Woodworking Tricks You'll Actually Use || Helpful Woodworking Hacks
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- Опубликовано: 4 окт 2024
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BOURBONMOTHWOODWORKING.
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Links below to tools and supplies:
Magnetizer: amzn.to/3xBRAsF
Clamps: amzn.to/2OjyYUh
Square: amzn.to/2tiTPQr
Tape Measure: amzn.to/3b2rnDq
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Grizzly Tools:
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Planer: amzn.to/3xCzH7r
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Tip: when using a nail gun, put painters tape down first, then shoot the nail.... when filling the holes with wood filler, you only get it in the hole, not all over the hole. After drying, peel off the tape and all that is left is a tiny hole to sand.
Tip: You should always leave driver tips and marking pencils in your pockets so they get clean in the washer, and make the dryer sound extra cool with all the extra clanging.
As an appliance repair guy, I don't like you.
@@kirkusmigirkusBut you should! More money in your pocket. LOL
This has the added benefit of making your wife yell at you so you have an excellent excuse to drink more beers.. 😂🎉😂
I let my wife sort them into a giant bin of bits, coins and screws right next to the laundry machine. That way I can eventually get fed up and throw them all away right before I need them.
My wife is yelling at you now instead of me!
Some of these tips are things I wish I knew when I started as a carpenter... Brilliant! I know you are teaching online... I sure hope you are teaching in person.
One tip I picked up after watching a few of your cabinet videos - where possible, work in common dimensions. E.g. Cut all widths of the same size on the table saw at the same time. Then move to cutting all heights at the same time.
Another tip I have - on your mitre saw, sometimes you need to cut a repeated length for a few pieces (for example the bottom piece of a cabinet), and then you need to cut other pieces (like some supports along the back and top of the cabinet) that may need to be shorter - accounting for the thickness of the side pieces because the sit inside the side pieces (hopefully that made sense). When I do this, I cut the repeated cuts using using a stop on my mitre saw fence, and then I place two scrap pieces of the timber I’m using against my stop and cut the other pieces. This effectively removes the thickness I’m accounting for without needing to measure again.
That was your smoothest entrance to date 10/10 🎉
This is the second vid I've watched on this channel, and I'm already absolutely in love!
Keep up the great work 🖤
15:40. Why would you put a sparkling water sleeve over sparkling water?
And if you buy Athletic brand "sparkling water," it still tastes like "sparkling water" but has the same kind of kick as actual sparkling water!
I’d always wondered what the jointer would do to my fingers, handy tip!
Wonder what one takes them off cleaner,the spiral blades or the straight knives
I saw this happen when I was an apprentice back around 1975. Another apprentice was jointing plastic laminate edge banding to apply to a rabbetted edge. His fingers slipped down the banding and took two of his finger tips clean off. It was a busy commercial shop and those blades were honed sharp daily. Good lesson learned! Work smarter@
@@paulkribbs1701they both do a tidy job but the spiral takes a lot longer to get the slices out of all the corners if you don’t get it cleaned up before it dries. 👍
When I was a kid, we used to take wax paper and rub it on our metal slide. It was a game changer.
Same. My mom used to keep wax paper and old soft drink cups (this was the '80s; IDK if they still use wax now) in the car for when we went to the park. We'd sit on them and go down the slide. A few trips down and you'd be at risk of breaking an ankle on the dismount!
Why do I have the sledding scene from National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation in my mind now? 😄
We used potato chip bags (which were made with waxed paper) back in the sixties.
I am constantly blown away by the quality of your content. This video is exactly what it says it is - nothing but useful tips and tricks. I also very much enjoy your humor - you manage to make me chuckle a few times for every video I watch. Keep it up - you have a follower for as long as you choose to create content.
