Cruel and unusual punishment - FULL TIMELAPSE
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- Опубликовано: 13 сен 2024
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For all the people asking why the material wasn't ordered with the bevel cut in... Yes, that makes much more sense.
Unfortunately, it came down to schedule crunch where we could get material that needed more labor on site or wait an additional 6-8 weeks to get material that was ready to install. This time schedule trumped convenience and Richard got the short end of the stick.
Just wait till we make him put in all the pegging... 😂
That happens on every large project - at some point a trade-off occurs (frequently :-) ) between waiting or modifying what is to hand, even if it involves huge effort. Plus some people are just inherently reliable, so they get the rough end of the stick a lot - just because it will get done then. It's what makes them reliable/worth keeping around as much as possible.
Haha! I would gladly put in all the pegging if you keep bringing us food Bobby! 🤣😂
25 year NWFA hardwood Floor Dog says yikes.
That house looks like it has been under construction for over 10 years.... 2 months lag on floors is probably someone being un-necessarily pushy, punishing someone without consideration.
Commend you and John for taking on a job that really isn’t your forté. This shows just how humble y’all are. 👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽
Love your attitude man! I'm a metal fabricator self employed for over 20 years. I've been there too many times! Your smart to maintain a positive outlook on these tortuous jobs.
Mentor me
These are the jobs you take that you have stories about for years. Love this kind of stuff
There is no way to get away from stuff like this in construction. Head down and get it done. Life is still good. Great job guys.
I am a retired carpenter from the northeast. I did install only once a hardwood floor with a bevel edge on both sides. After it was in the homeowner said she made a terrible mistake in picking this flooring out. She told us that it picks up all of the dirt and at the end of the day she hated her decision.
I agree...totally! Unless your home is a museum, this is a BAD idea.
Yep. Mine does to.
Thanks for always sharing your talents with us. God bless you 🙏👑🦁🕊🔥❤️🔥
Audible, you listening?!! So happy you're able to keep such a positive attitude through the grind. Sounds like a great opportunity to be included in this project. Looking forward to seeing you nail the trim and other finish work.
I don't know who had it more rough. Project Farm screwing in 1,000's of screws for testing or this job! 😂
We're gonna test that!
@@robertgiresi9515 lol. Exactly right
Your sense of humour is brilliant.
Trim routers do amazing work for their size. I use them constantly in my garage shop. I never doubted.
Your skill at finish carpentry is amazing. Your work on this and other historical homes is going to give knowledge that will make you in demand at whatever price you set.
When I built out my newest cargo trailer, I built it with lots of inspiration from Ron Paulk and bought his plans.
I used my Milwaukee trim router to make all the lines in the cubbies for the moveable 1/4” plywood walls to divide tools. 3 cubbies, 18-24” deep, 8’ long. Took about 2-3 hours to cut them all. Router handled it like a champ and never quit on me
You guys are wildin’ out here!
I did job where the homeowner acting as owner/builder with a PHD in engineering intentionally ordered wood like this to save money. The floor guys had to make t and g as well. He fired them for taking to long and never paid them. It is now 2 years later, and the house remains unfinished. Flooring and finish carpentry are a highly skilled trades. I have a great deal of respect for few guys like you. I apply finishes and more often than not, people praise me for the finished look. In reality, it is not me. All credit and professional respect goes to you. By the way, I walked off the job and told the homeowner he can finish the house himself since he thinks he is so smart and has zero respect for skilled trades people both male and female. Great video and continued success.
You nailed it. When the contract calls for "match existing" - this flooring will blend into the original seamlessly.
Doing two miles crawling and stooped over seems a little like boot camp! Would it be possible to set batches up on sawhorses? Then work at a more comfortable night and transfer completed batches back to the floor.
Thank you for always making a video of your work and showing it.
Can you comment on how the batteries held up, numbers of batteries used, charging setup, etc.?
Never seen an old floor with a chamfer. That is one of the reasons I hate engineered flooring as opposed to a sanded and finished floor
I loved this video. I enjoy your enthusiasm and calm manner.
