Hand Cut Dovetails | How to Tweak your Dovetails for a Better Fit

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  • Опубликовано: 12 май 2024
  • Rob Cosman shows you his trick for eliminating gas between your dovetails in soft wood
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Комментарии • 62

  • @maponce1987
    @maponce1987 17 дней назад +5

    I’ve never been so confused about something and then have it click so hard when you explained it. This is GENIUS!

    • @RobCosmanWoodworking
      @RobCosmanWoodworking  17 дней назад +1

      DOnt you love it when the light comes on?

    • @glennthomas4159
      @glennthomas4159 17 дней назад +1

      Exactly. In another video I didn’t see the point the first time through and had to watch it again and then BAM!

  • @juancolina7015
    @juancolina7015 10 дней назад

    Excellent explanation - thanks!

  • @TNbenchdog55
    @TNbenchdog55 15 дней назад

    Thanks for showing us this in another one of your very informative videos, Rob! For me, I will need more practice on the finer aspects of woodworking, especially after hand surgeries. The Shawn Shim and your dovetail saw does make the process much more enjoyable, especially when trying to narrow the "learning curve". Your time and effort that you put into your teaching is greatly appreciated from myself and other woodworking enthusiasts that I associate with. "Cheers!"

  • @countrymagic61
    @countrymagic61 18 дней назад +2

    Now it sinks in to what you were telling me when I was in class.👍😀

    • @RobCosmanWoodworking
      @RobCosmanWoodworking  17 дней назад +1

      You have to hear it numerous times before the light comes on!

    • @countrymagic61
      @countrymagic61 17 дней назад

      @@RobCosmanWoodworking This is so true when one begins a new journey. Well, the light did not just flicker, it on👍😂😎

  • @beach3408
    @beach3408 18 дней назад +3

    I love the Shawn shim

  • @dpmeyer4867
    @dpmeyer4867 3 дня назад

    Thanks

  • @heystarfish100
    @heystarfish100 17 дней назад +1

    Very clever Rob. Thanks for the tips.

  • @allanon54241
    @allanon54241 18 дней назад +1

    Great video Rob- will certainly help as I practice. Thanks for all you do to support woodworkers and through PHP!

    • @RobCosmanWoodworking
      @RobCosmanWoodworking  17 дней назад

      Please consider helping us by establishing a monthly donation to php at donorbox.org/the-purple-heart-project

  • @glennthomas4159
    @glennthomas4159 18 дней назад +3

    At 6:04 did you accidentally mark the pin on the wrong side of the tail. You talked about the Sean Shim in a previous video and I had to watch it a couple times to get my head around what was going on. Only mentioning this because it might be hard for somebody trying to follow this to understand or maybe I’m wrong and still don’t get it.
    Magical timing. My marking saw that you’re demonstrating came in the mail today! Woohoo.

    • @danthechippie4439
      @danthechippie4439 17 дней назад

      I thought that too

    • @harrymeijer393
      @harrymeijer393 17 дней назад

      Yup

    • @harrymeijer393
      @harrymeijer393 17 дней назад

      Apart from that, i love this method. All kudos to Rob and his team.

    • @RobCosmanWoodworking
      @RobCosmanWoodworking  17 дней назад +1

      Great catch....Its easyto do. Sorry about that

    • @glennthomas4159
      @glennthomas4159 17 дней назад

      Well, I can’t criticize anything here since I do something like that on every project. Great video and even greater community resource we have in Rob.

  • @emersonassis7154
    @emersonassis7154 18 дней назад +1

    Wow...when we see the idea..we think it is so simple...but thinking about the idea we see so genial it is in simplicity itself
    Shaw shim it is an amazing idea by the way (with that sawblade red knife be Romeo and Juliet)
    Thanks for all video class and constant support
    Congratulations from Brazil

  • @tuxbanjo
    @tuxbanjo 16 дней назад

    If you sharpen and set your own saw by hand, I presume that you lose some of the precision of the kerf width. What would you recommend? Measure the kerf width after each set and stone the teeth to even the set? Measure the kerf width and adjust the offset?

  • @edmd
    @edmd 18 дней назад +1

    Love the Shawn shim!

  • @J.A.Smith2397
    @J.A.Smith2397 18 дней назад

    Tks

  • @lor191ric
    @lor191ric 18 дней назад

    Thanks Rob, makes perfect sense.

  • @krenwregget7667
    @krenwregget7667 18 дней назад

    great stuff, Rob.

  • @richpeggyfranks490
    @richpeggyfranks490 17 дней назад

    I've been using a similar technique using blue tape as the spacer. Very close, but not perfect every time. The Shawn shim is a great idea for repeatability. I'm going to measure my saw this morning when I get to the shop. Thanks for presenting another innovation.

    • @RobCosmanWoodworking
      @RobCosmanWoodworking  17 дней назад +1

      You can also use a marking gauge to pick up the thickness of your saw and then use the gauge like we use the shawn shim

  • @tomdenny8507
    @tomdenny8507 18 дней назад

    Brilliant.

    • @RobCosmanWoodworking
      @RobCosmanWoodworking  17 дней назад

      It was Shawn;s idea ! donorbox.org/the-purple-heart-project

    • @RobCosmanWoodworking
      @RobCosmanWoodworking  17 дней назад

      Well I have been doing it over40 years before we thought of this!!!! donorbox.org/the-purple-heart-project

  • @user-bv8on7hu4x
    @user-bv8on7hu4x 10 дней назад

    Exelente explicacion se entendio , lo que nunca me gusto es la marca que deja el gramil cuando marcan la prof por cierto ese serrucho de costilla se ve hermoso . no se por que los chicos q veo en redes usan rioba dzuki o kataba. Japoneses .cuando los costillas para mi " son hermosos y presisos

  • @TheTechRep1
    @TheTechRep1 17 дней назад

    I just tried this and it works great.

