@@jakehanneman6956 heat + normal epoxy= no bueno gases, just use rubber grommets for feeding heated water lines through sheet metal (rubber grommets for stems/ what size piping/tubing you need is another). ntm they are cheaper than epoxy ($1.50 vs $2.99 for ok epoxy) and are resistant to chemicals under heat. this way you fry less brain cells overall, dont kill customers, and makes it so the stem moves a little if you bump it vs 1 soild hunk of piece. epoxys only benefits imo is it doesnt require you to measure stuff and you know where its at in the hardware store.
@@doodlebug6833 you reallyyy don't understand how I did it. But don't tell me I'm killing my customers. Last time I checked a tube of epoxy got almost a dozen made from the smallest tube around. Not to mention with all my buddies together chain smoking wax, even after being heated up repetitively over a half hour, the stem never even got luke warm. If the stem moves it breaks easier because it chips out the edges of the hole. I tried it that way before and grommets don't work with how I do it.
Hey Wranglerstar =) here is a little trick from my grandpa. Every time you trill to a very smooth surface, but some (painters)-tape on it. It graps the drill bit and you dont slide way, while trilling. It also prevents tear out. Thanks for the cool vids. Nice Greets from Germany =)
this might be a bit late, but if you haven't found out already.. Never try to drill tempered glass, it will explode!! Found that out a few years back when trying to drill the bottom glass in my aquarium :(
Not watched the full video yet, but I was taught to use masking tape on the surface of the tile to mark your hole centres and to prevent your masonry bits from wandering. Works wonders.
I've used the Bosch set on my tile. It took awhile, but they did what I wanted. I only needed to drill 2 holes and question just how many holes a single bit can drill. It was certainly slowing down after the first hole. Our tile was much harder than your subway tile, based on what I could see.
I know this guy who had a power generator stolen while he was using it. He was working in Philadelphia in one of those big warehouses, and his job was to go in clean, strip, and rewax the floor. So he had floor cleaning machines, and it was easier for him to just run a small generator outside, and plug into it with extension cords. So he is there using his machine, and next thing you know the machine kicks off. So he looks thinking maybe he tripped the switch, or the circuit breaker on the machine. No that doesn't do anything. So he goes outside, and where his generator was sitting is now just a bunch of plugs unplugged, no generator. So he is like WTF, so he is looking around and sees a taxi sitting at the top of the street at a stop sign. So he starts to walk towards the taxi hoping maybe the guy saw something, but he figures by the time he gets to the taxi it will have driven away. But he keeps getting closer, and closer, and it is still just sitting there. As he gets closer he can hear the man in the back yelling just go man, why are sitting here, drive now. So he gets to the taxi and say someone stole my generator sitting on that side walk, did you see anything. The taxi driver says yeah the man in my back seat stole it, and it is in my trunk. The guy gets out and takes off. So the taxi driver tells him I thought something was suspicious, he flagged me down around the corner, and asked me to take him around he had this heavy generator he didn't want to carry. So he drives around, and he is suspicious because it is still running, with stuff plugged into it. So the guy shuts it off, pulls all the plugs, throws it in this taxis trunk, hopes in and says lets go. So now he is really suspicious, why was it running, why didn't the guy go take any of the stuff plugged into it. So when he drives up to the stop signs, and looks in his rear view mirror, and sees this guy with a puzzled look on his face, he knew the guy stole the generator, and so he sat there and waited for the guy to come up to him.
@@Mic_Glow RE: aaaaaaaaaaaaah Sanchez Eve North Dauz Hicks Eve Loop Piles 0110101011001101001010 11.17.84.93.75 Krossection intersection B.K. Rescue M. South Saudi
@@inhumanfilth681 I'm 16 and none of my friends even know how to use a drill properly there not going to figure out drilling bottle to make a bong. And I totally would never do that lol
Tempered glass will shatter. The reason it's tough is because the whole piece is pulling on itself from the thermal shock of the tempering treatment. If you introduce a void, it implodes.
Yeah, tape is a MUST if you want to accurately drill. I use the Bosch professional range of bits (painted blue) and they made perfect holes in my tiles but I had to use tape so it wouldn't wander.
No you cant drill tempered glass cody.. laminated glass yes but not toughened or tempered. That type of glass will turn to a million pieces all over your shop floor..
Yep, the tempering process puts glass under tremendous strain, causing it to "blow up" when it does break. Think of it like surface tension on water, it's harder to break the surface tension with a widely dispersed load. The difference with tempered glass is, once that surface tension is broken, it's game over for that piece of glass. So you can take a spring loaded center punch, and easily pop a piece of tempered glass, but try swinging a sledgehammer at it, and it will probably bounce off.
If u cut at the temp the glass was tempered u can as long as its a cobalt diamond bit that's hot as well. U may say it makes the diamond softer but so is the glass. U just have to cut slow in an oven under drill press. Boo yah!
With over 100+ years combined years of family members in the union glass trade you can't cut or drill tempered glass. Unless you want alot of glass diamonds.
Weedus, no they are not. When tempered glass breaks it will go into alot small chunks of glass. Tempered glass aka safety glass is used in doors, sidelights next to doors, patio doors.