Years of construction work left me with Tinnitus that sounds like that router and never stops, I’d suggest you fellas get a good set of headphones. Big fan of y’all’s work!
Huh? Did you say something?
I can second this.. just with automotive and compressors. Ear protection is so important.
@@Me-iw5wo Dang it. You beat me to it.
Same I get it every night.
Agreed......but he did say he'd be listening to audible so there's your ear protection 🤔
Yow! 2 miles. Be glad they’re wide plank. As I recall, pre finished t&g oak flooring had the bevel since you couldn’t sand it flat (the bevel concealed minor irregularities). Unfinished, tight joint.
How many batteries did you go through with those routers?
My God ,what a tremendous amount of work..that is definitely one for the record book..and he was eating a huge burger..
awesome video i was def cringing during this video specially when it said 6 pm !!! Nice video nice job also really enjoyed this video
Its really awesome you got involved with Hull, they have some really amazing projects. You are definitely in the big leagues in DFW now.
I always record myself, that way I can play it back at 2x and get it done in half the time.
These are the jobs you never forget. Good for you.
Smart not to move the material more than you have to. I was putting miters on a big stack of 18' 1x12s recently and I quickly realized that taking my track saw to the stack was a way better idea than wrestling them onto the longest miter saw station ever.
Doesn't that guy you're working for have a shop with a power feeder and a forklift? Does he hate you?
You’re being funny….right? First of all Richard commands top $ in the marketplace. This looks to be a very nice home, so I’m sure Richard is being well compensated for the work, whether it’s critical busy work or fine carpentry. You have to start with raw material and tool it any way you look at it.
There is a router attachment that hooks up to a walk behind pole, and you can add the v groove after the floor has already been installed and sanded..
How does that work? You would need some sort of guide once the flooring is installed.
Adding a larger baseplate to the router will make it even easier to keep the router steady. The battery on top and the small base makes these cordless trim routers less stable than a traditional router. The large plate means less stress on your wrist trying to keep it steady.
I like it when you said John & I did the work.................................. a leader that appreciates his help !!
My big issue with the Milwaukee router is that the thing eats batteries. I love it for what it does, but don't think I could use it all day on 6aH batteries. I ran it with a 12aH battery but it's not balanced and gets uncomfortable quickly. What was your experience with the battery usage on that stack? If it was good, maybe I don't have the right XC's or something for mine in the lower capacity.
This is the exact reason I only have a cordless drill and a reciprocating saw. Having those die is frustrating enough, I couldn't imagine being halfway through a cut when my jigsaw or router or friggin miter saw dies.
@@CLove511 oh, I love my cordless everything. I have a different use case though, we do a lot of cabin work where there's no utility electricity so it's either battery or hear the generator drone in the background
Best show yet. Top notch
Cruel and unusual punishment- The beatings will continue until morale improves
No waste of movement is a key concept in 5-S lean manufacturing.
I've installed and Sand and Finished solid hardwood flooring for 25 years. I wish you the best of luck with this.
My concerns 1. When the Hummel drum sander comes in and runs the 50 grit and then 80 the micro bevel that was created will enlarge or in some areas begin to diminish or disappear. 2. After 80 grit Hummel when the floor dogs trowel fill the flooring the bevel will get filled with the filler, so they will need to "spot" fill the entire floor to avoid getting filler into the bevel. 3. After they run the 100 grit Hummel the width of the bevel will enlarge or in some areas begin to diminish or disappear. 4. When they run the 100 grit screen on the buffer the bevel will enlarge or in some areas begin to diminish or disappear. 5. The 1st coat of Sealer will fill the bevel and the 2nd and 3rd clear coats will do the same. > if this hardwood was to be stained the bevel would come out as black lines.
That’s exactly everything i thought watching it too. The hardwood guys should’ve just talked them into sanding the bevel out of the existing floor. Richard did an awesome job for what he was asked to do as usual, but it was literally a job that was futile and he should’ve never been asked to do in the first place.
