Planer Sled - waste of time!

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  • Опубликовано: 29 июл 2022
  • Why the sled idea is a waste of time, there's a quicker way!
    SUPER FANS - / hewandawe
    #hewndawe #woodworking
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Комментарии • 157

  • @paulmaryon9088
    @paulmaryon9088 2 года назад +6

    Yea mate, another good one thanks, I prep all my timber by hand, got no planer thicknesser, jointer, old fashioned kinda guy me! have a great weekend dude, thanks for posting, keep 'em coming

    • @HewAndAwe
      @HewAndAwe  2 года назад

      I bet that’s nice never hearing a machine! Cheers Paul, hope you have a lovely weekend! 🍻🍻🍻

    • @BasiliskFilm
      @BasiliskFilm 2 года назад +2

      I’ve just picked up a beat up wooden fore plane - 17 inches long with a relatively narrow cambered iron and wide mouth. After planing the sole and honing the blade I have to say the thing is a revelation. Like a scrub plane it’s quick but the length means you are leveling without really thinking too hard. Take care of twist first, obviously, as on longer boards even a long plane might ride through a twist. It’s a lot lighter than a similar size metal bodied plane so good for long sessions.

  • @stvnrncmn5066
    @stvnrncmn5066 Месяц назад +1

    Thanks for the no nonsense advice. It's hard to navigate with all the information out there.

    • @HewAndAwe
      @HewAndAwe  Месяц назад

      Oh-dude… I hear you. RUclips was where I started out and learned the basics, there’s a ton of BS here and costly BS too, what’s worse is I had to try and see if it worked, then try something else and so on, till I pretty much taught myself and what worked for me, all said and done dude, that’s what you must keep in the forefront of your mind, “what is it that works for me” there’s no one rule, there’s a lot of peeps here that show you something that’s a so called ground breaking idea for clicks, but it’s absolute bs.

  • @ohallifax
    @ohallifax 10 месяцев назад +2

    Lovely juxtaposition of classic hand planing technique with shelves of Festool toys in the background :) Thanks for the video.

    • @HewAndAwe
      @HewAndAwe  9 месяцев назад +1

      Haha cheers dude, hope you had a lovely weekend! 🍻🍻🍻

  • @jeremybolding3957
    @jeremybolding3957 Год назад +1

    Great video man! Good advice that is actually accurate. I’m beginning to see that so many of these YT videos are very bad information. Watched a ton of barn door build videos that are just gonna warp like crazy. Just like when you mentioned the Mdf sled. You’ve tried it. Doesn’t work. I followed one of those videos and had a very pretty door that will warp like crazy come winter. As someone who is about to try to buy his first rough lumber and mill it, this was a super helpful video. Thanks!

    • @HewAndAwe
      @HewAndAwe  Год назад +1

      Thank you Jeremy for the complement mate! Its like watching people make herring bone tables with the wood glued to an mdf sub straight most days on YT! Hope youre having a nice weekend!!! 🍻🍻🍻

  • @hammeredanvil7377
    @hammeredanvil7377 2 года назад +1

    Good one. I was literally heading out to the shed today to make sled for my thicknesser. Made me rethink that. Cheers

    • @HewAndAwe
      @HewAndAwe  2 года назад +1

      They’re not bad for short lengths but any movement of the work piece and it’s game over… I’d still do it by hand.

  • @FixitFingers
    @FixitFingers 2 года назад +2

    Top tips mate as I start to get interested in hand planes. Yep, a thicknesser was always going to be first on the list, but I'm in no rush. Lots of workshop project before then.

    • @HewAndAwe
      @HewAndAwe  2 года назад +1

      Workshop projects are excellent for the tube, they’re the only vids of mine that do well 😬

  • @robsmuddygloves72
    @robsmuddygloves72 2 года назад +1

    Brilliant video, thanks. Just picked up an old No.5, looks like I'll be getting a workout next time I'm in the workshop.

    • @HewAndAwe
      @HewAndAwe  2 года назад +1

      I pray the weather gives you a break then, I’m over the hot weather now!