Hey Wranglerstar, just want to say thank you for letting us in to your life. I watch your videos because you share a lot of the values and believes my family had when growing up. Lately it seems like these believes are almost shunned, its nice to know there is still a huge community that holds the same values as my family did when i was younger. Love hearing your thoughts on all the latest pop culture and problems we are facing. Ignore all the a-holes who complain about your idea of homesteading not matching theirs or people complaining about product placement. Most of us come here to hear your thoughts.
The glass and tile bits I use look more like a primitive arrow, with the arrow head attached to the shaft, if that makes sense, they work really well. In a pinch you can take a regular masonry bit and and sharpen it to much more of a point, with a sharp edge to it, most masonry bits are not sharp on the cutting edge, because they do their job by percussion, not cutting.The plumbers putty dam works good, but I've done the same thing with just a bit of wet paper towel. The core bit, next time put double sided carpet tape on the back of your guide board so it does not move around on the tile, they you can concentrate on keeping the drill steady, not doing that and keeping the guide board in place too. I'm enjoying this series. Cheers from Tokyo!
I wear my welding gloves when opening blister packs... Them sharp edges will get you! The blister pack is sharper than the cheap knives inside the package hahah.
A Dremel tool with a pointed diamond bit makes a great starting point for glass drilling...no wandering of the drill bit. As someone else pointed out, a carbide surray makes the holes much smoother without chipping or spalling.
Hi Copy I was taught a "Hack" for drilling tiles, first mark the point where you want to drill with a sharpy of some other pen. then cover the mark with a strip or two of clear adhesive tape (Sellotape), the bit will not slide on the tape and will let you penetrate the outer layer of the tile without the drill bit starting to slide
Glass is an amazing material I. Lived in a 200 year old farmhouse in Minnesota when I was a boy. The windows in the house were old old counterweighted with giant cast iron weights in the frame. The panes were twice as thick at the bottom of the pane as the were salt the top. Glass is a slow moving liquid.
Yeah you're spot on. The slack-jawed Snowflakes here in the UK would have been deeply offended by the sight of his exposed danglestar and complained to the police. The thieving scumbags would have received tax payer-funded psychological support and Cody would have been banged-up in a maximum security prison for at least five years.
frankjackson8 couldn’t have said it better myself! Oh and I have been laughing for the last five minutes for the greatest word ever! “Danglestar” Bloody brilliant!
First of all, I really love this new series. Second, im a glazier, to drill through glass you need to drill through from both sides to avoid those little chips(they're called shells) and temperwd glass can not be drilled or cut because of the process it goes through to become so strong it has a load of stress in it, and it actually "blows up" if you try. You can actually see the stress points in temperd glass if you look through polorized lenses, the surface will lool wavey, and the corners(if its a square or rectangle) have little rainbow things, ita quite cool to see. Hope this helps
Useful information there, I did think that about tempered glass, but now I know not to attempt it. I suppose any drilling has to be done before the tempering process.
Open your blister packs with a band/jig saw, whenever one is available. My first boss did it, and I never forget to go to the band saw for all sorts of things, now. Just wish I had one for the kitchen.
When drilling glass or glass bottles, using a drill press (when possible) and light pressure works very well. I've used clay and Play-doh to form a reservoir around the drill site.
Never drilled glass, but a simple masonry bit has always worked well with a bit of tape on tiles. Those specialized bits can be pretty expensive around here so we tend to make do
The French Bottle LOL That reminds me of an Old Rifle I have a WW II collector's item. It's a French rifle Mas Model-36 NEVER SHOT AND ONLY DROPPED ONCE. 🤣🤣🤣🤣
I hate Mas 36 rifles. They are pretty cool with the bayonet but the bolt could be the cleanest a mas bolt can be and still be worse than a mosin. The coolest part about the gun is definitely the bayonet and the way it just fits inside.
I used to cut glass for a living. We used a drill press to be more precise on the glass. And we had a rubber donut that held the water. Also tempered glass will "blow up" if drilled into, or chipped on the corner. Plate glass can be drilled.
Those Bosch bits are amazing for drilling into tiles. Use em every single day to drill multiple holes and they still last a week or two in softer tiles. Not so hot if you have floor tiles but still better than almost anything else.
For tile, I used standard masking tape over the areas to drill, a couple pieces over the areas and it worked. This was on a existing wall tile. In a rushed environment to get done.
I do a lot of flintknapping and make some eccentric pieces every now and then when a customer orders one. if you study some native American and old Egyptian stone drilling methods (flint is silica based like glass) you will find out a piece of cane/reed/bamboo with some pitch glue and fine sand will go through rock fine. it is basically the grandfather to the tool you were using, pretty cool how things come full circle.
I’ve been making lamps from large glass whiskey bottles and the Milwaukee bits have worked really well for me. This was a great video. I appreciate videos like this, when I started it was all trial and error lol.
I use that bosh set when i hammer drill in the wall so the tile stays in-tact and does not shatter. The normal practice is to punch a center hole on mark for wondering bits. The problem, tile is like glass and can shatter causing you to do a lot more than just drilling a hole for something. Most public bathrooms all use some sort of tile where you need to hang stuff and those Bosh bits are very handy for that.