Wax for the table saw helps me out. Thanks for the tip sir!!! 👍💪🇺🇸
Back in the day, we would take a screwdriver and wrap it several times with wire and then touch both ends of the wire to the battery terminals to magnetize it. 👍🏼
as a wood carver, knife maker I have many sharpening stones.i keep glass window panes and mirror squares and reface my stones by putting a sheet of cloth backed sandpaper on the glass and rub stones back and forth, side to side and true my surfaces. doing this regularly so I always have a perfect surface for my , carving knives, chisels, pocket knifes. it doesn't take long .😊 papa wishing you well
So you score the chisels, the bevel will get steeper as you wear out the blade
Yeah exactly. I have a block with markings on it instead. I butt the edge of the jig against the edge of my block and then extend the blade to the marking. Does the exact same thing and I'm not marring the surface of my chisels.
Every 100 +/- some sharpenings, scribe a fresh line, it's not difficult
A friend of mine just marks out the lengths on a piece of scrap wood. As a bonus, changing jigs just means tossing that piece and marking out a new one.
When I wipe off Rubio Monocoat, I make a last wipe with a microfiber cloth without pressing. That removes any pigment excess, no matter they are in cracks or in tight angles. This ensures the whole finish is made of one single thin coat, better drying, better render. Greetings from France
The beard brush is the best tip! I just kept buying New DeWalt caps 😅
I definitely didn’t know about the nail gun one. Thank you!
This is a tip everyone figures out the hard way. I'm glad you learned before you messed up a job.
@@christopherpavlicas oh no, I’ve definitely messed this up several times. I just thought I sucked at getting the nail gun parallel lol
I've now seen two youtubes who had incidents with that helical-head joiner. One lost part of a finger, once lost three fingers. That thing is no joke.
Looking forward to getting a bourbon blade when I get back from Italy.
Seriously awesome tips. Game changer stuff for me I never thought of most of these!
That was the most entertaining ad for Square Space that i have ever seen!
Excellently entertaining video. Doesn't matter if you already knew these or not. Here's a couple tips I'll share.
Keep a chunk of bee's wax handy and drag your wood screws through before screwing them in. Helps lubricate and makes it easier to screw them in.
Put a piece of blue tape down along the length where you are brad nailing, and nail through the tape. Fill the set holes, scrape off the excess, and then remove the tape. In most cases, this will eliminate 99.9% of the glue leaving only a tiny bit to sand level.
Note: I didn't invent these tips. I learned about them from someone else, like my dad.
Good tips. Follow up question: Where do you buy your chunks of bees. And do you wear protective gear to prevent stings? 😜
@@SweetSillyFun Ah, yes. Good questions. One day, after leaving a window open while working in my shop, the sound of my table saw drew a swarm of bees in. They set up a hive under the saw and mind their own business until I need them. When I'm going to be doing some assembly, I just grab a chuck of them - yes, perhaps a bunch would have been a better word - and put them in my apron. They seem content there and are willing to come out and lubricate the screws whenever I need them.
Thanks for asking.
The nail gun tip is a game changer
Oh yeah, lots of good stuffs. I’ll try em. First hydration cover.
8:49... Was I the only one expecting him to wipe his hat with his actual beard?
Ha!!! that was the first thing I thought of
Kind of disappointed he didn't, actually.....
Me too!
Good to see the tips back, cheers Jason.
I just sat down with a good Irish whiskey on a Saturday night and see a new Bourbon Moth Video came out 5 mins ago, Life couldn't be better
The easiest way to remove glue squeeze out in my experience is a thin line of paste (or bees) wax on the sides of squeeze out before glue up. Let it cure and simply scrape it off with 1 pull. Even a plastic scraper leaves a glue free surface.
You can also remove squeeze out with a plastic straw cut on a bias while it is still wet/damp. Works great! I keep a bunch of straws on my shop.
Was going to write this!
I think he had that in another tips & trick video
@@iambear.6526 I never remember where I get the idea, so I'm horrible at giving credit where it is due.
Silly Washington has outlawed straws. Now have to smuggle them into my shop.
Tips worthy of a snack for the algo
The brad nailer. Genius!
Thanks! Ray
Safe table rollin after a few good sparklilng waters...NIOCE :)
Thanks for a fun "Tips & Tricks" video. I have used the magnetizer for decades and am surprised how many of my experienced DIY friends have never seen it. Works great. Also, for quick touch-ups on the beds of your tools, try neutral Kiwi shoe polish. It doesn't take up any room and contains carnauba, paraffin and microcrystalline waxes.