  • @dennishughes3250
    @dennishughes3250 2 года назад +1

    Short, simple and informative. Probably wikipedias definition of a good youtube video. 👌

    • @HewAndAwe
      @HewAndAwe  2 года назад

      Thank you Dennis! 🍻😊🍻

  • @OaMaaM1775
    @OaMaaM1775 Год назад +1

    Simple and effective instruction, love this video.Thanks ever so much.

    • @HewAndAwe
      @HewAndAwe  Год назад

      Thank you Timothy, appreciate the compliment! 🍻😊🍻

  • @woodfather
    @woodfather 2 года назад +5

    I haven't seen that edge guide stabiliser doowhackey before, but it looks uber handy. I _always_ end up with an angled edge after the first passes with a handplane, and I end up spending way more time getting it square than I should. Same as hand sharpening, freehand just doesn't seem to work for me. I don't blame the tools though....I blame the uneven workshop floor 😄Couldn't possibly be me...

    • @HewAndAwe
      @HewAndAwe  2 года назад +1

      To tell you the truth I can't remember how I came about it either I only remembered I had it when I was filming this vid, shame you're not closer mate, you could have it!

  • @baja1980s
    @baja1980s 2 года назад +1

    love the content and rawness on how you explain, well done with the editing too....

    • @HewAndAwe
      @HewAndAwe  2 года назад

      Thank you for your compliment mate, one thing I though was I need to me sod what peeps think... So nice to read your complement mate, especially when I get comments putting me down cause of outside factors like depression.. Hope yore having a wicked weekend mate!!!

  • @trappedshadow
    @trappedshadow Месяц назад +1

    Love the music

  • @JiggsysShed
    @JiggsysShed Год назад +1

    Great video and nice tips. Thanks for sharing.

    • @HewAndAwe
      @HewAndAwe  Год назад +1

      Cheers Jiggsy! Thanks for taking the time to comment too!

  • @killawee118
    @killawee118 2 года назад +1

    This is how I do it. I'm not looking for perfection with the hand plane. I don't try and fix any bits of tear out. If I flip it "clean" face down and it feels flat. I run it through my cheap planer... Before I'm done planing, both sides will be go through the planer.
    Like you said in the video. The jig doesn't work for long boards... I glued the MDF together for a sled too. I found it rigid, but just to heavy and I'm pretty fit.
    I do my edges with a jig on the table saw, but you definitely get a cleaner edge then I do with a hand plane.
    PS: if I could do it again I would have bought an electric hand plane for this task. I will when I have more money.
    Thanks for the great content! I hope lots of people correct themselves to take this path before wasting as much time as I did.

    • @HewAndAwe
      @HewAndAwe  2 года назад +1

      Cheers Stephane! This electric hand plans I would of thought to short and would ride the ‘waves’ not taking the tops off to level though 🤷🏻‍♂️

    • @killawee118
      @killawee118 2 года назад +2

      @@HewAndAwe I get ya, and I see that your right. That being said, I would use a combination of both an electric hand plane and a No. 7... Just eyeball the high spots the way some people on RUclips do with a scrub plane.... I'd love to learn to use a scrub plane too(I've got an old no 4 that I can't manage to use as a smoothing plane), but with only so many hours in a day.

    • @HewAndAwe
      @HewAndAwe  2 года назад

      @@killawee118 I never thought I’d hear the day when someone said I’d love to learn to use a scrub plane, easily the least liked of planes.

  • @nathanpowell1500
    @nathanpowell1500 2 года назад +3

    Great video, thanks. I feel like most people are intimidated by having to sharpen/keep sharp plane blades. You should do a video on how you do it.

    • @HewAndAwe
      @HewAndAwe  2 года назад

      Thank you Nathan! I think mainly cause the metal, some irons are made of crap and sharpen fast but blunt fast, or they had A2 that takes for ever to sharpen but keeps an edge, I personally hate sharpening with a passion too!

  • @mtozzy11
    @mtozzy11 2 года назад +2

    I use an old timber jack plane belonged to my great great uncle it'd be around 140 years old fuckin lovely thing to use, then it's a trip through the thicknesser it's a cheap Ryobi but it does a good job for what it is and what the timbers I work with are (Australian hardwoods mainly blackwood atm). Just got a old 10" planner that I'm restoring.