Well you see wen you live 67 miles away from the city it's not convenient to drives all the way over ther for a peace of glass wen you a set of this drill bits and some glass bottles il just make my own for the time being until I have to go to the city to get some groceries or something and il get a new one.
sometimes those pipes look stupid tho, would be better to find a cool looking vintage bottle and turn it into one, it looks a little less 'bong-like' plus you made it custom!
For the piece of wood to position the core bit, make it bigger and then stick it to the tile with some good double sided tape. Otherwise you get what you saw where it was sliding around when you were trying to start the cut. This can also work for the other bits but not as well. For water, take a sandwich bag and snip off a small part of a lower corner. Fill with water and seal it up. Now just tape the bag to the wall above where you are cutting and let it drip down onto the bit as you cut. the thickness of the bag can make it drip too far away from the wall but a piece of tap dangling over the end will deflect it back into the wall.
Lol yeah no kidding and endless supply huh. Gotta keep buying them when will it end lmao. Just like the shower I guess just repeat until you run out huh lol.
For that jig for the hole saw, you could use a "ultimate luthier's trick" with masking tape and superglue. Put a piece of masking tape down on the piece you are drilling or working on, making sure it's longer than your jig. Line up the jig and mark where the tape touches the jig. Put tape on the jig that faces the work piece. Burnish the tape down on both pieces. Apply superglue to the tap of one and activator on the other. Carefully line up the jig and press it into place. The jig will not move latterly. To remove just pry up the jig. Tape comes off with no residue like you can get with some double sided tapes.
Harbor freight cheap diamond bits for a dremel worked real nice for me. Take the round bit at an angle to create the hole then enlarge it with the other bits
I would like to add how holes were cur in glass before carbide bits. Tape the glass build the dam and add sand to the water using a piece of soft copper pipe. We used a bit and brace but later changed to a drill press for more precise holes. The sand embedded into the copper making a cutting tool.
To stop a masonary bit wandering push it against the tile on your mark before you start the drill turning and rock the drill in a circular motion (like operating a computer joystick). The bit will crush a small indent and then when you start the bit turning it will not wander. Start slowly and make sure you keep the bit perpendicular to the workpiece.
you just cant puncture Tempered Glass with anything, or even scratch it too deep. reason is from tempering the glass the inside becomes a different hardness than the outside almost like a laminate. The inside "layer" now has an enormous amount of pressure built up within the glass itself. cut into it too deep and boom.
We use masking tape in an x form and use the small bit and go bigger. The masking tape helps to keep the bit still and stops the tiles from splintering.
"Nothing that you own is more important than a person's life" ... arguable. Property can be measured in years spent working to lawfully acquire it. When somebody steals property from you, they owe you that many years off their mortal soul.
It would suck to have your stuff taken, but if you believe in God and an afterlife, then killing someone over stuff will be hard to defend when questioned by God.
@@vu7419 Perhaps you are right, heres hoping that we never have to find out one way of the other. Especially if it involves our pets, I had a dog stolen when I was young, I know its a different story when its dog Vs. drill. But I might ask for a little understanding, maybe not mercy when met at those pearly gates.
If you need a really precise hole in ceramic tiles, you can do a small mark on the glossy surface with a center punch and then start drilling from there. That way your drill bit wont wonder at all at the beginning.
As someone who has drilled hundreds of 3/8” & 7/16" holes in wine bottles. The best way is to used the drill bits that are built like mini hole saws, encrusted with diamonds. And.. a small/slow drip of water(similar to the bottle drip used in this video)(but with a short piece of 1/4" tubing) Slow is fast. Gentle is efficient. 👍
i was making glass paned ant farms a while back. i used the diamond round bits in a crappy drill press. i hung 2-3 lbs of lead bars (weighted as needed) from string hanging on the drill press control lever to give light consistent pressure. each hole took 30 minutes or more. I had the same issue you did with the back side of the glass finally giving away taking a chunk of glass with it. i'd do 3/4 of the hole and then back down the weight for the final cut. always blew through at the end even with a wood backing. Not an easy thing to do.
Those funky looking offset EMT-style "cut anything" shears with the serrated blades that they sell at Harbor Freight and the like are great for blister packs. They will literally snip a penny in half.
The method that I've used to drill through tiles with masonry bits is to b4 when you go to start the hole is to stratch the tile glaze by placing a piece of tape onto the tile then rock the drill bit backwards and forwards by hand using a smaller drill bit similar to when u spot drill a piece of metal, then once you've done that you can then use the correct size drill bit needed to make the finished hole size
The best way I found to open those type of packages, if stick you fingers in the little cut out they use to hang them. So 1 finger for each side then pulled then apart like if you was opening a a bag of chips.
Great video, thanks! When I was still doing carpentry work, we always used the masonry bits with vinegar to lubricate them. I don't know why it's just how the boss said to do it. Use your heat gun on those stubborn blister packs...or fire, yeah fire will do the job! P.S. What scared that thief the most? You naked or the gun? LOL!
Thanks for the helpful video.....Less frustrating way to open blister packs is use exacto knife to cut 'U' pattern just inside packaging's outer perimeter or around packaged item's containment bubble then lift like a flap.
To open blister packs easily, use some old first-aid shears, the kind you will have in your paramedic kit to cut through cloths, etc. They will cut through most stuff pretty easily.
