Another way to cut the folding miter is to use a dado blade tilted to 45 degrees. That's what I was going to do in the first place, before I noticed the V-groove bit. The V-groove bit takes longer to make the cuts, though, and router bits get dull a lot faster than blades. While it takes some time to cut the folding miters, it takes no time at all to assemble - just fold and tape the miters. This method would work just as well for larger drawers made from thicker plywood, but you'd want to use that dado blade instead of the router bit to speed things up.
If you had it to do again, would a table saw kerf help the router work more efficiently? It shouldn't be too difficult to keep that kerf within the envelope of the final cut, so long as it's only half or 3/4 the total thickness.
My table saw won't take a dado stack (AFAIK), is there a way to accurately do it with a normal blade? Or in this case is the router bit the better option?
@@MelbourneClimbingSchool I would imagine a regular table saw blade with an ATB grind (each alternating tooth leans left, then right) would work, but you'd have to use 2 different rip fence settings. If you cut a kerf with one of these that's not all the way through, you know the bottom of the groove has 2 'points' with a raised ridge in the middle. So to use that, tilt the blade over at a 45 degree and set the height on a piece of scrap of the same material as your boxes, so that it is just shy of cutting all the way through, with the rip fence set at the shorter distance, from the edge of the blank to the depth of the groove, with the ATB kerf cutting its topmost 'point' into the point of the V-groove. Then flip the scrap blank around, and set the rip fence at a longer distance, equal to going from the top of the V-groove to the opposite edge of the blank, making sure the opposite 'point' of the ATB kerf is nestled up into the point of the first cut, and cut out the remainder of the V-groove. So to batch them out, do all the short 'rip fence distance' cuts on all the blanks first, then flip them around, set the fence to the longer distance, then cut out the remainders of all the V-grooves on that run.
Very good little project. When I worked in a cabinetmakers we had a twin rail saw with 4 small blades that made the 45 degree cuts . It was from the 1960’ and was an extremely dangerous machine. It caught many an experienced machinist out. 🇬🇧👍👍
Cedar fence boards. Just one more example of the versatility of this material and an inspired mind. When I see all the utility that John brings out from wood, I stand deeply in awe.
I tried this today to make a small pencil box. So easy! And the miters fit together perfectly. I love tips like this! Thanks! I will be using this again to make a small parts cabinet.
I've been pushing that method for years, but noticed none of your YT woodworking brethren trying it. Glad to see you're among the very first to take it seriously!
There's side to side space saving. Doing it this way made it possible to fit all 12 drawers under the CNC. I couldn't do that with dividers between the drawers.
I've heard it said that genius is the ability to perceive the obvious. The simplicity of this design using the up down arrangement to keep the drawers separate in the least amount of space? Genius. Whoda' thunk it!
Again just brilliantly thinking out of the box to produce a useful piece with an unusual twist that is both practical , easy to build and visual pleasing.Thank you.
This is so cool. Both design and technique. Always and ever increasingly jealous of how everything is ready for you jig/tool wise and how precise it all ends up. Thank you as always for the content and inspiration
I love the simplicity of this design John. It is something I know I can get several done in just a few hours. Ive been looking for something like this for my craft room and it will be perfect for the leather tooling area. I have tons of snaps in varing sizes and conchs of different styles and many other tiny pieces. I may even make several of these for the beads i use for jewelry making.Thank you for sharing this with us!
Compared to other drawer methods, this one has the advantage that you could potentially do it with a CNC machine and get almost ready-made drawers straight off the machine. Just need to glue them up.
I liked the use of the V groove bit to cut the miters for the drawers, it was very clever. Your builds always inspire to try to think of new ways to accomplish woodworking tasks.
Have been using this method for years - down to 3mm thick MDF the joints are surprisingly strong due to their close fit - the only thing not mentioned is that the router bit must be a 90° bit - you get odd results with a 60° bit - don't ask how I know.
Love the up-down offsets, and that it means there is no additional wasted space for drawer dividers. I had another thought - putting a shallow groove along the under side of the top panel about 1/2in back from the front edge. And in the top dividers too. That way when you pull the drawers out, they'll tilt down a bit for easier access.
