was the machine setup at time of threading.
Dowel with a groove…most important part that isn’t explained??? “I just made that” doesn’t help much.
“
Good
The fact that you don't describe how to make first dowl is a huge oversight mate.
Thumbs down cause you did not show you make the initial thread pattern? You did not explain the cutters how you made it?
Try a tooth brush or a finger nail brush to apply the oil and waxing processes. A shoe polish brush would work for the hard wax also for buffing out! Good results though!
He already explained above that he wrapped a thin piece of paper around the dowel to make the spiral and mark it and then cuts the groove with a hack saw.
Good job my friend 👍🤪
So...you make a wooden screw by using a wooden screw to make a nut, and then using a nut to make a screw. Why didn't I think of that?
We all though that... Simple get complicated sometimes.
It would last longer if you finished it with CA glue - it hardens the wood.
Better use a real wood clear finish instead. But yeah
Thanks. I really need to make one myself. Will have to give it a try.
Nice!
Muito camuflado, tem medo de revelar como fazer?
Depois de um ano, provavelmente já encontrou algumas maneiras para fazer. Mesmo aqui nos comentários podemos encontrar boas dicas, mas também em outros vídeos que mostram e então complementam o que possa ter faltado neste. Este vídeo me foi muito útil, mas já separei uma pequena lista para aprender o máximo de todas as etapas.
Boa sorte e bons projetos, Vilma!
Sexy AF mate. Great job.
You forget to give credit. @Carter's Whittling made that a decade ago.
Clever, economic and simple. Will give this method a shot! Did you try and match the cutter blade you made with the router bit?
Very interesting. But it would be more interesting to make a video about how to make a precision metal screw without a machine.
"Can you see that". Did he expect an answer?
Better make a metal one, lasts longer.
why didn't you show how you laid out your thread pattern? You could have showed a drawing and a formula sketch. why didn't you?
If you want a certain pitch you just need to measure an angle at 1:6 in inches for 1 rotation moving 6 inches.