Tape measure trick is awesome
I've got a small tip to go along with the little magnetizer thing. If you don't have one of those handy but you need to get a screw into an awkward spot and you happen to have some gum you've actually got something that will work.
Chew the gum a little until it's not super mushy and pinch off a tiny piece. Then you stick that into the slot on the head of the screw and it should be sticky enough for the bit to hold onto it until you get it into place.
I wouldn't do this much in woodworking unless the screw isn't going to be really visible as it's sometimes hard to get the gum back out of the slot. Chewing gum like Wrigley's seems to work a little better because it's firmer but it likes to stay stuck more. Bubble gum like Dubble Bubble works too but it doesn't like to hold as well which actually makes it easier to clean off.
I know this is just a silly little trick but maybe somebody will read it and it'll help them out in the future.
The gum trick is a neat idea, actually. What I do is find a spare magnet (the rare earth ones work best) and slap it to the shaft of the drill or bit, and then the whole thing acts like a magnet. When you pull the magnet off, there's virtually no permanent effect. Also, the rare earth ones don't tend to fly off when the drill gets up to driving speed.
If you don’t have gum or a magnet, you can stick the screw thru a piece of masking tape and tape it to your bit
@@15X98 that's actually pretty genius and I would never have thought of it on my own.
I learned my trick messing with electronics like where you're trying to get the shell back on an N64 controller but you've gotta hold it in a certain orientation to keep everything from falling out of place so that might have not worked as well. Once I learned it, I never needed to learn a new trick because I've always managed to either find some gum or just brute force my way through.
I'm keeping your trick in the back of my mind though!
@@mattelias721 that's a really good idea as well!
I tend not to have magnets around though. Also, (like I mentioned in the other reply) I learned this messing with electronics and I have a pathological fear of having magnets near technology. I know most modern tech isn't bothered by magnets but I ruined two PS1 memory cards and two CRT TVs with magnets back in the 90s. I disappointed my uncle and lost a deep save in FF7 along with other games on the memory cards and made playing games a lot harder with the TVs so I just don't do it.
This is just personal to me but since I'm over-sharing, every time I see a DIY project or hack with magnets, I immediately dismiss that part because I know I'm not messing with them. Magnets go on the fridge and literally nowhere else for me. I won't even buy magnetic screwdrivers or driver bits if I know they're magnetic.
@@CeeJayThe13th That sounds like a painful mistake, dude...! I work with wood, so I'm far less worried about what the magnets do to that material.
Rock on!
Regarding your magnetic screwdriver trick: when I worked on marine electronics equipment I would carry a little ball of beeswax in my toolbox - a little dab of beeswax on the end of a screwdriver will do the trick! It works with non-ferris hardware such as certain types of stainless steel, plastic or composite, brass and nickel plated brass, etc.
As a guitarist, I really appreciated the jointer tip.
Okay, legit the chisel into a card scraper trick is really good to know.
2:15 "two inches is too long". Tell that to my wife 😭
Great nail gun stuff .....
Tom Byrne
The magnetiser works by aligning the particles in the steel to make them magnetic. If you pick up some metal shavings that are all over the place with something magnetic you’ll see it on a larger scale as they will usually stand on end. I’m not 100% sure about the demagnetiser but I’d say it’s safe to assume it works by making the particles face in all sorts of directions
Omg the Brad nailer trick! I never knew that.
Nice trick with the brad nailer. For glue squeeze out, I'll grab my chisel plane to get into the corner really tight. For the planer, I just use a melamine board which helps with snipe and has little friction for wood to run through.
Some nice tricks. Waiting for my knife/chisel or chisel/knife or chisel or knife. It will arrive way after my birthday
I learned the first trick the hard way .
I learned this when I was a cabinet maker at a small custom shop.