That interchanging height of the sitting of drawers - ingenious! It saves quite a lot of horizontal space. Congrats. :) Nice build and a pleasant to watch video. Cheers!
You never fail to amaze me with your clever use of positive and negative space in such a way that the new form then functions damn near like magic. Thanks as always for ‘puttin it out there’ for us less creatively inclined splinter gatherers. Stay well and prosper.
Hi John, I gave it a go. I don’t have a router table and only have a cheap wood trimmer. But with careful clamping and guides, I did a pretty good job. The issue I had was removing the unwanted pieces cleanly, leading to a bit of an untidy fit. I’m thinking it’s because the router bit I used didn’t come to as sharp a point as the one you used. However, this method is a million times better that simply using butt joints or trying to cut the miter on the table saw. I think if I can source a better v-groove cutting bit then the end result may be even better. Thanks for the idea.
clever method for the drawer guides. I watched a video about five years ago on making drawers using a V bit and I made several which are holding up very well.
I'm not OCD but I would have planned so all the knobs were at the same height. I do like the idea for guiding the drawers that way. A lot less work than deviders between the drawers. Nice job John!
Great construction. Never crossed my mind to use a v bit and the up and down method. Your a very clever man.ill be trying that in my shop this weekend.👍thanx.
John your videos never fail to amaze me, I didn't expect much this time I've watched hundreds of drawers being made, but once again yours came out on top, that's genius.
Ah I love everything about this. Thank you! So creative and effective, in so few steps too. Looking forward to giving this a try as soon as I get around to building a little router jig 👍
Maybe I'll try CMT again. The last router bit i bought from them, the roller bearing cooked pretty quickly. I have 20 year old craftsman ones that still work perfectly.
Nice to see another joiner doing a lovely job . . . loving the height changing design. . . . makes it far more interesting . . . awesome . . . bet you really enjoyed making those . . . I know I will when I copy the design as I have been meaning to make some extra small drawers. So much nicer than drawer kits made from plastic . . . errr! Cheers
As one hoarder to another. The more drawers you have the more you can keep. Especially those things which were a pain to get hold of, and one day they may come in handy again. B-)
Very cool technique! We often build mitered boxes out of MDF for museum displays, I'm gonna try this metod. Btw, a fun method for managing those tiny knobs when cutting them on the table saw. Take the dust bag out of your vacuum cleaner. Clamp down the hose next to the saw blade and the little knobs will be safely collected by the vacuum. Stupid simple.
Once again, you have shown us an interesting, efficient project to us. I can’t wait for my garage to empty out so I can make the most important tool I need… a rolling tool cabinet and carpenters toolbox. Then I can take my power tools out of storage and build stuff!
Another way to cut the folding miter is to use a dado blade tilted to 45 degrees. That's what I was going to do in the first place, before I noticed the V-groove bit. The V-groove bit takes longer to make the cuts, though, and router bits get dull a lot faster than blades.
While it takes some time to cut the folding miters, it takes no time at all to assemble - just fold and tape the miters. This method would work just as well for larger drawers made from thicker plywood, but you'd want to use that dado blade instead of the router bit to speed things up.
John, I like that drawer seperator idea. Been wanting to try the bend plywood drawer also. Thanks
If you had it to do again, would a table saw kerf help the router work more efficiently? It shouldn't be too difficult to keep that kerf within the envelope of the final cut, so long as it's only half or 3/4 the total thickness.
@@joelhollingsworth2374 Yes, good idea :)
My table saw won't take a dado stack (AFAIK), is there a way to accurately do it with a normal blade? Or in this case is the router bit the better option?
