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How to make an oak front door - Ep6 | Door Bolt, Flamed Wood Finish & Clinkering
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- Опубликовано: 30 апр 2020
- #door #oak #woodworking
RUclips 1st! Yes, we have an exclusive you won't find anywhere else:
CLINKERING STEEL RIVETS THROUGH AN OAK DOOR!
In Episode 6 of the oak door project we see the door starting to look like what it's supposed to - a 300 year old door!
We start out with a quick recap of where we got to on the oak door project before diving in with a tonne of maker content that really pushes the front door project along. We start with the addition of a handcrafted bolt mechanism, before moving onto a flamed finish of the oak. Then we reveal how the butterflies and rivets come together with some 'hammer time'. In what we believe is a RUclips first Uncle Al closes all the rivets by hand so that the door is held together with an aesthetically pleasing look that makes the door look like something you might find in a castle or dungeon.
Additionally we throw in a dose of banter and music montages to bring the door project back to life. We hope you like it!
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Music provided by Epidemic - www.epidemicsound.com
• How to make an oak fro...
So good to see papa smurf back....
Cheers Matty, hope you're well, squire!
He back, he bad! Humph huh! Fo’real! Hope you’re keeping well Chief!
YAY!! Thank you! I have seen the flamed Oak done before, but you made it look WAY better than any i have seen. Not too much and it accentuated the grain pattern. POP! Great job!
I'm an American, and I really love the look of the flamed oak! When you first laid the flame to it......WOW!
Glad you like it, David - there's so many finishes to experiment with, Al just has a penchant for flammage!
@@DirtyShedCreations Bwahahahahaha!
Another amazing videos boys!
Love how you beeped the swear word at the start but not after 😂
Can’t wait to see the next one!!!
Stay safe guys 😊
Yeah, it seemed sort of pointless once the floodgates opened, potty mouth Watson. Thanks for the comments Darren!
I say ‘screw’ monetisation! Joinery workshops are full of colourful language! Our small dirty shop is no different!
It’s guuuuuud ⚒
Thanks. An umlaut just doesn't cut it, I agree, UUUUUUUUU's are necessary.
Yesssss
Yo! See you later, be interesting to get your opinion on the film!
Evening, Dan! Hope you’re keeping well!
@@yorkshirejoinery2869 I am and you?
Mega stuff, loved the “this is real life” bit 😂
Cheers Justin, thanks for watching! Never thought we’d see the end of the door project! Maybe the benefits of lockdown! We should all thank Camera Boy!
Thanks Justin, that episode turned out pretty good - hopefully manage to get the next instalment out for you in a few weeks! Thanks for the support, chieftain!
Absolute pleasure legends !!
Nice job! I like the burnt oak finish but I got exhausted watching you hammer those rivets.
Evening Sir, pleased you enjoyed the film! Tell you what, love the look and effect of the rivets in this project (had kind of forgotten exactly how much), but don’t miss the arm ache! These rivets kill you twice, once when you form the head of the rivet, the second time when you close the rivet! But they look so much better than welding/grinding. If only we could redo the rivets on the Throne! Maybe another throne might be easier! All the best, hope you’re keeping well out there!
Muchos gracias Peter, great to hear from you, hope you and yours are well!
Great stuff guys! Man I hope you got a well deserved rest. Looked hard going. "You're welcome,e Earth!"
Cheers Shane, the big guy needs as much exercise as possible so don't feel too sorry for him! Thanks for the comments, really appreciate it!
Great craic guys that will save you going to the gym. Hope you fellas are keeping well in these difficult times.
Sean
Morning Sean, thanks for the comment as always! Keeping well thanks, spoke to Camera Boy yesterday and he’s doing Joe Wicke’s stuff. I find that sad and disappointing! Thought he was better than that, but ‘no’! I’m doing lager lifts, multiple sets, high repetition! Let’s see if he spots this, he’ll probably come back with some talkie hole stuff, let’s check it out!
All good, cheers Sean - hope you are too! Uncle Al can't even spell Joe Wicks, let alone do a burpee - (insert your own flatulence gag) - sorry to involve you in our little domestic, 😉
Ooooo. I’ll set an alarm.
See you this evening - what you drinking?
@@DirtyShedCreations Bourbon on the rocks.