    • @HewAndAwe
      @HewAndAwe  2 года назад

      Sounds like the type of tool I’d take home with me every day just in case there’s a fire!

    • @mtozzy11
      @mtozzy11 2 года назад +1

      @@HewAndAwe lol. 50 years ago it nearly got thrown in the fire but my dad thought I better save it. Glad he did!

  • @danielpittman889
    @danielpittman889 Год назад +1

    Good advice!
    I got rid of my jointer and built a dead flat assembly table.
    Flatten one face of a board so it doesn't rock on a flat surface, run it through the thickness planer, and you're golden!
    Shoot, I don't even have a table saw anymore.

    • @HewAndAwe
      @HewAndAwe  Год назад

      Haha what’s that like? I can’t imagine being with out a table saw!! I hope you had a lovely Christmas! 🍻😊🍻

    • @danielpittman889
      @danielpittman889 Год назад +1

      @@HewAndAwe I sold my table saw to the woodshop at my job. I have visitation rights.
      At my personal shop I have a Bosch track saw. Not as convenient to use, but the dust collection is far superior.

  • @michaelflynn6178
    @michaelflynn6178 2 года назад +1

    Great advice very informative Thanks

    • @HewAndAwe
      @HewAndAwe  2 года назад

      You’re welcome Michael, hope you have a lovely weekend! 🍻🍻🍻

  • @monkeyboysworkshop
    @monkeyboysworkshop 2 года назад +1

    Mat loved the video, and you’re so right, it doesn’t take much to hand plane a board relatively flat then whack it through the thicknesser. Although my thicknesser bed works a treat and I’ve had no problems with it, all my stock comes out very square and it’s made from MDF 🤷🏻‍♂️🙈😂

    • @HewAndAwe
      @HewAndAwe  2 года назад +1

      LMFAO, Ive planed MDF once - I was surprised how clean it came out, but then regretted it when it came to finish, like a sponge & fluffy as too!

  • @amazinga.f.artwork9047
    @amazinga.f.artwork9047 2 года назад +1

    Great video!! I need to get some of those hand planes. I don’t know how many hours I’ve spent hot gluing and then lifting it and running it threw the planer or drum sander. Works your arms out , that’s for sure. Any good kit or set you could recommend for a beginner? And hello 👋 from the states , I’m Tyler From Iowa 😃.

    • @HewAndAwe
      @HewAndAwe  2 года назад +1

      Hi Tyler! I’d say start with the cheap Stanley plans, see how you get on with them. If you find them a paint to use I’d suggest you try low angle planes not all are made equal mind you, you pay for what you get. I think the veritas are a good middle ground of value and quality. 👍

    • @martinrwolfe
      @martinrwolfe Год назад

      @@HewAndAwe By cheep Stanley I take it you meen modern and not vintage. Then provided you put in the work to set them up the modern ones can do a good job. It is just a lot of work to set up a modern Stanley.

  • @liamcallahan5726
    @liamcallahan5726 2 года назад +1

    Wow, what a beautiful presentation cheers, cheers cheers

    • @HewAndAwe
      @HewAndAwe  2 года назад

      Cheers Liam! Thank you for the compliment mate 🍻🍻🍻

  • @buckrichardson3244
    @buckrichardson3244 Месяц назад +1

    thanks!

    • @HewAndAwe
      @HewAndAwe  Месяц назад

      You’re welcome 👍

  • @tonyworkswood
    @tonyworkswood 2 года назад +1

    Hi Ben. Love watching you use your hand planes but I'm one of those who hates a nice little workout lol, It's not me it's my arms. I must say though I enjoyed
    watching you use them and looking at your fantastic collection, some types I've never even heard of. I agree with you if your on a budget and preparing wide
    boards that's the way to go. Well demonstrated. You shown two really hard timbers for hand planning beginners to avoid. Brilliant Ben, enjoyed watching. Tony

    • @HewAndAwe
      @HewAndAwe  2 года назад

      Cheers Tony, appreciate the compliment mate! Hope you’re having a nice weekend bud! 🍻🍻🍻

  • @marchirestauracao
    @marchirestauracao 2 года назад +1

    Olá Acompanhando seu trabalho do Brasil, grande abraço.