Two reasons for blister pack...makes thing harder to return and the package protects the item from salt-water mist when coming from China on a container ship.
just another great info video i always use a wet sponge when I'm grilling tile on walls holding sponge top of drill on against wall and slowly squeezing sponge as im drilling
I use the punctured water bottle but a 5 gallon bucket with a water catch when wet sanding A class fiberglass finishes..fresh water is key in my industry!
A good pair of fabric scissors, or fabric shears if you want to go a little overboard, can reduce those annoying plastic packages to shreds. Cheap ones will just break, but good ones won't even twist. They can even cut thru zip-ties and thick cardboard without problems. The ones with the zig-zag pattern to prevent fraying work, but are much harder to get it to cut, so just use the straight ones.
“French bottle shouldn’t put up a lot of resistance” HAHAHA 😂😂😂
hes such a boomer, france hasnt lost a war in like 400 years
nathan leather okay Frenchi boi
Except WWII. Haha, they even surrendered you nit wit.
@@Kcii-99 no he isnt and they havent won themselves. The only thing they're good at is surrendering...
@@Kcii-99 France is barely even a sovereign nation anymore. Not something that happens when you haven't lost a war in 400 years.
"what did we learn?"
That it's pretty easy to convert a bottle into a water pipe.
Yessir. Make some good money too. Just epoxy the stems in
@@jakehanneman6956 heat + normal epoxy= no bueno gases, just use rubber grommets for feeding heated water lines through sheet metal (rubber grommets for stems/ what size piping/tubing you need is another). ntm they are cheaper than epoxy ($1.50 vs $2.99 for ok epoxy) and are resistant to chemicals under heat. this way you fry less brain cells overall, dont kill customers, and makes it so the stem moves a little if you bump it vs 1 soild hunk of piece. epoxys only benefits imo is it doesnt require you to measure stuff and you know where its at in the hardware store.
@@doodlebug6833 you reallyyy don't understand how I did it. But don't tell me I'm killing my customers. Last time I checked a tube of epoxy got almost a dozen made from the smallest tube around. Not to mention with all my buddies together chain smoking wax, even after being heated up repetitively over a half hour, the stem never even got luke warm. If the stem moves it breaks easier because it chips out the edges of the hole. I tried it that way before and grommets don't work with how I do it.
I enjoyed the hole drilling but my thumbs up goes to the story.
It's like a nightmare I might have.
Hey Wranglerstar =) here is a little trick from my grandpa. Every time you trill to a very smooth surface, but some (painters)-tape on it. It graps the drill bit and you dont slide way, while trilling. It also prevents tear out. Thanks for the cool vids. Nice Greets from Germany =)
this might be a bit late, but if you haven't found out already.. Never try to drill tempered glass, it will explode!! Found that out a few years back when trying to drill the bottom glass in my aquarium :(
Not watched the full video yet, but I was taught to use masking tape on the surface of the tile to mark your hole centres and to prevent your masonry bits from wandering. Works wonders.
Fun fact. You're more likely to die from opening a blister package then you are to win the lottery.
I've used the Bosch set on my tile. It took awhile, but they did what I wanted. I only needed to drill 2 holes and question just how many holes a single bit can drill. It was certainly slowing down after the first hole. Our tile was much harder than your subway tile, based on what I could see.
Naked man with a gun is always scarier that a man with a gun.
Priorities, most are just opportunistic, not something to the death/hurt over.
Everyone is naked under their clothes
@Michael Montgomery There are no witnesses is there is no one left to witness.
Michael Montgomery to long to read I’m sure it was funny lol
Back in Highschool, I always wanted to know how to do this so I can make a stealth bong... as an adult that phase is gone
I feel
Lol
I am sorry that you let your dreams die.
Thieves beware of the "Dangler-star".
Brilliant!
read this before i finished the video and was extremely confused😂😂
You're a genius.
@@babybenz6633 im on 8:11 rn and feel with you xD
😂😂😂😂
Again thank you for all the effort you put in your RUclips videos, and sharing your wisdom and experience and wonderful family events.
I know this guy who had a power generator stolen while he was using it. He was working in Philadelphia in one of those big warehouses, and his job was to go in clean, strip, and rewax the floor. So he had floor cleaning machines, and it was easier for him to just run a small generator outside, and plug into it with extension cords. So he is there using his machine, and next thing you know the machine kicks off. So he looks thinking maybe he tripped the switch, or the circuit breaker on the machine. No that doesn't do anything. So he goes outside, and where his generator was sitting is now just a bunch of plugs unplugged, no generator. So he is like WTF, so he is looking around and sees a taxi sitting at the top of the street at a stop sign. So he starts to walk towards the taxi hoping maybe the guy saw something, but he figures by the time he gets to the taxi it will have driven away. But he keeps getting closer, and closer, and it is still just sitting there. As he gets closer he can hear the man in the back yelling just go man, why are sitting here, drive now. So he gets to the taxi and say someone stole my generator sitting on that side walk, did you see anything. The taxi driver says yeah the man in my back seat stole it, and it is in my trunk. The guy gets out and takes off. So the taxi driver tells him I thought something was suspicious, he flagged me down around the corner, and asked me to take him around he had this heavy generator he didn't want to carry. So he drives around, and he is suspicious because it is still running, with stuff plugged into it. So the guy shuts it off, pulls all the plugs, throws it in this taxis trunk, hopes in and says lets go. So now he is really suspicious, why was it running, why didn't the guy go take any of the stuff plugged into it. So when he drives up to the stop signs, and looks in his rear view mirror, and sees this guy with a puzzled look on his face, he knew the guy stole the generator, and so he sat there and waited for the guy to come up to him.