@@PhilMakesThings Powerful boozing!
Dirty Shed Creations It’s Friday (apparently) and while I don’t drink very often, when I do, it’s the good stuff.
I’m on the scotch already! Word Phil, good to see you here!
beautiful looking door! Great editing as well guys
Cheers Sean, thanks for commenting chief - stay safe!
Thanks Sean, appreciate your support- stay ‘bon’!
It were good that. Well done, Messers Watson & Boy.
Cheers! Thanks for joining us and sharing the ebonising sauce wisdom - have a great weekend!
@@DirtyShedCreations that's why we call I'm "the sauce lord"
Going to visit the ‘sauce’ idea! Will be in touch for more info when things get back to ‘normal’ well ‘normal-ish’!
If I don't fall asleep.. 👍😀
Cool, hopefully it'll keep you interested!
We try to make our films soporific! Gentle and comforting, like a good pair of under crackers with the gusset blown out! Enjoy!
@@yorkshirejoinery2869 lol, By the way Guys thanks very much for the shout out, I picked up another 20 or 30 subs 👍 Well it was either you or the birdhouse build 😁
I wonder if an impact hammer would speed things up with the rivets...after a couple trials of hand closing
It probably would, but we didn’t have one to test, gotta make do with what you have!
Cracking job there's lads, Mr A-Dubz, where did you get those delicious chisels from? They look like they were crafted in the foothills of Mount Norikura
Well spotted, I just know them as Japanese chisels. I only have two (1/2” and 1”) due to the price tag (£50 each maybe 10 years ago), but they cover all the bases. They’re a pleasure to use, excellent to sharpen just really well thought out! But I guess that’s the Japanese and pretty much everything they do! Well done Japan! Thanks for the support!
@@yorkshirejoinery2869 they've got to be better than my bucket find random assortment of cheap chisels
Thanks Turgworks, treat yourself to a fine chiz-chiz, you deserve it!
Loved it. As always great sweaty work. Just one dumb question couldn't a pneumatic rivet hammer be used to start and finish by hand?
I'm sure it's a possibility, but Al aint got one of them and he hates to spend the mun-mun (£/$)! I'm sure he'll jump on here soon enough and give his sweaty opinion. Thanks for the comments!
Evening Roberto! Thanks for watching and your question! Absolutely a pneumatic rivet hammer would be the exact tool for the job. I’m not sure that riveting is still an readily applied industrial process though. What I mean by that is that welding has probably superseded riveting. I know steam enthusiasts still use rivets in their engines, but they probably use antique/vintage rivet hammers. I’m not sure they’re readily available anymore to buy ‘off the shelf’. Happy to stand corrected if you can direct us to an Company or RUclips channel to prove otherwise! All the best in the meantime and thanks for your support! Al
Do you worry about galvanic corrosion between the steel and the copper?
Morning NitFlickwick! Wow, what an incredible question! I suppose ‘i do now’ won’t cut it as an answer! Only ever come across ‘galvanic corrosion’ in an aquatic environment, sacrificial anodes and all that in boat building. But will give this some more exploration - so ‘yes’, I do worry about galvanising corrosion now’! Oh, this is me, Al, by the way. Great question, thanks for watching!
Love this thread, great questions, great answer - you guys!
I recently made a little display thing for a steel marlinespike, and I used copper to hold it. It was the question that went through my mind, and I never found a good answer. For mine, I figured it probably wouldn't matter, but it'll hang out inside. For yours, I imagine it may add a little more "patina", unless it's installed really close to the sea. Then you might get even more "patina".
Did you add any stain to the door in addition to burning it? Burning darkens the grain, but how did you get that nice tan color on the rest of the wood?
We did use a hard floor lacquer, several coats, the name escapes me right now, but we definitely cover it in a future episode of the project! Thanks for watching, ping me if you want to know the exact product.
@@DirtyShedCreations sure, I'd be interested in knowing the name. Thanks!
@@joshmoyer9065 it’s Morrels catalysed lacquer, I believe used for ship/boat decks. Enjoy!
@@DirtyShedCreations Thanks!
@@DirtyShedCreations So it looks like the lacquer is just a clear coat and your getting the tan base wood color (not the dark dark grain) from burning?