    • @HewAndAwe
      @HewAndAwe  2 года назад

      Obrigada! Espero que você esteja tendo um lindo final de semana!

  • @derekhansen7508
    @derekhansen7508 2 года назад +2

    Nice one Ben. Some very useful information and advise. Love a bit of hand planing. Maybe a run through all your Hand tools would make an interesting future vid. Just a thought.

    • @HewAndAwe
      @HewAndAwe  2 года назад +2

      Cheers Derek, to tell you the truth I'm well stuck for ideas of what to film, especially build vids. Materials are thin on the ground too. I'll put that on a list to do mate!

    • @HewAndAwe
      @HewAndAwe  2 года назад +1

      Just uploaded one vid about my hand tools, will be live 5pm today UK time.

    • @derekhansen7508
      @derekhansen7508 2 года назад +1

      @@HewAndAwe superb. Look forward to watching it a bit later.

  • @joncarter3038
    @joncarter3038 2 года назад +3

    Hi Ben, another great video, as usual. As a relative newbie to woodworking I hear people say all the time to get your boards somewhere near to final size, and then let them acclimatise before finishing to the final size. My question is how near is near? Is it 5mm on the length, width, height or is it more or less than that? Having not really had the experience of boards shifting to date any advice, will I'm sure, save me some hard earned in the future.

    • @HewAndAwe
      @HewAndAwe  2 года назад +1

      Morning Jon. Normally I’d say just a few mm, the length I usually leave 40mm ish to be honest cutting to length is pretty much done last thing, especially if it’s a panel glue up cause there’s a good change it’s not square.

    • @joncarter3038
      @joncarter3038 2 года назад +1

      @@HewAndAwe Cheers Ben, as always, much appreciated.

  • @jlmfoy365
    @jlmfoy365 2 года назад +1

    Converted a old knackered no 5 to a scrub plane, works a treat. Regards Jim.

    • @HewAndAwe
      @HewAndAwe  2 года назад

      For the most part I find them to hectic taking of way to much, mostly the sawn boards I get only need a tickle.

  • @harrybrooks7750
    @harrybrooks7750 2 года назад +11

    Fantastic video, spot on. So much RUclips content is about how this or that jig is going to work wonders, when often just getting out the hand tools and putting in a bit of graft is actually quicker, builds skill and is endlessly versatile. Keep it up, really like your style

    • @HewAndAwe
      @HewAndAwe  2 года назад

      Thank you Harry, I much appreciate your compliment mate! Hope you had a nice weekend! 🍻🍻🍻

    • @ryananthony4840
      @ryananthony4840 Год назад

      Lmao yeah ok.... let me spend an hour on a little board and physically wear myself down instead of running it through the machine for a minute maybe 2.....

    • @robertmcdonald3101
      @robertmcdonald3101 5 месяцев назад

      And. I cannot use both arms. So sled is my best option

    • @HewAndAwe
      @HewAndAwe  5 месяцев назад

      You’re not very bright are you.

    • @HewAndAwe
      @HewAndAwe  5 месяцев назад

      Yeah, I made this vid thinking the majority don’t have any arms 🤦🏻‍♂️

  • @samsboringchannel
    @samsboringchannel 2 года назад +1

    I don't have any of the things in this video, and am on the brink of going down this pathway so this video couldn't be better timed. I've been tempted by one of those cheap combo machines but the more I think about it I'm concerned they're just gimmicky garbage that will end up on marketplace, having barely been used. Thanks for the solid advice

    • @HewAndAwe
      @HewAndAwe  2 года назад

      Do you mean like the TITAN, no way would I waste the money on that, heard enough bad about it, its too short anyway, for really small stuff. Cheers Sam, hope you're having a cracking weekend!

  • @waynethompson4453
    @waynethompson4453 2 года назад +1

    Price of some of these hand planes you can buy a cheap second have planner jointer for like a TITAN TTB579PLN lol.
    I have the same Axminster as you an love it 👍

    • @HewAndAwe
      @HewAndAwe  2 года назад +1

      Really, I'm not in love with mine! The fence when set then moved forward or back its out of square, oh and dont even get me started about setting the beds, what an awful system the bolt and nuts are!