Thats a great story and its great that the taxi driver just said that he stole it .
Legend says somewhere in that post are Avengers Endgame spoilers.
@@Mic_Glow batman kills thanos bro
@@Mic_Glow RE: aaaaaaaaaaaaah
Sanchez Eve North Dauz
Hicks Eve Loop Piles 0110101011001101001010 11.17.84.93.75 Krossection intersection B.K. Rescue M.
South Saudi
Dido to the taxi driver!
My tile guy likes to rock the core bits in a circular motion for more precise large holes, this really helps to prevent cracking and flaking.
You've just taught teenagers everywhere how to create their own bong. Congratulations!
They already knew how lol
@@inhumanfilth681 I'm 16 and none of my friends even know how to use a drill properly there not going to figure out drilling bottle to make a bong. And I totally would never do that lol
@@roccoguidry9188 funny you mention that because i was 16 when i figured this out lol im 26 now
@@inhumanfilth681 nice lol
@@roccoguidry9188 to be fair though i lived in the stix and head shops were not really a thing out there so we had to be resourceful lol
Tempered glass will shatter. The reason it's tough is because the whole piece is pulling on itself from the thermal shock of the tempering treatment. If you introduce a void, it implodes.
I learned to drill through glass when I was 17. Made a decent Macgyver bong out of one of my moms vases.
Yeah, tape is a MUST if you want to accurately drill. I use the Bosch professional range of bits (painted blue) and they made perfect holes in my tiles but I had to use tape so it wouldn't wander.
No you cant drill tempered glass cody.. laminated glass yes but not toughened or tempered. That type of glass will turn to a million pieces all over your shop floor..
Yep, the tempering process puts glass under tremendous strain, causing it to "blow up" when it does break. Think of it like surface tension on water, it's harder to break the surface tension with a widely dispersed load. The difference with tempered glass is, once that surface tension is broken, it's game over for that piece of glass. So you can take a spring loaded center punch, and easily pop a piece of tempered glass, but try swinging a sledgehammer at it, and it will probably bounce off.
If u cut at the temp the glass was tempered u can as long as its a cobalt diamond bit that's hot as well. U may say it makes the diamond softer but so is the glass. U just have to cut slow in an oven under drill press. Boo yah!
@@damedog19 What if you were to heat the area you intended to drill in order to de-temper that area?
With over 100+ years combined years of family members in the union glass trade you can't cut or drill tempered glass. Unless you want alot of glass diamonds.
Weedus, no they are not. When tempered glass breaks it will go into alot small chunks of glass. Tempered glass aka safety glass is used in doors, sidelights next to doors, patio doors.
Hey Wranglerstar, just want to say thank you for letting us in to your life.
I watch your videos because you share a lot of the values and believes my family had when growing up. Lately it seems like these believes are almost shunned, its nice to know there is still a huge community that holds the same values as my family did when i was younger.
Love hearing your thoughts on all the latest pop culture and problems we are facing.
Ignore all the a-holes who complain about your idea of homesteading not matching theirs or people complaining about product placement. Most of us come here to hear your thoughts.
The glass and tile bits I use look more like a primitive arrow, with the arrow head attached to the shaft, if that makes sense, they work really well.
In a pinch you can take a regular masonry bit and and sharpen it to much more of a point, with a sharp edge to it, most masonry bits are not sharp on the cutting edge, because they do their job by percussion, not cutting.The plumbers putty dam works good, but I've done the same thing with just a bit of wet paper towel.
The core bit, next time put double sided carpet tape on the back of your guide board so it does not move around on the tile, they you can concentrate on keeping the drill steady, not doing that and keeping the guide board in place too.
I'm enjoying this series.
Cheers from Tokyo!
I've used the same ones! Yes they do work well I personally find the Bosch ones a little better.
For those blister packs use a can opener👍
PLUMBERS PUTTY IS GOOD BUT DO NOT USE IT ON NATURAL STONE
IT WILL LEAVE AN UN REMOVABLE STAIN
He had non staining putty in his hand but most people wouldn't think there's a difference or potential for disaster
I haven't seen anything but non-staining putty since I've been doing it lol. That's like finding lead solder.
the core bit is what we used to drill drip holes through our planter pots that had no holes, even the very hard pkastic ones and it was great!
I wear my welding gloves when opening blister packs... Them sharp edges will get you! The blister pack is sharper than the cheap knives inside the package hahah.
I always just cut around it with my knife and it opens right up easy as can be
I tend to use kitchen/utility scissors.
Scissors no? Kind of obvious choice.
a good pair of large scissors
I use aviation snips for opening those blister packs.
Thanks, I'm remodeling my bathrooms and I just picked up the larger GT3000 set. Love your videos.
Use a hand held can opener to open the blister pack. Open as you would a metal can.
