North Missouri Woodworking with Jace Webber - Burial Urn

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Комментарии • 8

  • @ernesttaylor908
    @ernesttaylor908 2 года назад

    This video was very helpful.

  • @MrDoodsie56
    @MrDoodsie56 4 года назад

    Excellent video, Jace!

  • @robertdubuc3880
    @robertdubuc3880 3 года назад

    Hello, Nice video, well done with humour. Can you explain how the Top is fixed with screws ? You haven't went thru these explanations ! Regards, Robert

  • @TheSafecrkr1
    @TheSafecrkr1 5 лет назад +2

    That was a very nice video. I've never seen anyone make the mitered corners on the router table before.
    I will say that I have seen quite a few videos and demos of installing keys to mitered corners.I learned to make dovetailed rails, like you used for your keys, while making drawer glides.
    Is there a particular reason why you didn't make the box the size that would accommodate the funeral home box ?
    I would think that the people receiving the remains wouldn't want to see the actual bag of their dear departed's remains. Just a thought.
    By the way, I really liked seing the out takes & mistakes. It makes you seem more human. Not like Norm.

    • @BossmanEight
      @BossmanEight 5 лет назад

      There is no "standard size" for the boxes that crematories use. It all depends on how heavy the deceased was. I've seen rectangular, square, and even round tube containers. I have always been asked to place the cremains into the urns that I've built so no family members have ever seen the ashes.
      For the record, cremation ashes look and feel like course to fine whitish grey sand. Nothing more, nothing less.

  • @daveerickson5313
    @daveerickson5313 5 лет назад

    Is that a simple chamfer bit in the router table?

  • @jerryjansen2953
    @jerryjansen2953 3 года назад

    Don't do it!