    • @waynethompson4453
      @waynethompson4453 2 года назад

      @@HewAndAwe I got mine second hand beds was set well and haven't touched it and never have a issue with the fence being out of square but it is a bit flimsy when planning large timber and trying to hold it square against the fence. But I guess all 12" planer thicknesses are gonna have some pros and cons.

  • @ChristIsLord229
    @ChristIsLord229 Год назад +1

    Ive yet to buy a jointer or planer, ive been doing it by hand. I would give into a shelix planer to speed up the process of milling, but id still like to face joint one side by hand.

    • @HewAndAwe
      @HewAndAwe  Год назад

      Yeah planet and thicknesser is the way to go, but while peeps are saving up for the planer they can get by with the above idea. The helix head doesn’t speed anything up, but boy is quieter!!! Merry Christmas! 🍻😊🍻

    • @ChristIsLord229
      @ChristIsLord229 Год назад +1

      @@HewAndAwe im thinking of getting the Oliver 12 1/2", woodcraft has it for 1000 right now. When i buy a jointer itll be a 12", no messing around. Hand planing is fun actually. Happy new year.

  • @chrisp.76
    @chrisp.76 6 месяцев назад +1

    Why didn’t you use the scrub plane?

    • @HewAndAwe
      @HewAndAwe  5 месяцев назад

      Cause that’s to hectic, did you see the camber on the bad-boy!

  • @ollym990
    @ollym990 Год назад

    You're talking about the most extreme use case for a planer thicknesser. Not many people are making 2.2m long dining tables with them. These things are incredibly useful for many tasks - dining tables, not so much, but I'd dare say that's obvious.

    • @HewAndAwe
      @HewAndAwe  Год назад

      Wasn’t the point of the video fella.

    • @ollym990
      @ollym990 Год назад +1

      @@HewAndAwe Not sure what the point was though tbh. Unless stating the obvious is the name of the game.

  • @paulhodgson4790
    @paulhodgson4790 2 года назад +1

    Good advice mate.

    • @HewAndAwe
      @HewAndAwe  2 года назад +1

      Thank you Paul, hope you're having a nice weekend dude!

  • @stavros_katsopr
    @stavros_katsopr 2 года назад +1

    Old Mae West Quote: When I'm good, I'm very good. But when I'm bad I'm better.
    New Ben's Quote: When i'm funny, i'm very funny. But when i'm serious, i'm dead serious.
    Or is fun serious after all???? 👍
    Great one Ben, thanks a million mate.

    • @HewAndAwe
      @HewAndAwe  2 года назад +1

      Thank you buddy for the lovely compliment! I was born in Syria’ness 😉

    • @stavros_katsopr
      @stavros_katsopr 2 года назад +1

      @@HewAndAwe This is one of my classic "english" jokes: "Are you serious""? "Yes. I'm from Syria!" 😂
      PS Glad to know this mate, got many friends from there. There is a connection between Crete-Syria too, there are some "Cretan- origin" villages, where they still speak some Cretan language/words.
      Pity this beautiful country is so messed up in the last years...

  • @micksjoinery666
    @micksjoinery666 2 года назад +1

    Agree with it all mate. I learned the hard way as well.

    • @HewAndAwe
      @HewAndAwe  2 года назад

      The school of RUclips?

    • @micksjoinery666
      @micksjoinery666 2 года назад

      @@HewAndAwe and school of shit need more wood 😂

  • @VORONM
    @VORONM 2 года назад +1

    Hello, Ben! Don't agree with you. Working with a hand tool is not a waste of time, but a pleasure in the process of working with wood. It's a treat!

    • @HewAndAwe
      @HewAndAwe  2 года назад +1

      I never said working with hand tools is a waste of time mate, actually completely the opposite. 👍

  • @toolchuck
    @toolchuck 2 года назад +1

    Only here in north America (U.S and Canada) is a planer called a jointer or a thickness planer/thicknesser is called a planer. I'm not sure but I think it was a marketing decision to distinguish the two during the early DIY boom somewhere around the 50's. Or maybe a woodworker saw a 6" or 8" planer and said, "You can't plane anything on that, it's only wide enough to joint on".
    Anyway, I prefer Planer/Thicknesser myself.
    All the Best, Chuck

    • @HewAndAwe
      @HewAndAwe  2 года назад

      Oh man thank Chuck! I always wondered this, cause it make NO sense anyone calling it a jointer. A planer/jointer is pretty much a hand plane turned upside down, a planer doesn't joint anything either... And then there's the rabbet, rebate... why we can all just get on the same page I dont know, its so confusing for any newbies...

