I've owned a couple of Streibig panel saws that took tremendous abuse for years without quitting. We were in the Corian business and that material is tough on equipment. You can do just about anything on them that a sliding table saw will do in a fraction of the space. Eventually we moved up to a full panel processing saw with diamond blades and a 150" square format. I don't think it would fit in your shop. You could cut 8 sheets of plywood at a time - but that didn't happen very often. I miss my big boy toys, my spanking clean shop and the joy of coming to work in the morning.
Impressive how you guys were able to "re-create" some of the same shots from the how to cabinetry video 😉. Love these videos, always learning something useful!
I've always thought that the shop was kind of small for what you do, but I've just chalked it up to being in Boston and the added cost that would come with a bigger shop.
Really enjoyed the video and the thought processes about the flow of work. I have a small Joinery workshop in the UK and wondered if you guys have considered a wall/vertical saw?. They take up wall space but far less footprint than a large panel saw. Really easy compared to a panel saw for getting 8x4 or 10x5 sheet materials on and I can't think of anything I could do on a panel saw I can't do on a wall saw, even cut apertures in doors ,trim horns etc... Just wondered if wall/vertical saws are used much in the US?... Regards Ade
one issue about panel saw is the weight of the materiel and some odd cuts that is needed and yeah panel saw is very nice and i have used it in panel manufacturing plant and panel saw is easy to use by one person which is what i like about it
For your assembly table with dog holes, did you use the Parf guide or something else to line them up? Also I notice you have the Oneida cyclones for your CT vacs, why these over the Festool CT VA cyclone? Great tour, thanks for filming this! Fantastic explanations.
We cheated. The table was cut on a CNC. We had the Oneida collectors on our vacs long before Festool came out with their cyclone. Thank you for watching!
very nice setup, I would consider either a couple of super dust deputy's in front of those bag collectors or move the compressor away so it doesn't have to use air with fine dust and/or add a sizable exhaust fan in your dust collection closet to most that air out of the building. just my humble opinion.
What grit do you use in the time saver when you send the doors through? If you didn't have a time saver, is there another machine you would use instead? Thanks for making these videos, they are really interesting.
Great questions. Typically 120 or 150. Going up or down a grit depending on the project. Before we got the wide belt, using the Festool Rotex sander made quick work of rough sanding. Thanks for watching, it's much appreciated.
I noticed you store all your sheet goods standing up, is there anything in particular you do to keep them from warping or bowing? I store mine the same way and it’s a regular problem I deal with. Thanks for putting out the great content.
We're not storing them for all that long. When we do though, we try keeping the rack full to keep them straight up. We used to store them horizontally but we use so many different sheet types that we don't have enough room to store them all individually and without fail, always need the ones on the bottom. That becomes difficult and time consuming to get those sheets out. Material handling and selecting is much easier with them stored vertically.
If you have a conveyor that comes off of the end of your edgebander you can do doors without having to walk all the way to the other end of the edgebander or edgeband one part and it conveyed its way back to you without having to move your edge banner
I am so very impress you have a very very serious cabinet shop and i like one best is a large table saw and im like wow and im sure you can make almost anything and nothing is impossible to make almost and good job and work and layout and planning space you have
i have ben watching you guys for a while and really like the attention to small details on your projects! i try do the same however sometimes time/deadlines dont allow for that .
What is your experience with a used edge bander? Any major tuning required? I am in the market for one since i am purchasing a Shop Sabre CNC for my custom shop.
I like your videos. I'm a general contractor in Santa Barbara Ca, I went to Wentworth Institute and I am wondering if that is still a viable asset for construction as it was for me in the early 1970's
G, day from Sydney, Australia * great tour of the joinery * other than the edge bander, is there any steps of manufacturing that travels backwards? * would be good to see the finishing shop. And remember... Eyes, ears and dust. 🌏🇭🇲
How happy are you with your Cantech machines? I am looking into some of their stuff. I have been told that they are much better quality than powermatic which I have been over for years now. I was told that the Cantech are true industrial machines and being that you have several of them I would greatly appreciate hearing from you as to your experience with them. Thank you
That's true but there's always reasons why it can't be on there for a particular cut. On the other had there's no need for Roscoe to be putting his fingers anywhere near the blade in most cases. That Cantech is way safer than the old Unisaw or Powematic without the guard.
