How YOU Should Be Cutting Plywood

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  • Опубликовано: 19 июн 2024
  • In this video I show you the process that I go through to break down plywood and achieving perfectly square cuts every time.
    Cutlist Optimizer
    cutlistoptimizer.com
    The TSO Products Items I was using in this video can be found:
    tsoproducts.com?aff=5
    #cabinets #plywood #sheetgoods
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Комментарии • 671

  • @KenCharlesTheGreat
    @KenCharlesTheGreat 2 года назад +49

    I'm glad I kept watching, I figured it was a Festool centric video, great info on work flow. I learned something about panel cutting workflow I can use with my unistrut / track clamp bare bones panel cutting system ! Great video as always, thanks !

    • @bentswoodworking
      @bentswoodworking  2 года назад +2

      Glad you found it helpful

    • @Markdoubts
      @Markdoubts Год назад

      Yeah - glad I watch. Thought it was just going to about track saw.

    • @jim99ful
      @jim99ful 8 месяцев назад

      Me too, thought it was going to be Festool 'R' us, then why cut off the factory edge and replace it??

    • @RichardBoisclair-hw6nb
      @RichardBoisclair-hw6nb 4 месяца назад

      Good video. Too bad you don’t like using Festool brand…

    • @KenCharlesTheGreat
      @KenCharlesTheGreat 4 месяца назад

      I got a Makita track saw since that comment and just recently drank the green kool-aid an got a CT-25 dust extractor, very nice!@@RichardBoisclair-hw6nb

  • @kennethvogt9379
    @kennethvogt9379 2 года назад +104

    I know it’s a small thing, but I really appreciated the tip to leave material on both sides of the blade to improve dust collection.

  • @beniaeschbach2626
    @beniaeschbach2626 2 года назад +11

    Hi Jason, thanx for your videos, been watching a couple.
    I would like to ad something for people who 'struggle' to get a straigt edge. You are working with top notch cabinet grade ply, which will stay true when cut. But if someone uses cheaper stuff, say construction grade ply, following might be helpful: Material (ply, solid timber or even a chunk of steel for the engineer) is allways under tension. Tip: release that tension first! If, for say, you cut a sheet of ply in half then make this rip cut first. 610, then trim 5 each side to your final 600. Like this you will shave off any bending that occured when tension was released when cutting the sheet in half.
    If confronted with a 'reference' edge that is suddenly not straight anymore, people often try to find the fault in the gear (track, saw) but it can be the sneaky material that plays up.
    Hope I explained in a way easy to understand.

  • @jsmxwll
    @jsmxwll Год назад +4

    When I learned with basic handtools in woodshop, keeping track of reference and show sides was drilled into us. Somewhere along the line I stopped paying as much attention to it. Machining wood can give me a false sense of confidence sometimes, and it's so fast that I can move through without thinking carefully about how I'm doing things. Great video. Its a good reminder.

  • @paulbuffington9709
    @paulbuffington9709 2 года назад +62

    I use a piece of painters tape to mark each of my reference edges as they are made. This way I can easily label the parts for the joinery process. ie side bottom, bottom front, etc etc.

    • @bentswoodworking
      @bentswoodworking  2 года назад +6

      I like that as well when dealing with a lot of parts for sure 👍

    • @rickwilson478
      @rickwilson478 Год назад +2

      Yeah, I do the same thing with Post-its ... they are easy to peel off and to write on. They don't adhere as well as painters tape but will stay put mid stack and usually they are just placed on the top panel of each stack of .. "base sides".."base tops, bottoms, rail splits, shelves".. etc. I place them in the 90* reference corner for the good length and end cuts. I usually add a pencil slash mark in that same corner.

    • @dividend_investing_is_grea9523
      @dividend_investing_is_grea9523 Год назад

      Good idea! I will be doing that in the future thanks.

  • @whomadethatsaltysoup
    @whomadethatsaltysoup 2 года назад +9

    Thank you for sharing! You are a born pedagogue. An extremely clear explanation of how to achieve accurate cuts on sheet material. With the current cost of material, it's more important than ever to minimize error and avoid unnecessary waste.
    Not fretting about getting the whole sheet square, and just concentrating on the initial reference edge is much easier than wresting an 8 by 4 through the 5 cut method in a small workshop.