If you are building casegoods and cut a panel, stretcher or other lumber part just slightly smaller than the other pieces, use a piece of iron on edgeband to "shim" out the short piece. If it's a painted cabinet then this can be useful on all faces. If it's stained or clear coat then you'll need to make sure the edgeband isn't going to create an odd shadow line.
Love your channel so much 😂😂😂
There were some good tips in here! Thanks 👍
the way you handle that nailer reminds me of what happened to erin in final destination 3.
6:40 there's just one problem: as that chisel gets shorter, the angle will get steeper.
i'd just set a stop block at 20 inches. way more consistent.
Same with the marks but I figure it’s for people who aren’t going to get to that point. That or they progress and their ability goes beyond needing it.
When I was a kid, we used the wax paper trick on sliding boards at the playground to slide faster.
Hey brother will you do a video on how you put together your cut lists to reduce waste?
Squarespace better pay you well for that ad at the end
Jason that was one of your better rolls.
They're harder to come by now-a-days but a newspaper works well as a strop
I got a brand new brad nailer. Its a nice trick for this. Thanks Mate
Get a vertis chisel guide and it sets the angle and has a off set wheel so you can set your 2° with a turn of the wheel knob
Similar to the half-lap machine setup, when cutting mortises and tenons using the table saw, always cut from one side then flip the piece and cut the other side to keep the mortises and tenons perfectly centered.
I don't know if I'd ever seen a better ad than your shameless plug. That didn't last long bc the squarespace ad had the most unrelatable metaphors 😂 plus now I wanna check out squarespace
As far as website services go Squarespace is decent. Used it for years to host my photography website. I still had a custom site I worked on for my other projects but using Squarespace for the professional site was great
Scott brown carpentry does the best square space ads 😂
@@natepuksta662 did my comment praising Squarespace get deleted lol wtf
For squeeze-out, I use a triangular paint scraper. Rockler sells one for $18 with multiple heads, but you can find a cheap one elsewhere. Allows you to get in those corners without having to scrape away the wood. Especially important when working with plywood. I do this every day at work.
Fantastic video!!
I use balsa wood with a polishing compound for my strop. It works great.
Try corrugated cardboard. Thank me later.
To get a clean and uniform cut line on your sparkling water can, screw a utility knife blade to a scrap piece of wood whose thickness is the height of where you want to cut. If you project the tip of the blade out over the edge of the wood you have a perfect slicer, just put the can against it and turn it to have a nice even cut all around.
For glue clean up I take a straw cut a 45. Works beautiful
I needed that wax paper tip!
Tape measure pencil trick is genius.
15:00
a magnet by itself can do this, those oldschool u shaped ones work best.
I just bought the demagnetizer. Jason, you are funny. Thanks for the video.
Me too 🌞
In relation to sharpening your chesil. Every time you sharpen you are bringing fresh metal to the edge which is reducing the length of the chesil.
So a scord line on the back will put a slightly different angle on every time.
What you need is to set up a stop block so the distance from the honing guide to the EDGE of the chesil is the same every time
16:45 I do this but with a fine steel wool & paste wax. Works great & if buffed well doesn't effect the wood. Works well on any flat top tool or circular saw plate.
When it comes to woodworking tips and tricks, I always tell people to stay sharp or they'll end up in a knotty situation!
Being not a woodworker, I've been using the air hose trick all my life. And as soon as you said "A really good tip" at the jointer I said don't stick your *ick ticklers in there. Turns out you already knew that tip. Love the can tip. I was lazy and just poured up in a different can.
I want a screwdriver with a brass magnet tip😂😂😂
Another good trick for glue squeeze out in tight corners is to use a plastic straw to scrape it away before it dries. If you fold the straw you'll be able to make a sharp corner that removes all the glue. You'll probably still want to scrap it after in case there's any invisible residue but it'll make that task a lot quicker.
Lie Nielsen has free plans for an angle-setting jig that will work for every standard angle, will stay accurate as you continue sharpening your chisel or plane irons, and it's quite easy to make. That said, I love this angle finder trick for if you're out of the shop or cant find your jig.