@@MelbourneClimbingSchool I would imagine a regular table saw blade with an ATB grind (each alternating tooth leans left, then right) would work, but you'd have to use 2 different rip fence settings. If you cut a kerf with one of these that's not all the way through, you know the bottom of the groove has 2 'points' with a raised ridge in the middle. So to use that, tilt the blade over at a 45 degree and set the height on a piece of scrap of the same material as your boxes, so that it is just shy of cutting all the way through, with the rip fence set at the shorter distance, from the edge of the blank to the depth of the groove, with the ATB kerf cutting its topmost 'point' into the point of the V-groove. Then flip the scrap blank around, and set the rip fence at a longer distance, equal to going from the top of the V-groove to the opposite edge of the blank, making sure the opposite 'point' of the ATB kerf is nestled up into the point of the first cut, and cut out the remainder of the V-groove. So to batch them out, do all the short 'rip fence distance' cuts on all the blanks first, then flip them around, set the fence to the longer distance, then cut out the remainders of all the V-grooves on that run.
I like the up down offset. Gives it some unique visual interest.
Thanks Jay :)
@@JohnHeisz you could stick some labels on the guides with the contents of the drawers 😃
With a face plate added, you'd never know and you regain the horizontal space that dividers usually take up!
@@RickMeasham 👍👍😊
Super clever
that up-down arrangement is so clever! It's simple, solves a problem, looks neat, and is just so... simple! Love it!
😊😊👍
Very good little project. When I worked in a cabinetmakers we had a twin rail saw with 4 small blades that made the 45 degree cuts . It was from the 1960’ and was an extremely dangerous machine. It caught many an experienced machinist out. 🇬🇧👍👍
Cedar fence boards. Just one more example of the versatility of this material and an inspired mind. When I see all the utility that John brings out from wood, I stand deeply in awe.
I tried this today to make a small pencil box. So easy! And the miters fit together perfectly. I love tips like this! Thanks! I will be using this again to make a small parts cabinet.
That’s what I call thinking outside the box! Very clever John!
I've been pushing that method for years, but noticed none of your YT woodworking brethren trying it. Glad to see you're among the very first to take it seriously!
Perfect for little drawers that won't need to hold a lot of weight. I like the staggered drawer heights, saves space. Great project John.
There is no space savings. Looks cool though
@@rd-ch1on in the total width of the set there is 3.75 inches of saved space not having a divider between each drawer. How do you not understand that?
@@KipdoesStuff How about the vertical height? Do you not see that wasted space?
The up/down drawers are genius. Allowing the drawers to be placed with no divider between them really saves space.
A bottom rail/tongue for each drawer would do the same and save even more space. Funny looks tho.
@@constantinosschinas4503 Exactly how would that take less space? Thinner? These could have been a bit thinner as well.
@@rd-ch1on I agree. The look is great. I admit that it might not be for everyone, but not everyone will build this. 🙂
There's side to side space saving. Doing it this way made it possible to fit all 12 drawers under the CNC. I couldn't do that with dividers between the drawers.
@@rd-ch1on horizontal space is being saved due to the lack of traditional dividers.
I've heard it said that genius is the ability to perceive the obvious. The simplicity of this design using the up down arrangement to keep the drawers separate in the least amount of space? Genius. Whoda' thunk it!
As a long time subscriber I am very happy you found a sponsor that is relevant to you.
Good workJohn, you must lay awake nights thinking of this stuff. Keep on smilng.
Have I ever told you how amazing your ideas are? They are.
I'm always dumbfounded at all the gadgets you make for your machines.... yours and Jay's videos have helped me on my woodworking journey!
Sometimes simplicity is genius. You knocked it out out the park with project! Thank you.
Again just brilliantly thinking out of the box to produce a useful piece with an unusual twist that is both practical , easy to build and visual pleasing.Thank you.
I hope this goes viral. Thanks for the video John.
John you are master when it comes to building. You keep it simple and make masterpieces. Thank You
This drawer design with the staggered guides is very clever!
You're really underselling the drawer slide method there. It looks awesome and is perfect for that use case.
always a pleasure to watch you work. not only a fine craftsman but an artist.
Very nicely designed and made, love the simplicity of it!👍👍
That "UP-DOWN" was pretty innovative. Cool!
This is so cool. Both design and technique. Always and ever increasingly jealous of how everything is ready for you jig/tool wise and how precise it all ends up. Thank you as always for the content and inspiration
Hii sir
I miss your woodworking videos. You are a RUclips woodworking legend!