@@zakkshaffer3216 A floor dog should be the tradesman to make decisions on the hardwoods. I would have provided 3 or 4 options. First would have been to choose a threshold and cut out @ threshold and install an accent plank , then transition to the new flooring.. the flooring they purchased is new growth has no patina and the color and sheen level is not going to match anyways.
Millwork ain't easy , Millwork ain't hard, Millwork ain't nothing but a boring job ..... James Taylor happy friday from Canada
Brent gives you all the good jobs😅
I do floors…. And tbh there’s no price on what you did here!!! 🤘🏻🔥
How many batteries did you guy’s go through? A lot of ripping lol
"I think we can get this done by Christmas" OK, time to give up trim carpentry and get into stand up.
First try!!! Nice work.
Got a project coming up that one of those routers would come in handy for.....thanks for the video!
Looks like a job that should have been sent to a shop where it could have been put on carts and run through a router table.
That’s an incredible amount of busy work Richard! I know it’s going to exceed the homeowner’s expectations once you’re finished!
What are your thoughts concerning the Dewalt Router vs the Milwaukee Fuel Routers. I use the Dewalt router at work and find it a bit heavy after awhile, even while running a 2 amp battery on it. I recently picked up the Milwaukee Router, along with the plunge base, however I haven’t used it yet.
That looks to be an amazing home. I’m hopeful you’ll be able to give us a house tour once you’re finished. I’d love to see it!!
Hey Richard. Can you explain a little bit about what the "dowel" looking things are in the flooring? Was that installed just for looks or actual purpose built. The dark dots?
Nice video like always
My back hurt just watching this
I'm surprised the bits lasted through all those bevels, the real heroes of this job
Great attitude. Pro.
Totally assumed you were helping do a herringbone pattern. Turned into an even more interesting video than my assumption!
Should have counted how many battery swaps you went through too!
When I was a young apprentice I would moan to myself when doing repetitive jobs. I would say "I can't wait until I am older so I don't have to do this boring stuff anymore". Then when I got older I found out we still have to do all of the repetitive stuff too 😂.
Haha exactly! It’s all something that needs to be done at the end of the day!
I would build a little Router table! Takes about an hour but saves a lot more
That was fast!!!, you trimmed every one of those boards in like....7 minutes.
I hope you didn't charge on a time basis!!
Awesome job. Love when trades work together
Double trim routers. Double Fastback knives.
Why are comments turned off in the recent videos.
Homeowner: " I like the look of the bottom side better, can we install them bottom side up?
NEED HELP BADLY ...Hello my name is Ty and I'm looking to get a coffered ceiling in an 11x14 room and wainscoting down both sides of a 20 ft hall way. Is there someone you can recommend In the San Antonio area???? Builders have all the finishers here so busy and paid well, so no one is taking on side jobs or independent work. Any advice would be amazing!
Those grooves will come in handy for collecting every particle of dust in the entire house! ✌🏻🇺🇸
Few years back I had to run a stack of wood similar size through my thicknesser as the customer had bought 5 meter boards (16 ft) that had been used as a sub floor of a gym so they were old rough timbers and different thicknesses, AND covered in dirt as apparently they used to use essentially MUD to level out a floor before laying the maple on top - so I had to run EACH BOARD through my planer, the ENTIRE STACK, trimming off just a little, then dial down the thickness a few mm and do it again, the entire stack, and again and again... until I was getting fresh clean wood on all the boards on one side with no remaining ingrained dirt. THEN I had to run them all through the thicknesser again, same process, the entire stack at 40mm then 36mm etc etc to get them all the same thickness as the thinnest board so when laid the floor was flat without having to hire in a professional floor sander.
took a week - a full 5 day week, 8 hours a day, with two people, I got through 4 sets of blades, rotating them until I could tell they were dull and honing them up again on my jig each evening.
and all "because the wood was cheap" not after £1500 of labour it wasn't.
Oh yeah I've just remembered, and after all that, I then had to make up a jig to trim them all the the same width too, as none of them had 1 good edge to run on my tablesaw fence, which was the last day of that 5 day week.
That's tedium. boring dirty, extremely dusty, tedium.
John, "You signed us up to do what?"