Love the can trick ❤. I have to wait until I can get a bourbon moth blade but I want one. God Bless.😊 where’s your foreman?… miss him 😊
9:22. Craig does the intro graphics for each segment, doesn’t he?
Good tips.
Tip: @2:23 NEVER put your hand over the business end of a nailer! ESPECIALLY when it is connected to air and your fingers are so close to the trigger!
Another point about nail blowouts... you might have noticed that the nails can tend to follow the grain of the wood, especially in hardwoods. So keep that in mind too.
Not nail gun but regular nails my dad taught us when we were kids to turn the nail upside down and hit the point of the nail with your hammer. Dulling it up and then drive the nail into your wood. And then it won’t split your wood.
If you're concerned about glue squeeze out in the corner of pieces, I saw a good tip a while back. Place some painters tape along the edge before you assemble the pieces. Then any glue that squeezes out will be removed when you remove the tape
Love the tips videos, thanks!
I'm wondering when my Burbon Blade will be delivered....lol. it's been awhile man. I need my blade man !!!
Grub-Screw Drill bit Depth Stop Collars are just as handy for when you're using a chuck that is too deep!
Rubio crack residue… this is worth gold 🤘🔥🤘
16:00 That's Coors Light . . . The closest thing to water that's called beer.
Natural Light and Miller Light exist and I'd argue are slightly closer, but that's so marginal a difference I couldn't gauge if pressed on it ;D
Also known as porch beer
Wood glue and ketchup. I always have the tip of the wood glue bottle hardened with glue. So what I do now, is when I have an empty ketchup bottle (with this anti drip cap) I clean it and fill it up with wood gleu. Works perfect and makes it easy to dose the gleu.
Vic at DownUnderWoodWorks does that and I keep expecting for the glue to come out red.
I have not tried the ketchup (or mustard) bottle trick yet, mainly because I use sriracha bottles - most have that twisty green cap that seals and leaves a tiny amount that you just wipe onto your shirt or pants, like we all do. Sriracha bottles are kind of one-time use for glue, but in my house, there are always sriracha bottles being cleaned out. They also hold the exact amount of the 'standard' Titebond bottle.
You had me at brad nailer hack
I love shameless promotion. As David Sandler preached, "never let someone else do your selling for you."
Just instantly bought the magnetic thing need that
Leather crafter chiming in. It's odd since I work with leather that I'm advocating for something not leather lol, but if you don't have a strop or a spare piece of leather for your chisel, a piece of corrugated cardboard with some jewelers rouge works really good In a pinch.
Tip when crossing a one way street save time by just looking one way, Doog, Columbia SC
Tip when crossing a one way street look both ways incase someone is driving the wrong way, Doog, Emergency Hospital, SC
Best Woodworking Tips video yet! LMAO
Hi. I am new to woodworking and have watched a lot of your videos. I like your build style and methods you use. What would you recommend that I start building first? I am almost done with my workbench but I wanted to know your suggestions.
Use a vacuum to clean tools, don't use compressed air as it blows the dust and dirt inside the tool, switches, motors, etc possibly damaging parts and shortening the life of the tool.
you're forgetting to add the blade kerf using the tape trick, all you cuts will be consecutively 1/8" short. and planers are designed to feed the material, you never want to "push" the material through.
For setting the chisel angle just take a piece of plywood and with your chisel in the honing guide at the proper angel just glue a stop onto the plywood at the distance for each. Then all you need to do is put your chisel partially into the honing guide and but it up against the plywood and push the chisel until it hits the stop block and tighten it down.
Another tip with nailers...
Treat your nailer like a pistol. Don't point it in the direction of anything you don't want to hit! Like your head, neck or chest for instance. 😒
Top tip. When starting a project, get about 15 pencils. Leave some at the saw, some where you are working and a few in your pocket. If you look, most likely you already have one in your hand. 😂
Always choose the type with an eraser on the end!
@@robt2151 which end ?
Gotta love the silliness
Love the video, as usual. A perfect blend of useful tips and tricks, comedy, and sarcasm.
Question: A few of your mockups for the bourbon blade featured a black or gun blued chisel blade. Will you be releasing this as an option later?