Joggle stick? boat building method
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- Опубликовано: 12 дек 2020
- In this video i show an old boat building technique used to recreate complex shapes and curves. this process is typically used to make bulkheads, but in this video i use it to cut a small piece of wood with a curve for a project im working on.
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ruclips.net/p/PLEI-x8-OSztCPyUn_2mLwi0JzwzjunWaN
I love how you point out where you have made mistakes and offer advice based on your experience.
Thanks for sharing this old trick.
Terrific demo ! I have a small area to trace and will be constructing this exact tool tomorrow.
That’s a cool old school trick!
Cool idea
great video, a new friend here, greetings from Ecuador, my support for you
Thank you! ❤
A free form incremental scribe, handy.
If you only cut one notch and slid the marker in the slot, you can just slide it down the hull and mark the cardboard the exact shape or use dividers with a marker attached like a compass. This is interesting but way over complicated.
Maybe it would be clearer and quicker to cut notches only on one side of the stick? You wrote “top” on the stick, so I suspect your stick has confounded you before! Also, if you tapped some nails into the final board to mark the arrow points, then bent a bit of plastic conduit along the pins, you’d get one smooth long curve to trace for the final cut.
Thats smart, and yea definatly will do it on just one side next time!
Dose it do the same as a tick stick only the creation of this stick is unnecessarily more work to do
Someone apparently didn't know what a "ticking stick" was. There is absolutely NO reason to have so many notches going down each side of the stick.
Unless I am misunderstanding something, I believe this is more commonly called a tick stick. Unless it just depends on what country a person is from.
Yea differnt people call it by differnt names
You are right, my tick stick is much more simplistic so you don't spend so much time tracing.
Yep. "Tick Stick." Same general concept. But you just mark along one edge and the end, or perhaps an intermediate notch. Less fiddlin' about.
Here's a video a drywall guy made showing the Tick Stick method.
A couple of things:
1. He used a scrap of drywall for the transfer. The thickness of the board can affect accuracy, if you're not careful. Ram Board or paper would have been less an issue.
2. Always number your points (original and each stick mark), so you don't lose track.
ruclips.net/video/K2pvMS3jhAo/видео.html
"tick" or "ticking"
Very interesting and helpful.
Thanks! Do you have any projects coming up that itll help you with?
@@haydenfoy5723 I may be fixing another transom board for an aluminium jon boat. Would make the sides fit better. Also for a platform deck for the front of the boat.
Nice!
Is it an ancient method or is there some complicated concepts I do not understand? You could as well just trace it directly on the cardboard and create the exact shape.
For that to work correctly the stick would have to be at a right angle at every mark. Not easy to do visually.
Lol, there may be a situation when this would be more useful, but in the described situation, and since you already went to all the work to get your cardboard laid out next to your work, a simple straight stick with a single notch and a pencil would trace that curve directly to your cardboard. Lot less work.
not without being at 90 degrees along every path with the pencil and stick; nearly impossible visually.
Cool
Very smart
Interesting
You should ask an good old joiner how to scribe. You will after learning this, know how to do this type of job better, cheaper & faster with a great sense of satisfaction in your ability.
Agreed! A much simpler way for this shape would have been scribing with a compass.
You could probably make a simpler pattern with some glue and popsicle sticks. Cool idea though.
Yea definatly, i went a little over board with this one
Tell us the story of when the plyboard met "Jaws" ;-)
Very smart for copying the hull shape. Others use the same wooden plank but in stead of the joggle stick many small wooden pins nailed to the plank.
Interesting! They used the nails to mark it?
Generally called a spiling stick downeast... but I guess they say it different wherever you're at.
Yea, ive heard joggle stick, and tick stick before. Spiling stick is a new one
@@haydenfoy5723 *Nod, tick stick I've heard... Cheers!
yassuh, important when yer hangin' planks
@@jgeur Ayuh
its a ticking stick?
Yes! Some call it tick stick others call it joggle stick.
Tick stick is another name however were all from different places and to be honest it's called a jacobs staff...
Tell us the story when the plywood met jaws is the best comment so far.... Lol.... Wow sorry bro
Tick stick.
I just use dividers and scribe it in.
JIM
Whats a divider?
@@haydenfoy5723 a compass...similar to what you used in geometry class
@@jgeur i dont think a compass will work quit the same
@@haydenfoy5723 sorry for the miscommunication. a divider is not a compass but "looks" like a compass and operates in a similar fashion. i did a quick search and found this article that may help. blog.lostartpress.com/2017/12/29/spiling-batten/
Not sure I understood what I saw.
What are you confused about?
I found some amazing plans for Woodglut. Just check them out.
Cool idea
Thank you!