I appreciate and get your sense of humor. By comparison to this project of yours makes the one at my Carrollton home that I need so badly, look like a cake walk! How do I get an estimate, and on your calendar?
i had one of those Milwaukee routers i was disappointed. the bits always slipped.
Only thing I can think of would be to create a giant jig and table where you can just feed the boards through and the person at the end carries it and moves it away, but like, how many times are you gonna do this where that makes sense lol
Wow !!! That's alot of grooving, you'll be dreaming about this job.
Okay that's bad but I got you beat. Instead of 4 pallets of parquet tiles I got 4 pallets of 12 inch by 1 x1 sticks. The good news, i finally got that drum sander I always wanted.
How come you turned off the comments on your newer videos?
The only difference between a master and a grand master is the details.
I carefully watched the 128x speed video and noticed you used the same router on both sides of one of the boards. It is the third or fourth one from the bottom in the middle stack. JK. Another very entertaining video sir!
“Sponsored by Audible”…that was funny!
Did you see the new cooler makita came out with?? Thinking your going to need it for that job!!😂🤣
Richard, that was your first video where I'm actually glad I'm not you! 🙂
I made the mistake of installing refinished maple flooring in our kitchen and ended up hating it for the bevel which just show dirt. Raw wood finished is what replaced it.
you said by Christmas but you didn't say what year.. 😂
I cut 1/8" to 1/4"x 3/4 "dado grooves in mdf and ply with my makita trim router with no problems .good Freud bit.
😂 audible 😂. Your not sold out…………yet 👿
what building is this? is it explained on an earlier video? I love this guy and his talent and great personality.
I wonder how many batteries charges they burned through? Nice work, hard work!
Was that a Diablo or Freud bit? And how sharp was it until the end? Any recommendations on what you would use next time in choice of bit and batteries (amp)? Love the great attitude, Richard. It’s what makes a world of difference.
And again with the dayglow lol
How do you get all these instrumental versions of songs I’ve heard/love?
I can't imagine how nerve wrecking it is to do that to all that flooring. I'd be so scared to ruin the flooring because it's definitely expensive. That and just the fear of starting off with mistakes before I even start my own projects. Nothing worse than starting off in the negative.
What kind of bits are you using? Whiteside?
Wow how many batteries did you go through?
Youre a Router Master now lol
I've been on some "Christmas " jobs along the way 🤦🏼🤣
I have the MKE trim router. Like it but have had to rework the fence to keep it locked in. You have any similar experience?
It’s not all exciting but all is necessary.
Milwaukee router I am surprised it wasn't DeWalt
When you’re so good that you can make your work look bad to match the original
Could you set up a jig on the table saw and run it through that way?
Dude be careful with those little trim routers, I was using mine back in December and I was working long hours not being careful and I ended up cutting the tip of my thumb off and losing a quarter inch of it and a part of my bone. I was back working within three months but it the pain was terrible and the amount of visits to the specialist was killing me with $$$.
Love your work and I'm a huge fan, but just stay safe 👊
I got lucky, dont really know what happened but I touched the bit while it was running at full speed. Fortunately it was the bearing on the end so just a minor bruise and a major shock
@@vidpromjm That's crazy man. Stay safe!!
Did you consider a router table with a power feed? One of you at each end.
Why are the comments turned off on all the new videos???
Knowing that you own a lot of the 20volt Dewalt tools, as well as the Milwaukee tools, have you ever used a battery conversion adapter to try and unify your battery usage? I mostly have Dewalt 20 volt tools, but purchased the 18 gauge finish nailer, tool only, and then bought an adapter from Dewalt to Milwaukee to minimize the number of different batteries that I had to buy and use.
Funny you said that, I actually have the same exact Milwaukee 18 gauge set up with dewalt battery power. For the same reason as you probably, mainly have dewalt 20, primarily bc dewalt 20 was what I had first and didn't want buy two different systems. And I got that battery adapter idea from this channel, so yeah he knows about the battery adapter. Lol
I couldn't do it without saw horses. My body would be aching the next few days.
How many batteries did it take?
I'm curious how the batteries held up. How many did you go through that day?