  • @daveengstrom9250
    @daveengstrom9250 18 дней назад +1

    I could have used that trick 50 years ago. ☺

  • @twandieltjes1359
    @twandieltjes1359 17 дней назад

    Great explanation and work. Me is always told that if such a joint is too tight, the glue-up will be less stronger. How does it hold with your piece when the joint is made a but tighter?
    Thanks for sharing

    • @RobCosmanWoodworking
      @RobCosmanWoodworking  17 дней назад

      There arecircumstances where you can "Starve" a joint of glue., but that mainly is cases of applying too much force with clamps. That is not a worry here as just friction is holding the wood together. donorbox.org/the-purple-heart-project

  • @user-de2hz4ru8x
    @user-de2hz4ru8x 12 дней назад

    Good afternoon! Why is there a sub-caliber projectile in the workshop?

    • @RobCosmanWoodworking
      @RobCosmanWoodworking  10 дней назад

      I employee two combat wounded soldiers, one was a tank commander, that casing was the first round he fired. We run the Purple Heart Project to help wounded Veterans. Check it out at robcosman.com

  • @Tensquaremetreworkshop
    @Tensquaremetreworkshop 17 дней назад

    This is a useful jig. And, if you have access to a mill, quick and easy to make. No mill? With the aid of a digital caliper, it is not hard to make with a hand file. Does not have to be brass- aluminum works just as well, and is cheaper/easier to source.
    Instead of using a knife to make the mark, using a pointed saw (with the same kerf) that is pull-cut makes a small trough that the saw fits into- great precision.

    • @RobCosmanWoodworking
      @RobCosmanWoodworking  17 дней назад

      You can also use a marking gauge to pick up the thickness of your Kerf and use that like the Shawn Shim

    • @Tensquaremetreworkshop
      @Tensquaremetreworkshop 17 дней назад

      @@RobCosmanWoodworking True. Although I have come up with an improved design that requires no machine tools to make, and both locates the parts in both planes and is easier to hold in place. Will be publishing soon.

  • @Carpenters_Canvas
    @Carpenters_Canvas 18 дней назад

    Another awesome video rob, thanks for all you do.

    • @RobCosmanWoodworking
      @RobCosmanWoodworking  17 дней назад +1

      Thanks for watching and commenting. Consdier donating to PHP at donorbox.org/the-purple-heart-project

  • @Carpenters_Canvas
    @Carpenters_Canvas 14 дней назад

    I am really getting frustrated with dovetails lol. I have the worst case of the "can't saw straits". I'm going in the wrong direction too, meaning my tails are wider where I'm marking them and thinner where I cut them from, if that makes sense., always a gap, the worst type of gap, always from the same step, the first one, cutting square "no wood then pen, just pen " type of issues.
    SO, I see people starting to migrate to jigs and what not and I say, go ahead if that's helping you, me? I want to own the joint. So do jigs help you learn? I don't know why but when I watch other videos of ppl using magnetic jigs where all they have to do is move the blade back and forth, again fine, but I wonder if something like that can be helpful? At what point does it become a jig? because technically you are cutting it by hand right? but are you?
    if anyone reads this, let me know what you think, thanks again Rob!

  • @roman_le
    @roman_le 17 дней назад

    You leave less space for glue.

    • @RobCosmanWoodworking
      @RobCosmanWoodworking  17 дней назад

      There is still plenty of space for the glue. Have donw Hundreds of these and then we stand on them to test them. the glue never fails.

  • @Mhj96813
    @Mhj96813 18 дней назад

    Amazing. Thanks. However, you shun using a guide to hold the blade or chisel when sharpening because you can learn to do it without. But you promote using a Shaun shim and saw blade knife. How do you resolve that contradiction.

    • @jack5402
      @jack5402 18 дней назад +1

      It's not a contradiction. He isn't using them as a guide while making the cuts, just for layout

    • @christusartworks
      @christusartworks 18 дней назад +2

      No contradiction. He understands that getting dovetails from the saw (which is possible and the most efficient way to do them) is quite complicated if you're a beginner. Once you get proficient with the set off method you may go to the traditional one. Since it's more difficult, it'd requiere your entire dedication since you already know that you can do it.
      I may inquire also that as a part of his business he promotes the tools he makes, which may lead to a bias from his perspective. Nevertheless you cannot talk about Rob Cosman without expressing how he has changed the handcut dovetail horizon like David Chalesworth changed sharpening, or Paul Sellers has changed woodworking itself.

    • @ponyboyc
      @ponyboyc 18 дней назад

      What are you talking about haha. Sharpening a blade is a lot different than using layout tools....

    • @RobCosmanWoodworking
      @RobCosmanWoodworking  17 дней назад +2

      The reason I recommand to learn free hand sharpening is because you can easily learn freehand sharpening and the speed at which you can sharpen your blade (32 seconds). heck every 12 year old apprentice in the 1700's learne how to freehand sharpen. You cannot move a piece of wood .024 of an inch, multiple times in a row, free hand. I think you have an apple and an orange comparison,

  • @WoodenWaresHandwork
    @WoodenWaresHandwork 17 дней назад

    This isn't anything new Rob. A few years ago I remember you demonstrating the same thing.

    • @RobCosmanWoodworking
      @RobCosmanWoodworking  17 дней назад +1

      What’s new is interchanging the offset from one side to the other. I used to teach to use either .024 or .025, but this allows for finer control.

    • @WoodenWaresHandwork
      @WoodenWaresHandwork 17 дней назад

      @@RobCosmanWoodworking Yes, that's right. It was a while ago not sure when it was.