  • @lwcd2833
    @lwcd2833 2 года назад +9

    This is spot on. I always make my cuts 1/4" over and then final on the table saw using the reference cut against the fence.
    I love checking cabs or drawers for square and they are spot on dead square. great video. thank you.

  • @danblanchette5201
    @danblanchette5201 Год назад +7

    I watched your demo on installing Blum undermount drawer slides. Now I watched this demo on cutting sheet plywood with perfectly square corners. You are really, really good at explaining--in easy to follow directions--how to do stuff in a wood shop. You should've been my shop teacher long ago. So I'm bookmarking each and every demo you do here on RUclips. All will help in my future furniture projects. P.S.: I like your occasional references to certain specs on things like drill bits and handy tools I hadn't already heard of.

  • @rjtumble
    @rjtumble 2 года назад +21

    I like the tip about making that first cut a little deeper so there is wood on the right side of the blade. I've noticed how much more dust I get if I'm "saving" wood by cutting just the edge clean.

    • @bentswoodworking
      @bentswoodworking  2 года назад +3

      Oh yeah, nothing to trap it when just skimming the edge.

  • @brianfuller5157
    @brianfuller5157 Год назад +1

    I've built a fair amount of plywood cabinetry etc. and just never stopped to think of this ever so simple technique. I will use it from now on. Thank you for the great video

  • @99trampis
    @99trampis 2 года назад +4

    This is awesome. As a DIYer I've never looked at breaking down a sheet of ply like this. You've made it much more simple for me to understand. Thank you and I just subbed! Keep up the great work!

  • @tommanseau6277
    @tommanseau6277 2 года назад +6

    This video really clarified things I've observed and thought were my fault with plywood. It's not. I now realize that I'll have to treat plywood in a very similar manner as hand tool work with solid wood. The rest is mechanics once the consistent system is in place.

  • @lindamarsden8024
    @lindamarsden8024 2 года назад +6

    Thank you, this was extremely helpful. I also use a piece of 4x8 insulation board to protect my work top and I've even used on my concrete floor when I have heavy MDF. This works great for those of us that are not that tall or strong. I've book marked the cut optimizer and looking forward to trying it out.

    • @bentswoodworking
      @bentswoodworking  2 года назад

      It is a really useful tool especially for being free

  • @derekw40
    @derekw40 Год назад

    Thank you, I’ve always been fascinated with cabinet building. Ive built a few. But i keep running into accuracy. Now i have the info i need to improve what i aspire to do.

  • @zachgoestoeuro
    @zachgoestoeuro 2 года назад +3

    This has been a huge help to me. Thanks for explaining and going through the details.
    I don’t have the fancy table so I opted for a four foot drywall square and handle my cuts that way for now. In my recent project, everything lined up perfectly and it was a pretty amazing experience!

    • @bentswoodworking
      @bentswoodworking  2 года назад +1

      You don’t need all the fancy stuff. Glad you found it helpful

  • @johnnycorn7225
    @johnnycorn7225 Год назад +1

    ABSOLUTELY in love w my new combo Tracksaw(wen w festool tracks) and dewalt palm router guideplate setup on other side of track. Saves time and space, Perfect cuts.

  • @grantdavies6081
    @grantdavies6081 Месяц назад +1

    This is a really good video. The number of times I've cut plywood for cabinets or drawers and found it square on one corner but not another, I wasn't being methodical. This is really straightforward, and I love how methodical it is. I'll try this out today, thanks for creating the video!

  • @michaelgrova225
    @michaelgrova225 2 года назад +4

    One thing I always love to see is when the craftsman and makers I enjoy watching are supporting other makers in the community.

  • @mkelly6591
    @mkelly6591 Год назад +1

    Great lesson on breaking a sheet down and squaring it up in a way that those of us without expensive tools can repicate. Thanks!

  • @ScottJones5280
    @ScottJones5280 2 года назад +3

    I appreciate and greatly value the clarity of your teaching. I’ve learned a lot from your channel and my projects get a little more efficient and precise every time. Thank you!

  • @OriginalCatfish42
    @OriginalCatfish42 3 месяца назад +2

    What I love about these videos is the neat little tools I discover, like that little pocket ruler. I had to pause the video and order one right away!

