DIY Epoxy Slab - Wood and Steel working - Resin Art
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- Опубликовано: 30 июн 2020
- Such an epoxy project you have never seen before, have fun watching and rebuilding.
Meine Werkzeuge:
*Winkelschleifer: amzn.to/3BtaKge
*AKKU Schrauber: amzn.to/3CJaLy5
*Schweißhelm: amzn.to/3Cu86I9
*Werkzeugkoffer: amzn.to/2XZOrkp
Die mit * gekennzeichneten Links zu Produkten sind Affiliate-Links. Wenn ihr über diese Links einkauft, unterstützt ihr damit meine Projekte und Arbeiten. Ich erhalte dann dafür eine kleine Provision für den Kauf, den ihr getätigt habt. Für euch fallen dadurch keine zusätzlichen Kosten an.
#epoxy #epoxytable #resin Хобби
Könnte das stundenlang ansehen, bitte mehr davon 🙌
Sehr nice! Bitte mehr davon !
hast du mein neues video schon gesehen?
What was the white stuff around the slab before the pour? It wasn't there and then it was with no explanation???
Very very Impressive video
Thanks Bro ❤️
Your project looks Amazing. I also wanted to say a good work table is very important when making stuff. Your work table is bad azz. Looks like it has many options on doing different things.
thanks Bro
Can,t wait for your next item
👌🏻💯
Wow das Ergebnis sieht toll aus!
ja schau dir mein neues video an ist noch besser
👍👌 meisterhaft
Danke 🤩
Love it guy
Thank you ❤️
Gute Arbeit!
Weiter so,du hast es drauf!👍
Danke!
Thats amazing
Thanks Bro
Nice 🔥
TheRedHead 88 thank you ❤️
Круто, молодец!
💪🏼💪🏼💪🏼
Can you use cling wrap for the bottom of the log when pouring resin?
Top chou de bola
This example is exactly what I am looking for.
I have a slab of a tree trunk that have emotional values 😢
and wanted it to be like that sooo bad 🙏
but didn't know how 😅
Thx for the video, your awesome 👍
Thank you ❤️
Sie machen auch Glasgeländer; würden Sie auch in München arbeiten? Ich weiss nicht, wo Sie Ihre Firma haben? Danke
I want to do this but I'm so afraid its going to continue splitting over time even after the epoxy is done and finished. Is there a way to make sure this doesnt happen or is it more of a guessing game and its possible that every peice may end up cracking further anyway
Fantastic! I'm working on a slab myself but I have some questions. I don't have the fancy machinery and getting the slab super flat seems impossible with a regular orbital sander. Will that cause issues in the future? And if I'm trying just to coat the top with epoxy, for a shine and seal, how thick should it be? Is 6mm too thin? Thank you!!
Hi, with coarse sandpaper make it about straight, and when you pour resin over it will automatically be straight. 6mm is OK.
Richtig genialer Stuhl. Kann man den erwerben ?
?
Needs more of a shine to it. Looks dull
Coffecolour liquid, what is it?
I have a very similar slab, my fear is that it might continue to split, how do you know when it gets to a point that it stops splitting? Does the epoxy help stop? Thanks!
I was wondering the same for various projects. So far the most useful info I've found was at the attached link. It is titled about air drying wood, but the info also discusses kiln drying and different factors that can cause defects/cracking/shrinkage, and some methods to try to avoid such etc.. He also references a moisture meter which can supposedly tell you at what moisture level the wood is at. Now, I'm still experimenting, but personally I already own a Caliber 4 hygrometer by Western Humidor. These are under $30 at Amazon, and designed for monitoring moisture levels of things like cigars. People also use them (typically with glass jars) for drying herbs in glass jars; there are a lot of in-depth articles about using them with cannabis, but at my house we have also found can use them with home grown herbs for tea/spices. The moisture meter referenced in that article is over $100, and most of my projects are small in size. I'm thinking (+I can't promise this will work perfectly since I haven't actually done it enough yet) that since the far less expensive hygrometer is typically used in airproof containers to accurately measure the humidity of herbs, that if I put the small piece of wood I want to work with in an airproof container (like a sealing tupperware) with the hygrometer, I should be able to figure the moisture level of the wood (and compare to that article's data to figure whether it is or is not yet at the right moisture content to work with). Again, I can't promise this will totally work since I haven't done it enough to know for certain, but in theory it should, +could be a far less expensive way for people with small projects to determine moisture content. But if you intend to do large pieces of wood (not convenient to find an airproof container to fit them in, like a table slab) then the device the article mentions is probably far more useful. Hope this helps. If you find better info please let me know as I'm still exploring with my own projects. Here's the afore-mentioned link: www.woodcraft.com/blog_entries/how-to-air-dry-lumber-turn-freshly-cut-stock-into-a-cash-crop-of-woodworking-woods
@@SoirNoirKat hgv
@@SoirNoirKat l
Bissl umständlich manche sachen
Was meinst du genau 😅
Wasted a lot of epoxy
Ja 😅