    • @toolchuck
      @toolchuck 2 года назад +1

      @@HewAndAwe You look all dejected at the end of your video. 😢 I bought a Felder AD-531 and haven't back. I get not everyone can jump in and afford a planer and a thicknesser especially in the beginning, but it is surely worth the investment.
      Just remember, in woodworking, there's nothing money can't fix, no wait, it's you only cry once!
      Crap, it's one of those, or is it both? 🤦‍♂
      All the Best, Chuck

    • @HewAndAwe
      @HewAndAwe  2 года назад

      @@toolchuck Depression is a cruel mistress fella. I look back mate and think I should of just held out till I could afford what I wanted, the money I wasted buying crap only to then sell on at a loss - If I was god I would give everyone a planer thicknesser combo, on one condition they make chair!

  • @therelaxingwoodshop7495
    @therelaxingwoodshop7495 2 года назад +2

    Beautiful camera setup

    • @HewAndAwe
      @HewAndAwe  2 года назад

      Thank you! I'm assuming the shots or did you see my actual camera?

    • @therelaxingwoodshop7495
      @therelaxingwoodshop7495 2 года назад +2

      @@HewAndAwe 100% the cinematographer of your movements is really smooth. A pleasure to watch

  • @Rossco242424
    @Rossco242424 2 года назад +1

    really good advice

    • @HewAndAwe
      @HewAndAwe  2 года назад +1

      Thank you Ross, hope you had a nice weekend dude! 🍻🍻🍻

  • @rustic35
    @rustic35 9 месяцев назад

    The thicknesser will flatten the bow but once it's through the planer, the bow will still be there. 😂

  • @mattelias721
    @mattelias721 2 года назад +1

    Ben, this is awesome. So you know, I've seen a lot of your content lately, but mainly at work ( :) ) and there I can't comment... Anyway, I love this how-to/teaching content. I agree with everything you said. Two questions:
    One: how would you approach a board that's about say, 80 inches long with this technique - I'd love to see a video on that
    Two: Your scrub plane has a hella huge camber to it... any comments? - I understand the 'why" of the camber, but why do you have THAT MUCH?

    • @HewAndAwe
      @HewAndAwe  2 года назад +1

      Howzit Matt! 😊 I’d approach it exactly the same I’d have it clamped in place along the face of the bench shooting the plane diagonal across the board. With a board that long I’d make sure I’ve read the board really well first. The plane came like that from veritas, that’s kinda what I was showing that’s ridiculous camber and a normal flat grind blade pardon the pun will cut it. Sawn boards from a good supplier should never need that kinda camber. Also did you see how thick the iron is 🤯 A2 steel works just fine doesn’t need to that thick. In short that scrub plane was an unnecessary buy. 👍

  • @WalterMelons
    @WalterMelons 5 месяцев назад

    What jointer plane is that?

    • @HewAndAwe
      @HewAndAwe  5 месяцев назад

      I’m not sure if you’re asking about the hand plane or? The hand plane I used was a number 5, I’m not sure what you’re asking cause it’s in the vid so wondering if you meant something else like make maybe?

    • @WalterMelons
      @WalterMelons 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@HewAndAwe Sorry the № 7. Looks like a low angle maybe?

    • @HewAndAwe
      @HewAndAwe  5 месяцев назад +1

      @@WalterMelons all my planes are low angle veritas planes, although when I bought them they weren’t the crazy price they are now!