Wondered how long i would have to scroll to find somebody else that knew this trick... great days to ya !
Thank you!!!
Scissors, quick and simple.
I use my bandsaw
Love these random household/homestead videos of things you might need to do at some point in your life.
Maybe when you're not sure what to do for content you should just do "story time with Cody."
Good stuff, ha!
A Dremel tool with a pointed diamond bit makes a great starting point for glass drilling...no wandering of the drill bit. As someone else pointed out, a carbide surray makes the holes much smoother without chipping or spalling.
use a can opener for the blister packs
Hi Copy I was taught a "Hack" for drilling tiles, first mark the point where you want to drill with a sharpy of some other pen. then cover the mark with a strip or two of clear adhesive tape (Sellotape), the bit will not slide on the tape and will let you penetrate the outer layer of the tile without the drill bit starting to slide
7:47, the wig is starting to shed.
mons pubis bro
Bruh it’s not a wig he dyes his hair but it’s not a wig
@@dietznutz1 It is a joke, you need to go back a few years and watch than you will get it.
I have the Bosch set and it worked great going through ceramic tile
How hard can it be to learn how to powder coat things?
Easy.
Glass is an amazing material I. Lived in a 200 year old farmhouse in Minnesota when I was a boy. The windows in the house were old old counterweighted with giant cast iron weights in the frame. The panes were twice as thick at the bottom of the pane as the were salt the top. Glass is a slow moving liquid.
If that had happened over here in the U.K. instead of punishing the thief’s the police would probably arrest you for indecent exposure 😂
Yeah you're spot on. The slack-jawed Snowflakes here in the UK would have been deeply offended by the sight of his exposed danglestar and complained to the police. The thieving scumbags would have received tax payer-funded psychological support and Cody would have been banged-up in a maximum security prison for at least five years.
frankjackson8 couldn’t have said it better myself!
Oh and I have been laughing for the last five minutes for the greatest word ever! “Danglestar”
Bloody brilliant!
frankjackson8 although have you seen how cold it gets over there! Less “Danglestar” and more “Button Mushroomstar” 😂
Yeppers. There is a reason we politely asked your government to leave in 1776 and again in 1812.
@@dangergirldesigns5943 but not before we burnt down the white house and won the war
I always chuck up a pointy router bit to get through the glazed layer on tile then switch to a masonry but to finish drilling deeper. Works perfectly.
First of all, I really love this new series. Second, im a glazier, to drill through glass you need to drill through from both sides to avoid those little chips(they're called shells) and temperwd glass can not be drilled or cut because of the process it goes through to become so strong it has a load of stress in it, and it actually "blows up" if you try. You can actually see the stress points in temperd glass if you look through polorized lenses, the surface will lool wavey, and the corners(if its a square or rectangle) have little rainbow things, ita quite cool to see. Hope this helps
For tile, you can use the same thing for metal to stop the bit from wondering.
Useful information there, I did think that about tempered glass, but now I know not to attempt it.
I suppose any drilling has to be done before the tempering process.
I’ve always wondered why windshields look like that through polarized lenses! Thanks!
Them Bosch bits are very nice
Great info and demonstration, great story to end the video !
You and wranglerstar are my top favorite youtube channels. Lots to learn from both of you
Open your blister packs with a band/jig saw, whenever one is available. My first boss did it, and I never forget to go to the band saw for all sorts of things, now. Just wish I had one for the kitchen.
You left me with visuals that will take awhile to shake.
It is drilled into my memory.
@@carlzirk Ouch!
just don't shake it more than twice
@@supermoon1430 Members get the symbol.
Try the roofing Hook-Blades when opening the plastic packaging , its much safer !
now i can make a bong out of my dads beer bottles ty
goat facts lmao
When drilling glass or glass bottles, using a drill press (when possible) and light pressure works very well. I've used clay and Play-doh to form a reservoir around the drill site.
Man's version of play-doh... man-doh?
or modeling clay
Work-doh
didnt show how the first bit on the bottle may or may not have blown out the back...
I think man-doh is just money 🤣
Work-doh
Never drilled glass, but a simple masonry bit has always worked well with a bit of tape on tiles. Those specialized bits can be pretty expensive around here so we tend to make do
The French Bottle LOL
That reminds me of
an Old Rifle I have
a WW II collector's item.
It's a French rifle
Mas Model-36
NEVER SHOT AND ONLY DROPPED ONCE. 🤣🤣🤣🤣
I hate Mas 36 rifles. They are pretty cool with the bayonet but the bolt could be the cleanest a mas bolt can be and still be worse than a mosin. The coolest part about the gun is definitely the bayonet and the way it just fits inside.
@@prestonsamson3674
You didn't get it.
Never shot 🤔
Only dropped once.🤔
THEY DIDN'T PARTICIPATE IN THE
PACIFIC THEATER.
1941-1945😲😲😲😲
@@robertjahrling1877 lmao I was just exclaiming my hatred for Mas rifles.
@@robertjahrling1877 hang on the pacific theatre's got nothing to do with it
you didnt get your own joke
I used to cut glass for a living. We used a drill press to be more precise on the glass. And we had a rubber donut that held the water. Also tempered glass will "blow up" if drilled into, or chipped on the corner. Plate glass can be drilled.