  • @dooleyfan
    @dooleyfan Год назад

    Great advice,thanks! I’m about to tackle building a complicated shelving & drawer storage unit, and this was very helpful.

  • @stuwaugh7672
    @stuwaugh7672 2 года назад +2

    Thankyou - I now realise how using what I thought was a dead on factory edge, compounded to make the last few cuts of the sheet way out. I always thought I was ‘saving’ wood by using factory edges and making exact measurement cuts from the sheet. A few mm of ‘wasted’ wood will lead to square projects that I won’t be secretly disappointed in.

  • @rogerpoulin2068
    @rogerpoulin2068 2 года назад +4

    Thank you for this video..I've been having problems trying to get square panels. Now I know why. Thanks again.

  • @evans_workshop
    @evans_workshop 2 года назад +2

    Thanks Jason! Great video. Simple easy to follow instructions. I appreciate what you share with us!

  • @arievanharen1488
    @arievanharen1488 Год назад

    Having just started my own business thanks for this video, excellent for helping me get best practice processes in place. thank you so much!

  • @philrabadi6757
    @philrabadi6757 2 года назад +1

    Great video Jason. I’ve really been enjoying these quick lessons you’ve been doing! Very helpful. Thanks so much

  • @stakwalderbak5331
    @stakwalderbak5331 2 года назад

    Another great instructional video. I like the process of using parallel guides, MFT, and tablesaw. Fortunately I have all 3. Justifies the expense. The MFT was my last purchase and I wished I had bought it ages ago. All the plethora of shop built tables are fair enough but the MFT still rules I think.

  • @SuperCC112
    @SuperCC112 16 дней назад

    Omg! I had this exact problem. I thought the factory edge was square af, but it wasn't. Thank you for this video. It solved my problem. I need more plywood now.

  • @rosemcommm
    @rosemcommm 10 месяцев назад +3

    I do this on a leftover piece of 3/4" flooring plywood, cheap plastic saw horses and a Makita track saw all day in my driveway. With great results.

  • @deponzi
    @deponzi 10 месяцев назад +2

    That was probably the best explanation on breaking down a sheet of plywood I have ever seen. Thank You so Much

  • @ZombieHaunter408
    @ZombieHaunter408 Год назад +1

    I'm surprised your channel doesn't have more followers. I've been binging your videos and you do an excellent job explaining everything. Well done!

  • @antonyhibberd8824
    @antonyhibberd8824 2 года назад +1

    Great information. Thanks. I just really appreciated that you used millimetres in your video as a measure of accuracy.

  • @christopherdekonstrukt444
    @christopherdekonstrukt444 Год назад

    Just ordered a Festool cordless track saw and an additional 55" track. No more cutting larger sheet goods on the floor with a guide and circular saw on rigid foam. Using a Bora 4x8 Centipede for now, will build my own shop table with T-Tracks for the Festool and TSO parallel guide system. Thanks for your channel. You invest in Festool you invest in quality.

  • @ChalupaBatman9000
    @ChalupaBatman9000 Год назад

    Great advices for me as a beginner in woodworking. Keep it up!

  • @TheVideoGameVault
    @TheVideoGameVault 2 года назад +1

    Great info. This really lays out the why and how. Getting my first track saw soon just for this purpose.

  • @SAMUELPEREZ-yc8uq
    @SAMUELPEREZ-yc8uq 2 года назад +1

    Great tutorial. You have answered many of my RFIs in an easy to follow format. Thank you. Semper fidelis.

    • @bentswoodworking
      @bentswoodworking  2 года назад

      I knew you were military as soon as I saw RFI 🤣

  • @perpetualmaker764
    @perpetualmaker764 2 года назад +3

    Great video Jason. I use a similar technique and if feel it's much safer than putting a large sheet on my table saw. Also, having a workflow around the assembly table always made more sense to me!

  • @workshopdojo
    @workshopdojo 2 года назад +1

    I love your basic videos, so important, nicely explained.

  • @marianam8643
    @marianam8643 Год назад

    Really love your channel. I learn so much. Thanks very much for doing this!!!

  • @g.wes.3906
    @g.wes.3906 Год назад

    That tip about cutlist optimizater is a so genius. Sometimes it's just the little things that make so much difference to the end product.