  • @XxStratAttackxX
    @XxStratAttackxX Год назад +1

    Nice editing

    • @HewAndAwe
      @HewAndAwe  Год назад

      Thank you dude! 🍻😊🍻

  • @TheSMEAC
    @TheSMEAC Год назад +1

    Brilliant; this is captivatingly shot, edited, accompanied. I actually rewound the beginning 3 times alone.
    It helps too that the content says exactly what you and many of us think and feel. It’s so satisfying (and often faster) to mill one’s own timber. ❤

    • @HewAndAwe
      @HewAndAwe  Год назад

      You’re doing my whole library 😊 thanks dude, may help the algorithm that seems to hate me 🤷🏻‍♂️

  • @esskayrepairrestoration8265
    @esskayrepairrestoration8265 2 года назад

    Great video Ben but I'll disagree with your advice at 5:20 in the video re tilting the plane to fix a slight angle on the edge of the board. All the old hands I worked with years ago just moved the plane over slightly so they were only taking a pass on the angled area of the board, then go back and have one more full length pass to get it true. Angling the plane is too prone to moving and creating a bigger problem, especially with the bigger/heavier planes. Paul Sellers has a great video on the subject.

    • @HewAndAwe
      @HewAndAwe  2 года назад

      What works for some doesn’t necessarily work for everyone else.

  • @mamihamid8187
    @mamihamid8187 Год назад +1

    We recently lumbered a 36" maple, a 36" white ash, and a 32" pecan. After drying, we tried planing with a Rigid (Home Depot) 13" planer with 2 HSS knives ruclips.net/user/postUgkxIzvvTi3_Qc8JnVdYYRJCvuoDC4QjTzeL . This job was clearly too much for that machine. The pecan was particularly difficult, due to heavy mineral deposits, and a sharp pair of HSS knives would be consumed by a mere 3 boards. We were also having lots of problems from chip bruising, due to poor dust collection. The shavings came off like straw and jammed in the 4" hose.We bought the DW735 simply to be able to run carbide blades, which worked brilliantly for the pecan. However, we found it to be a much, MUCH nicer machine. It was far more rigid than the "Rigid" planer, and far more accurate as well. But what I liked most about it was the dust feed. This machine has its own blower, which shreds the "straw" like shavings as they come off the cutting head and helps boost the shavings into the dust collection system. No more clogs! It's also nicely sealed so that the internals stay quite clean. This is just a well tempered machine that's a delight to use. It literally cut the labor in half. Just another example of getting what you pay for.

  • @MrKeithcl
    @MrKeithcl 11 месяцев назад +1

    The point of the sled is to save an enormous amount of time. I need 50 boards flat and can't hand plane them all. Great olds school idea though

    • @HewAndAwe
      @HewAndAwe  11 месяцев назад +2

      If you’re in the position to need 50 boards milled up you’re be in the position to have a planer and thicknesser.

  • @tylermfdurden
    @tylermfdurden 5 месяцев назад

    how is 20 minutes with a hand plane quicker than a couple shims and a piece of MDF?
    I'm not against getting the same results with hand tools... but you're not gonna convince me that knocking down high spots with a scrub is quicker than a pass through the planer.

    • @HewAndAwe
      @HewAndAwe  5 месяцев назад

      Where did you get 20 mins from. You’ve missed the point of the vid.

  • @awlthatwoodcrafts8911
    @awlthatwoodcrafts8911 2 года назад +1

    What you're saying makes sense, but there's a little more to it, especially for the novice, who is likely the type of woodworker who is asking the question. They are just as likely to not have the hand tools and/or an adequate workbench.
    One might think they can save money by not having to buy a jointer (aka planer, lol), following your advice, but they're still looking at buying decent hand planes, a sharpening system and possibly something to firmly hold any size board they would typically be trying to mill.
    I'm not knocking your advice. I think it's very sound advice. You just missed the reality of what the novice woodworking probably lacks trying to follow it.

    • @HewAndAwe
      @HewAndAwe  2 года назад

      I didn’t miss that at all, wasn’t anything to do with what the point of the video is.

  • @scott8351
    @scott8351 2 года назад +1

    Perfect opportunity to just use a hand plane, like you said it's not that hard.

  • @Sly_Wolf_1
    @Sly_Wolf_1 2 года назад +1

    Nice one mate, sweet advice (even though I hate planing, since school. Like a virgin tickling a cherry, just can't get it right for long enough)

    • @HewAndAwe
      @HewAndAwe  2 года назад +1

      LMFAO I haven't heard that one before!!! Love it!!!