Is this bong making class?
Those Bosch bits are amazing for drilling into tiles. Use em every single day to drill multiple holes and they still last a week or two in softer tiles. Not so hot if you have floor tiles but still better than almost anything else.
Your videos provide me with such a feeling of peacefulness, I love watching these very much 👍
For tile, I used standard masking tape over the areas to drill, a couple pieces over the areas and it worked.
This was on a existing wall tile. In a rushed environment to get done.
I love these kind of videos
I do a lot of flintknapping and make some eccentric pieces every now and then when a customer orders one. if you study some native American and old Egyptian stone drilling methods (flint is silica based like glass) you will find out a piece of cane/reed/bamboo with some pitch glue and fine sand will go through rock fine. it is basically the grandfather to the tool you were using, pretty cool how things come full circle.
In the "old" days I used copper tubing and valve grinding compound to cut holes in glass.
Ive heard of that! I have all of that stuff. I'm gonna try it.
@@MrJeb707 Tip: Use copper tubing not pipe. Its softer and will hold the compounding
@@HappyTrailChihuahuas after a few attempts, I gave it up. Haha I could see that it would work, but man it would take a minute.
I’ve been making lamps from large glass whiskey bottles and the Milwaukee bits have worked really well for me. This was a great video. I appreciate videos like this, when I started it was all trial and error lol.
11:00 *it would have GONE through
Thanks for sharing your knowledge and insight. May you live a long, healthy, and happy life. Farewell.
French glass.... 😉🇺🇸
I use that bosh set when i hammer drill in the wall so the tile stays in-tact and does not shatter. The normal practice is to punch a center hole on mark for wondering bits. The problem, tile is like glass and can shatter causing you to do a lot more than just drilling a hole for something. Most public bathrooms all use some sort of tile where you need to hang stuff and those Bosh bits are very handy for that.
Finely I can make a bong for medical marijuana 😉😉
Where do you live where you need to make one? Every vapeshop/smokeshop sells more bongs then anything else near me.
Well you see wen you live 67 miles away from the city it's not convenient to drives all the way over ther for a peace of glass wen you a set of this drill bits and some glass bottles il just make my own for the time being until I have to go to the city to get some groceries or something and il get a new one.
@@drews_red_ram8731 Wow. So you grow all your own goodies too then?
@@3.6roentgen61 not really am not that talented but I can get it much faster then to drive to the city and get it
sometimes those pipes look stupid tho, would be better to find a cool looking vintage bottle and turn it into one, it looks a little less 'bong-like' plus you made it custom!
I always love the stories he gives when he does this stuff
Why don’t MasterCard and Visa work in France?
The French don’t know how to say charge!
For the piece of wood to position the core bit, make it bigger and then stick it to the tile with some good double sided tape. Otherwise you get what you saw where it was sliding around when you were trying to start the cut. This can also work for the other bits but not as well. For water, take a sandwich bag and snip off a small part of a lower corner. Fill with water and seal it up. Now just tape the bag to the wall above where you are cutting and let it drip down onto the bit as you cut. the thickness of the bag can make it drip too far away from the wall but a piece of tap dangling over the end will deflect it back into the wall.
Got the code thanks cody.
AmericanGrizzly were was the code then huh
EquinoxModz- it was in the part where he first used the red bit in the top right
@@calebduke8948 then at the very end
There were 3 codes and I can't get them to work
4:05 break the glaze with a 1/16th metal drill bit to stop the wobble when using a masonry bit on tiles.
Bought scissors that were in blister pack. Instructions to open with scissors.
Lol yeah no kidding and endless supply huh. Gotta keep buying them when will it end lmao. Just like the shower I guess just repeat until you run out huh lol.
@@my2centz196
Just like the shower?
@@TimothyTimPSP shampoo rinse repeat lol
@@my2centz196
As needed.
@@TimothyTimPSP it was just a joke lol.
For that jig for the hole saw, you could use a "ultimate luthier's trick" with masking tape and superglue. Put a piece of masking tape down on the piece you are drilling or working on, making sure it's longer than your jig. Line up the jig and mark where the tape touches the jig. Put tape on the jig that faces the work piece. Burnish the tape down on both pieces. Apply superglue to the tap of one and activator on the other. Carefully line up the jig and press it into place. The jig will not move latterly. To remove just pry up the jig. Tape comes off with no residue like you can get with some double sided tapes.
Blister packs require scissors. I learned that from my wife. I guess they're man-proof.
Harbor freight cheap diamond bits for a dremel worked real nice for me. Take the round bit at an angle to create the hole then enlarge it with the other bits
Thanks for the $25 Wranglerstar!
How do you get the 25 dollars?
Congratz! :D
@@thisisfarta9693 I got the full code, plugged it in at Amazon.
Ok thanks
Don't spend it all in one place.
I would like to add how holes were cur in glass before carbide bits. Tape the glass build the dam and add sand to the water using a piece of soft copper pipe. We used a bit and brace but later changed to a drill press for more precise holes. The sand embedded into the copper making a cutting tool.
9:58 KCNAJC
The Ferguson Lover what’s with the gift card code pop up?