  • @christianpetersen1782
    @christianpetersen1782 Год назад

    I’m a bit late on the scene here having just found you. I found your methods and presentation style very interesting and engaging. I learned a lot here to tweak my accuracy. I don’t have or want a table saw but I take your main point that it’s about the process so I can still use this to get more accurate results. Any more videos using track saws will be welcome here. Thank you so much and subbed! Greetings from 🇬🇧.

  • @Wyman642
    @Wyman642 2 года назад +1

    Excellent practical advice. I appreciate the wisdom of cutting the pieces larger on the track saw for later precise final cutting on the table saw. And, of course, keeping track of the reference edges as they are created. Lesson learned. Thanks very much!

    • @bentswoodworking
      @bentswoodworking  2 года назад

      You’re welcome

    • @vincentzhang2160
      @vincentzhang2160 Год назад

      @@bentswoodworking may I ask why not do the precise final cut with the track saw? Is it a necessity to do it at the table saw? Personally I feel like track saw gives me cleaner cuts. Are you worried about the lack of a fence for track saw systems not producing perfectly square cuts?

  • @robertgenelli8685
    @robertgenelli8685 Год назад +7

    Thanks for the advice, never trust factory edges , I’m a bit of a perfectionist so I’m in agreement of making your own, cheers from Scotland.

  • @buildingthecrowders
    @buildingthecrowders 2 года назад +1

    This has been the best video I have found for breaking down plywood correctly!! Thank you!!

  • @tedpuckett2779
    @tedpuckett2779 2 года назад +1

    Really enjoyed this. Making all the reference sides was a great share. Will look into the freeware you mentioned as well. Thanks

  • @brianmcintyre5867
    @brianmcintyre5867 2 года назад +1

    Excellent workmanship. Thanks for the attention to details.

  • @johnisley4578
    @johnisley4578 2 года назад +1

    Another great vid that really helps newbies such as me ! Good Stuff Brent. Cheers

  • @abdulkhaliqalsaif8883
    @abdulkhaliqalsaif8883 Год назад +1

    Great tips, very useful to me, learned new professional way of doing work. Thank you very much

  • @Neoethical
    @Neoethical 2 года назад +1

    This was really helpful. I wrestled with this. Seems so obvious after seeing it. Thanks a ton!

  • @marymartindale996
    @marymartindale996 2 месяца назад +1

    Thank you for your video. I am a complete beginner and appreciate you explaining it in a way that I can understand.

  • @micschemelin663
    @micschemelin663 2 года назад +1

    Great technique and you really spelled out in an easy to follow process. Thank you !

  • @jaykepley5238
    @jaykepley5238 2 года назад +1

    Good instructional video, Jason. Thanks!

  • @suearmstrong3404
    @suearmstrong3404 2 года назад +1

    Nice job/explanation! I wasn't sure why you wouldn't just use the track saw but you explained perfectly why it would be important! Thank you!

  • @timrowe5448
    @timrowe5448 4 месяца назад

    Great, informative video! Thank You!

  • @justinlee3139
    @justinlee3139 3 месяца назад

    Hi, I'm at beginning stage and your lesson was greatly helpful. Many thanks.

  • @samusnone2417
    @samusnone2417 Год назад

    Great educational video. Thank you

  • @ealdydar
    @ealdydar 2 года назад +1

    Cut List Optimizer is a must if you wood work. Ive been using it on my pc and mobile phone. Its not just for sheet goods. I build cabinets for a living and install for designers that order the exactly what you need. For example im using it to figure out if i have enough perfinished crown and furniture base. most of the time if you make one bad cut or out of order not cutting all your longs first generating smalls your short.

  • @glennirwin4710
    @glennirwin4710 Год назад +1

    Nice video as always.

  • @pmelchman
    @pmelchman 2 года назад +1

    Great video Jason. The biggest take away for me was the Cutlist optimizer. I used to try a use Sketchup but that is way more work

  • @rikmiles6531
    @rikmiles6531 Год назад

    I am a home builder of 40 years and I thought I could cut plywood. This is a very nice video. Well done.