  • @aberba
    @aberba 2 года назад

    Or use a board flattening sled with a router

    • @HewAndAwe
      @HewAndAwe  2 года назад

      By the time you’ve set that up milled the board I would of done two by hand , and not half the mess a router makes.

  • @plssmellmycheese
    @plssmellmycheese 2 года назад +2

    👍👏

  • @johnrice6793
    @johnrice6793 Год назад

    Ahh - dang it man - there is no such thing as muscle memory. 🤜🤛

    • @HewAndAwe
      @HewAndAwe  Год назад

      Man I beg to differ especially when it comes to sawing DT’s.

    • @johnrice6793
      @johnrice6793 Год назад +1

      @@HewAndAwe
      In the literal sense -
      Muscles have no memory.

    • @johnrice6793
      @johnrice6793 Год назад +1

      @@HewAndAwe
      Muscles have no memory.
      Your brain does the memory duty.

    • @HewAndAwe
      @HewAndAwe  Год назад

      Gotchya 😅

  • @ecowomble1781
    @ecowomble1781 2 года назад +3

    Great video. Timely too. I just made my son a desk from old scaffold boards I had laying around. They had a nasty twist . Bought melamine sled. Used a ton of hot glue and shims to stop it rocking and whacked it through the thicknesser. Then flipped it. Trying to clean that glue off was a job. As you said it was over long and heavy. I’m making myself a work bench next with no sled. Only thing is snipe. Guess I’ll just have to lose a few inches from each end. Thanks again great video.

    • @HewAndAwe
      @HewAndAwe  2 года назад

      Brave to use scaff boards mate 😬 With snipe on lunch box planers you either lock off the out feed and in feed tables so they’re rock solid with absolutely no give/play in them or make a jig with a piece of melamine running through the planer and built so it’s supported 100% in and out feed sides Hope that makes sense? The machine also needs to be bolted down so it can’t move. Then you shouldn’t have any snipe. 👍

  • @davekolp4552
    @davekolp4552 Год назад

    Planer sleds are faster and better finish.

    • @HewAndAwe
      @HewAndAwe  Год назад

      They’re not faster, besides you’ve completely missed the point.

  • @rubenreynaga1572
    @rubenreynaga1572 9 месяцев назад

    I don't think this is a quicker way

    • @HewAndAwe
      @HewAndAwe  9 месяцев назад

      You’ve completely missed the point.

  • @yficfic8352
    @yficfic8352 2 года назад +1

    I agree that the sledge are not a convenient solution, but here in France a good hand plane cost nearly the price of a small planer thicknesser ...

  • @su-mu
    @su-mu 5 месяцев назад

    7:59

  • @architennis
    @architennis 2 месяца назад

    Uh, a sled is not a waste of time if you're a noobie, don't own any planes and don't want to, and have access to a planer and narrow jointer. Just saying.

    • @HewAndAwe
      @HewAndAwe  2 месяца назад

      You’ve missed h the e point 🤦🏻‍♂️ just saying.

  • @trentdavis8919
    @trentdavis8919 Год назад +1

    Yea not difficult until you have 30 boards to do that are each 5 times the length of that board lol

    • @HewAndAwe
      @HewAndAwe  Год назад

      I think you missed the whole point of the video.

  • @mijicmugendo
    @mijicmugendo 2 года назад

    Index finger!!!

  • @wills5482
    @wills5482 Год назад

    Oh yeah, another woodworking elitist who things manual everything is the best. I too love wasting hours doing something for the sake of ego

    • @HewAndAwe
      @HewAndAwe  Год назад

      If you used one half of that brain cell you would of understood the who video, you've completely missed the whole point of the vid.

  • @XxMalabooo
    @XxMalabooo Год назад

    why the fck would I do this when I can just spend 3K on a tool just to do the same thing in 2 seconds. kek

    • @HewAndAwe
      @HewAndAwe  Год назад

      For those that don’t have 3k for a planer, that was the point of the video.

    • @XxMalabooo
      @XxMalabooo Год назад +1

      @@HewAndAwe I’m being sarcastic

    • @HewAndAwe
      @HewAndAwe  Год назад

      Doh! My-bad! 😬