A scribe tool is a scribe tool but a master carpenter would slightly back cut a wall scribe to ensure only the money side touches the wall. Lot’s of silly comments by folks who think skill is something purchased than learned.
Looks interesting, tho I just picked up a Tooley Fat boy to try. The downside of this tool is you need to keep it level and perpendicular to the work piece, almost as hard as a compass to do without practice.
Did anyone even watch the whole thing, or just the thumbnail. It ends up acceptable at the end. How did no one point out its way to long in height. And any professional knows, to cut to a scribe line, you remove any excessive offcut with your choice of powered saw, and finish it off with an electric planer.
And how would you get a plunge saw or router to follow the contours scribed from the wall ? A router or plunge saw would work perfectly if the scribe was straight . A down cut blade in a jigsaw works perfect for me .
@@kevinnoakes4638 absolutely agree with that 100%! Cut shy of the scribed line then creep up to it with a belt sander is a great way to get a nice tight scribe .
Trying to sell a new tool to people that don’t know there is already a simple scribing tool available that in my 40 years of experience is superior to this complicated piece of cheap plastic crap!
Perfect except for the gap lmao!
🤣🤣🤣
Bit of caulk mun
A scribe tool is a scribe tool but a master carpenter would slightly back cut a wall scribe to ensure only the money side touches the wall. Lot’s of silly comments by folks who think skill is something purchased than learned.
Looks interesting, tho I just picked up a Tooley Fat boy to try. The downside of this tool is you need to keep it level and perpendicular to the work piece, almost as hard as a compass to do without practice.
half a tube of caulking later
Good work 💪
"Perfect fit"? Thats shit!
Darren needs to go back to jigsaw school, that was terrible the gap left was big enough to drive a car through 😂🤣
Hahaha Perfect fit!
I like you ♥
Did anyone even watch the whole thing, or just the thumbnail. It ends up acceptable at the end. How did no one point out its way to long in height.
And any professional knows, to cut to a scribe line, you remove any excessive offcut with your choice of powered saw, and finish it off with an electric planer.
No kitchen fitter uses a jigsaw on finished panels . Fine toothed plunge/track saw or router every time
And how would you get a plunge saw or router to follow the contours scribed from the wall ? A router or plunge saw would work perfectly if the scribe was straight . A down cut blade in a jigsaw works perfect for me .
Belt sander works best for unstraight cuts
You're clearly not a professional lol. Tablesaw or hand plane
@@kevinnoakes4638 absolutely agree with that 100%! Cut shy of the scribed line then creep up to it with a belt sander is a great way to get a nice tight scribe .
I would pay money to see a video of you trying to cut a scribe with a router lol
That cut looks absolutely terrible!!!!
I subscribe you channel
anybody notice it did a shitty job?
The tool is fine, it was probably a bad cut
Looks a good tool .
You're a moron
This things 40quid my cheapo stationary compasses get better results
Fire your social media/marketing who-ever. The finish cut looked terrible, lol -it was the tool! haha!
"British" perfect fit. That is shocking, you can actually see how uneven the cut is lmao
Trying to sell a new tool to people that don’t know there is already a simple scribing tool available that in my 40 years of experience is superior to this complicated piece of cheap plastic crap!
There's an even cheaper scribing tool. An off cut
Pencil wrapped with masking tape
It's for those people who dont to pay the astronomical prices trades people charge with there 40 years experience ie the flucked up for 39 years