I love the simplicity of this design John. It is something I know I can get several done in just a few hours. Ive been looking for something like this for my craft room and it will be perfect for the leather tooling area. I have tons of snaps in varing sizes and conchs of different styles and many other tiny pieces. I may even make several of these for the beads i use for jewelry making.Thank you for sharing this with us!
love the self made router table but it was terrifying watching you use it
That up-down offset is so cool. Thanks for sharing John. Your videos are always inspiring.
Folks, NEVER click follow any of these spammers to other platforms or call the phone numbers they give you.
Thanks for this. This is great. I love the position of the drawers.
Compared to other drawer methods, this one has the advantage that you could potentially do it with a CNC machine and get almost ready-made drawers straight off the machine. Just need to glue them up.
Such a beautiful table saw, you did an amazing job. Very talented
I liked the use of the V groove bit to cut the miters for the drawers, it was very clever. Your builds always inspire to try to think of new ways to accomplish woodworking tasks.
Nice drawers! Really like the folding miter joints.
as a new wood worker , you inspire me , thank you
awesome thank you
Another great build I love the way you don't always follow the normal the up down of those drawers I belive will be in my shop one day I love it
One of the best tips I've learned in last 20 years is tape on miters. So much easier than clamps.
Я восхищена самой идеей! Как нужны эти маленькие ящики!! Мастер великолепный! Спасибо, что раскрыли свои секреты! Счастья Вам и здоровья!!!
Rosa, do you work wood?
@@stephen1137 юрист
Но очень люблю различные рукоделия. Были в родне столяры-краснодеревщики. Отсюда тяга к дереву, различным поделкам.
This is a lovely and delicate bank of drawers.
Beautiful work ( project and video ) and visual appealing. Great work John.👌
Thanks :)
That’s not just a good storage space but a cool looking one at that
Have been using this method for years - down to 3mm thick MDF the joints are surprisingly strong due to their close fit - the only thing not mentioned is that the router bit must be a 90° bit - you get odd results with a 60° bit - don't ask how I know.
😇😂😱wow John that’s clever and i like that the “dividers” work for 3 things at once 👍🏼❤️🇨🇦
The up/down dividers are a brilliant idea!
it looks cute
and the drawers design is also very impressive, thanks to those bent miters
Love the up-down offsets, and that it means there is no additional wasted space for drawer dividers.
I had another thought - putting a shallow groove along the under side of the top panel about 1/2in back from the front edge. And in the top dividers too. That way when you pull the drawers out, they'll tilt down a bit for easier access.
Folks, NEVER click follow any of these spammers to other platforms or call the phone numbers they give you.
I like all the home made tools and machines.
That interchanging height of the sitting of drawers - ingenious! It saves quite a lot of horizontal space. Congrats. :) Nice build and a pleasant to watch video. Cheers!
Brilliant! Thinking outside of the box (shelf) ...!
You never fail to amaze me with your clever use of positive and negative space in such a way that the new form then functions damn near like magic. Thanks as always for ‘puttin it out there’ for us less creatively inclined splinter gatherers. Stay well and prosper.
Wow. I have to remember this trick for making drawers. NEAT
I love watching your work. Thanks for the video
Genius, don't need clamps you always have innovative ideas.
Been using CMT bits and blades since I picked up my unisaw 20 some years ago. best blades and bits I've used.
Fantastic idea for small drawers. Now I need to order a sharp point bit.
In this video, we saw unique educational tips. We are waiting for your next video. thank you👌👌👌🙏
This is Genius. and genius is also beautiful.
You always have such clever ideas, and this is no exception. I'll have to keep this trick in the back of my mind.
Best projects ever. Love the way you explain. Thank you.
What a lovely little project John. The upper and downer alternating slider-stops are a great and fast way to use here! Many thanks!
That was very well done! I really like the drawers staggered, looks really cool.
Unique drawer arrangement. Very space efficient!
Nice job. I would never have thought of using a router bit to make folding mitres - but I will sure give it a go.