  • @johnvodopija1743
    @johnvodopija1743 2 года назад +2

    As a new track saw owner I found this video very helpful. Thank you 👍😎🇦🇺

  • @csimet
    @csimet 2 года назад +1

    Excellent video. The cut list optimizer is great. Tx!

  • @coreys63
    @coreys63 2 года назад +1

    Good Stuff! As a rookie...I'm always making mistakes by not keeping track of my square edge. I'll be sure to start marking my edge(s) now 👍

  • @septimuspretorius250
    @septimuspretorius250 2 года назад +1

    Nice Job, sir: Your presentation was outstanding! I’m glad that I watched the entire video. I “liked and subscribed” to your channel. Keep them coming!!

  • @quietwoodworking
    @quietwoodworking Год назад

    I love this. Thank you!

  • @gwapo247
    @gwapo247 2 года назад +1

    Very useful for me since I'm a beginner. Great technique!

  • @shane3584
    @shane3584 2 года назад +1

    Very good tip's.i have been using the same methods for years except for the final table saw cut as I didn't have one suitable.i will have a new festool TKS 80 next week and will be fully using your method.thanks for a great tutorials.regards from Ireland.Shane 👍

  • @dscritter614
    @dscritter614 2 года назад +1

    I'm a newbie. Learned a lot. Liked the work flow info. And yes, I am n awe of your setup.

  • @brentprosser7293
    @brentprosser7293 2 года назад +1

    I tried to get by just using the festool system for cutting. And it is accurate......mostly. I can make it work with minor adjustments. But, I have realized I'm going to have to go with the hybrid approach you just laid out. I came to that realization a few weeks ago and your video just reinforced it. I'm currently researching whether to go with the laguna or with the harvey table saw. I think I'll be going with the laguna, as of today, and then when I finish building my new house and shop, I'll keep the laguna just for one purpose and then add the Harvey down the road for others. Might set it up like Frank Howarth did with his double table saw set up. As always, thanks for the videos!

  • @nsanerydah
    @nsanerydah 2 года назад +1

    Great information!!

  • @GKganesan
    @GKganesan 6 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you. This is super useful

  • @jenniferhennessy2357
    @jenniferhennessy2357 Год назад

    Great video, thanks for the link to the cutlist optimiser, great website

  • @reedbrickell215
    @reedbrickell215 2 года назад +1

    Thanks for the idea of foam under the wood. Worked great.

  • @rebelchief6590
    @rebelchief6590 2 года назад +1

    This video was excellent. Super simple and smart!

  • @craig8727
    @craig8727 3 месяца назад +1

    My gosh you did a fantastic job of explaining all of this, very good work! I'll will be using your techniques during my first cabinet builds, thanks!

  • @FD-dh2fu
    @FD-dh2fu 4 месяца назад +1

    Love it. Thank you for the guidance.

  • @HarlyGuy13
    @HarlyGuy13 2 года назад +1

    All around great video. I just purchased a Makita track saw and what a game changer it is. Thanks for the tips.

  • @LaserGarage
    @LaserGarage 2 года назад +1

    Great Video Jason. Keep up the good work

  • @natureswrapture3922
    @natureswrapture3922 2 года назад +1

    Very well explained. This has always been a problem for me using a regular circular saw. I've just invested in a track saw so hopefully true 90 degree cuts are in my future.

  • @josephfisk466
    @josephfisk466 Год назад

    Good stuff! Explained well

  • @tyrsafray4640
    @tyrsafray4640 3 месяца назад +1

    Excellent video! Great technique! Makes total sense

  • @YT-User1013
    @YT-User1013 Год назад

    Great stuff, thanks!

  • @jessefurqueron5555
    @jessefurqueron5555 2 года назад +2

    Very similar to what we do for “precise” cuts. No MFTs, so use the TS75 tracksaw w TSO GRS16 PE to make two known reference edges w 3/4” foam backer (prefer the white urethane to pink stuff, just beware the “shiny” side in bright sunlight if outdoors)), 1” is not readily available in our part of the country. We usually establish those two known straight edges on the largest piece we can safely manage/move through the table saw (PM2000B w 50” fence). That manageable piece which is cut 1/4” to 1/2” oversized initially (if doing multiple yield pieces add/allow for tablesaw blade width cuts) may yield one final cut piece or perhaps dozens of smaller pieces from the initial two reference cuts. As always, just sharing my .02c, nothing more, nothing less.