Bryan Hammond you get a discount I think if you type the code in
Not working for me
To stop a masonary bit wandering push it against the tile on your mark before you start the drill turning and rock the drill in a circular motion (like operating a computer joystick). The bit will crush a small indent and then when you start the bit turning it will not wander. Start slowly and make sure you keep the bit perpendicular to the workpiece.
Saw an amazon thing but I don’t know what to do with it!
Bit too short for a gift code.
i think it was too short too. I wonder how many of us still tried it out anyway ??? LOL
Figured it out, but Looks like it can only be redeemed once and already has been
I tried both of them , people see them as soon as videos posted so were always toooo late ! HAHA
There were 3 of them and I can't get them to work
I use a kitchen shears on the blister packs. Works great, unlike the Amazon gift code I am trying.
You can never drill through tempered glass 😅 it'll just blow up
Use heat
you just cant puncture Tempered Glass with anything, or even scratch it too deep. reason is from tempering the glass the inside becomes a different hardness than the outside almost like a laminate. The inside "layer" now has an enormous amount of pressure built up within the glass itself. cut into it too deep and boom.
Yeah I'm a glazier... heat won't do anything. But I'd gladly let you try a piece lol
We use masking tape in an x form and use the small bit and go bigger. The masking tape helps to keep the bit still and stops the tiles from splintering.
"Nothing that you own is more important than a person's life" ... arguable. Property can be measured in years spent working to lawfully acquire it. When somebody steals property from you, they owe you that many years off their mortal soul.
It would suck to have your stuff taken, but if you believe in God and an afterlife, then killing someone over stuff will be hard to defend when questioned by God.
@@vu7419 Perhaps you are right, heres hoping that we never have to find out one way of the other. Especially if it involves our pets, I had a dog stolen when I was young, I know its a different story when its dog Vs. drill. But I might ask for a little understanding, maybe not mercy when met at those pearly gates.
just for you to know, once the glass is tempered you cand neighter drill or cut it. it will simply shatter. love your show
I tried the code didn't work
Rando87 someone already used it
If you need a really precise hole in ceramic tiles, you can do a small mark on the glossy surface with a center punch and then start drilling from there. That way your drill bit wont wonder at all at the beginning.
2:27 I saw the Amazon card
Trump UKJM no it’s not there it’s at 9:58
@@thefergusonlover5898 ITS AT BOTH
As someone who has drilled hundreds of 3/8” & 7/16" holes in wine bottles.
The best way is to used the drill bits that are built like mini hole saws, encrusted with diamonds.
And.. a small/slow drip of water(similar to the bottle drip used in this video)(but with a short piece of 1/4" tubing)
Slow is fast.
Gentle is efficient.
👍
i was making glass paned ant farms a while back. i used the diamond round bits in a crappy drill press. i hung 2-3 lbs of lead bars (weighted as needed) from string hanging on the drill press control lever to give light consistent pressure. each hole took 30 minutes or more. I had the same issue you did with the back side of the glass finally giving away taking a chunk of glass with it. i'd do 3/4 of the hole and then back down the weight for the final cut. always blew through at the end even with a wood backing. Not an easy thing to do.
Those funky looking offset EMT-style "cut anything" shears with the serrated blades that they sell at Harbor Freight and the like are great for blister packs. They will literally snip a penny in half.
The method that I've used to drill through tiles with masonry bits is to b4 when you go to start the hole is to stratch the tile glaze by placing a piece of tape onto the tile then rock the drill bit backwards and forwards by hand using a smaller drill bit similar to when u spot drill a piece of metal, then once you've done that you can then use the correct size drill bit needed to make the finished hole size
The best way I found to open those type of packages, if stick you fingers in the little cut out they use to hang them. So 1 finger for each side then pulled then apart like if you was opening a a bag of chips.
Love it when you tell stories, really gives your video’s something specail
Great video, thanks!
When I was still doing carpentry work, we always used the masonry bits with vinegar to lubricate them. I don't know why it's just how the boss said to do it.
Use your heat gun on those stubborn blister packs...or fire, yeah fire will do the job!
P.S. What scared that thief the most? You naked or the gun? LOL!
Thanks for the helpful video.....Less frustrating way to open blister packs is use exacto knife to cut 'U' pattern just inside packaging's outer perimeter or around packaged item's containment bubble then lift like a flap.
To open blister packs easily, use some old first-aid shears, the kind you will have in your paramedic kit to cut through cloths, etc. They will cut through most stuff pretty easily.
The French bottle joke was great. 😂
Two reasons for blister pack...makes thing harder to return and the package protects the item from salt-water mist when coming from China on a container ship.
just another great info video i always use a wet sponge when I'm grilling tile on walls holding sponge top of drill on against wall and slowly squeezing sponge as im drilling
Wranglerstar stories are the best!!!!
I use the punctured water bottle but a 5 gallon bucket with a water catch when wet sanding A class fiberglass finishes..fresh water is key in my industry!
A good pair of fabric scissors, or fabric shears if you want to go a little overboard, can reduce those annoying plastic packages to shreds. Cheap ones will just break, but good ones won't even twist. They can even cut thru zip-ties and thick cardboard without problems. The ones with the zig-zag pattern to prevent fraying work, but are much harder to get it to cut, so just use the straight ones.