Hi John, I gave it a go. I don’t have a router table and only have a cheap wood trimmer. But with careful clamping and guides, I did a pretty good job. The issue I had was removing the unwanted pieces cleanly, leading to a bit of an untidy fit. I’m thinking it’s because the router bit I used didn’t come to as sharp a point as the one you used. However, this method is a million times better that simply using butt joints or trying to cut the miter on the table saw. I think if I can source a better v-groove cutting bit then the end result may be even better. Thanks for the idea.
That's a very nice design, thank you for sharing!
clever method for the drawer guides. I watched a video about five years ago on making drawers using a V bit and I made several which are holding up very well.
You always come up with those cool ideas! Very neat.
Congratulations from Brazil, i love your videos.
Great idea using the pointed bit and the drawer dividers.
Every time you say you've thought of something new and clever I think "yeah right, probably not" but damn it you're right like every time!
Beautiful and unique - Nicely done John!
I'm not OCD but I would have planned so all the knobs were at the same height. I do like the idea for guiding the drawers that way. A lot less work than deviders between the drawers. Nice job John!
👍👍
Very cool design, what a great way to make small drawers, would have never thought of doing it like that. Thanks.
I'm really digging the background tunes.
So satisfying watching your work. Keep it up man. Inspiring.
AS USUAL great ideas n creativity , thanx again !!!!
Great looking, very functional. Thanks John.
Great construction. Never crossed my mind to use a v bit and the up and down method. Your a very clever man.ill be trying that in my shop this weekend.👍thanx.
John your video production skills are high quality... your videos are pleasant to watch. I appreciate the attention to detail (as in your woodworking)
John your videos never fail to amaze me, I didn't expect much this time I've watched hundreds of drawers being made, but once again yours came out on top, that's genius.
Good job
Great video as always. I love your voiceover work for these, and the transitions to the ad portion for CMT and the Maker's Mob are seamless.
Such a cool idea for small parts storage
Loads of details work involved !!!
That is pretty slick 👍
Thanks :)
Ah I love everything about this. Thank you! So creative and effective, in so few steps too. Looking forward to giving this a try as soon as I get around to building a little router jig 👍
Very nice! You are a very skilled craftsman!
Very nice way to make drawers. Got to love those CMT blades too!
Wow!!! I'm going to try it today. Thank you!!!
Love the look of this. Great stuff john
what a bloody awesome project Thank you for sharing
Love the simplicity of these drawers - nice work
Maybe I'll try CMT again. The last router bit i bought from them, the roller bearing cooked pretty quickly. I have 20 year old craftsman ones that still work perfectly.
Hello friend
Nice to see another joiner doing a lovely job . . . loving the height changing design. . . . makes it far more interesting . . . awesome . . . bet you really enjoyed making those . . . I know I will when I copy the design as I have been meaning to make some extra small drawers. So much nicer than drawer kits made from plastic . . . errr! Cheers
Thats an awesome little box making trick. Ill have to give that a whirl. 👍
As one hoarder to another. The more drawers you have the more you can keep. Especially those things which were a pain to get hold of, and one day they may come in handy again. B-)
As another hoarder to you. Most of the times the day that it might become in handy, never comes lol.
That is brilliant and so simple.
Кайфанул от вашей работы и снятого ролика,однозначно Лайк👍
Very cool technique!
We often build mitered boxes out of MDF for museum displays, I'm gonna try this metod.
Btw, a fun method for managing those tiny knobs when cutting them on the table saw.
Take the dust bag out of your vacuum cleaner. Clamp down the hose next to the saw blade and the little knobs will be safely collected by the vacuum.
Stupid simple.
Once again, you have shown us an interesting, efficient project to us. I can’t wait for my garage to empty out so I can make the most important tool I need… a rolling tool cabinet and carpenters toolbox. Then I can take my power tools out of storage and build stuff!
Folks, NEVER click follow any of these spammers to other platforms or call the phone numbers they give you.
Mr. Heisz love your channel. When I get my shop up and going I'll have to order some plans from you as your knowledge is first-rate!!