  • @Nilsje
    @Nilsje Год назад +2

    Great video and a lot of useful tips! Love the fact you’re using metric. You’re a smart man 😃👌🏼

  • @irondave103
    @irondave103 2 года назад +1

    Love this system 👍😎

  • @macklane3467
    @macklane3467 5 месяцев назад +1

    Awesome video. Thanks!

  • @RJ-sr5dv
    @RJ-sr5dv Год назад +1

    Well Done.. THX for making the video

  • @lanegustafson929
    @lanegustafson929 Год назад +1

    What an eye opening video. Thank you.

  • @RJ-sr5dv
    @RJ-sr5dv Год назад +1

    I’m new to woodworking love your channel. Thanks.

  • @fabioc.pereira5184
    @fabioc.pereira5184 2 года назад +1

    As a hobbyist woodworker I just own a Makita track saw. I like your setup and I was able build a simple table similar to MFT. Appreciate your tips to rip cut square. Just Don have a table saw so , need to improvise to get good square cross cuts. Greetings from Brazil!!

  • @joeladam742
    @joeladam742 2 года назад +1

    Great video. It was nice to see how a pro deals with the lack of square on factory edges. I like your festool setup. I have been trying to do the same sort of thing with my kreg aws

    • @bentswoodworking
      @bentswoodworking  2 года назад

      Thanks, glad you found it helpful!

    • @dougkelly8956
      @dougkelly8956 Год назад

      One of the valuable things I've discovered from this channel is that the very nice TSO products now support the Kreg ACS track system (they didn't back when I first purchased the ACS).

  • @ilive4livemusic
    @ilive4livemusic 2 года назад +1

    Very helpful and clear. Thanks

  • @deany5709
    @deany5709 2 года назад +2

    Excellent video. I'm a recent subscriber and love your videos. A long time ago I used to cut full sheets of plywood on my little Makita contractor's table saw. I was very lucky that I never got injured. 30 years later and I'm still using that table saw, though with a Ridge Carbide blade, but I've since used a circular saw to break down the full sheets. Will definitely follow your instruction on squaring the pieces!
    To silence the doubters, maybe you should try using a contractor's table and a circular saw using a plain straight edge. Just a thought.

    • @bentswoodworking
      @bentswoodworking  2 года назад

      Even then, I’m sure I would get naysayers 🤣🤣

  • @3ddiy
    @3ddiy 2 года назад +1

    Solid advice in here, Thanks!

  • @alancroft6928
    @alancroft6928 2 года назад +1

    Excellent. Thank you for that.

  • @bdm1000
    @bdm1000 11 месяцев назад +3

    It should be noted that with Cutlist Organizer, unless you pay $15-$25 a month, you can't change the "Optimization Priority". I assume this affects the cutlist to permit doing all the rip cuts first as you suggest. Otherwise, when it's left on the "Least wasted area" setting, it's going to mix your rip and crosscuts (not allowing you to do all your rip cuts first).

  • @stephenoneil7743
    @stephenoneil7743 9 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you, GREAT video! Wish I watched it last week before building 3 cabinets and having to sand every edge to square.

  • @patheffernan3418
    @patheffernan3418 2 года назад +7

    This seems simply analogous to how we cut milled wood… you start with a reference edge, cut the other rip, establish a clean 90 degree crosscut face and measure and cut for length. The real secret, with whatever tools you use, is to ensure your setup is creating perfect parallel or perpendicular cuts! Nice video.

    • @bentswoodworking
      @bentswoodworking  2 года назад

      Glad you enjoyed it

    • @garrett2635
      @garrett2635 Год назад

      @@bentswoodworking Came here to say this. I usually rip a factory edge and then take a framing square and then rip a second edge so you know you one corner of the sheet is perfectly 90. I find this easier and I think it reduces your total number of crosscuts as opposed to having to make a 90deg cut on every crosscut. If you know a reference corner is 90deg then you can reference the whole corner vs having to mark out a perfectly perpendicular line every time.

  • @gregoryjohnson3627
    @gregoryjohnson3627 2 года назад +1

    Using the fence to measure and having the track flip up like that is something I look forward to building in to my workbench