You guys do deserve bigger shop, similar to one that April Wilkerson has! However I realize that if your projects are in downtown Boston, you now have 20 miles to there, so if you could get 2x sized shop from 40mi away, the joy of working with space would get lost to having to drive double the time each time :(
Hi, great tour of the shop and the equipment you use. One question -- you mentioned at the beginning there are parts that "came back from the finisher" and are all wrapped up, as they should be. I've been doing my own finishing and would love to outsource it instead, as it takes a ton of time and I'd rather we focus on milling and making and not spraying and dealing with all that finishing. But I can't seem to find finishers here in Atlanta, I think I must be searching for the wrong terms on Google, because the search results I always get back are for painters and the like to come into someone's home and refinish the cabinets that are already installed, which obviously isn't what I'm looking for. So any advice on what I should be looking for, what I should call it, etc etc.? Atlanta is a big market so there must be businesses her that do that kind of thing. Second question -- did you guys ever do your own finishing at any point? what were the key reasons you decided to outsource it? Thanks!
Check in with the guys at "Buckhead Finishing Studio" and/or "Wurth Wood Group." Between those two, I'll bet you find a quality finisher in Atl. Wurth will at least be able to tell you who buys a ton of finishing product & that'll be a place to start. Best, Andrew Thiessen
Ken, Nick has nothing on you with these video's. You were born to do this!
Hahaha I don't know about that but thank you very much.
I've owned a couple of Streibig panel saws that took tremendous abuse for years without quitting. We were in the Corian business and that material is tough on equipment. You can do just about anything on them that a sliding table saw will do in a fraction of the space. Eventually we moved up to a full panel processing saw with diamond blades and a 150" square format. I don't think it would fit in your shop. You could cut 8 sheets of plywood at a time - but that didn't happen very often. I miss my big boy toys, my spanking clean shop and the joy of coming to work in the morning.
Outtakes for the win. Hysterical!
Bloopers put a smile on my face even on a bad day lol
Saw one of your vans in town today and a video..I getting a lottery ticket!
Don't forget about us little guys when you win it big!
Impressive how you guys were able to "re-create" some of the same shots from the how to cabinetry video 😉. Love these videos, always learning something useful!
I've always thought that the shop was kind of small for what you do, but I've just chalked it up to being in Boston and the added cost that would come with a bigger shop.
It is very small and yes Boston is quite expensive. Constantly keeping an eye out for the right space in the right location.
Really enjoyed the video and the thought processes about the flow of work. I have a small Joinery workshop in the UK and wondered if you guys have considered a wall/vertical saw?. They take up wall space but far less footprint than a large panel saw. Really easy compared to a panel saw for getting 8x4 or 10x5 sheet materials on and I can't think of anything I could do on a panel saw I can't do on a wall saw, even cut apertures in doors ,trim horns etc... Just wondered if wall/vertical saws are used much in the US?... Regards Ade
one issue about panel saw is the weight of the materiel and some odd cuts that is needed and yeah panel saw is very nice and i have used it in panel manufacturing plant and panel saw is easy to use by one person which is what i like about it
Nice to process their process for how they process their projects. That’s my dream shop
What a timing!!! Just finished watching NSB IG story 👍
Why do you send out the boxes to be cut by CNC when you have the sliding setup for the table saw?
For your assembly table with dog holes, did you use the Parf guide or something else to line them up? Also I notice you have the Oneida cyclones for your CT vacs, why these over the Festool CT VA cyclone? Great tour, thanks for filming this! Fantastic explanations.
We cheated. The table was cut on a CNC. We had the Oneida collectors on our vacs long before Festool came out with their cyclone. Thank you for watching!
very nice setup, I would consider either a couple of super dust deputy's in front of those bag collectors or move the compressor away so it doesn't have to use air with fine dust and/or add a sizable exhaust fan in your dust collection closet to most that air out of the building. just my humble opinion.
Never seen pneumatic miter gauge hold down for your shaper where did you find that?
What grit do you use in the time saver when you send the doors through? If you didn't have a time saver, is there another machine you would use instead? Thanks for making these videos, they are really interesting.
Great questions. Typically 120 or 150. Going up or down a grit depending on the project. Before we got the wide belt, using the Festool Rotex sander made quick work of rough sanding. Thanks for watching, it's much appreciated.
I noticed you store all your sheet goods standing up, is there anything in particular you do to keep them from warping or bowing? I store mine the same way and it’s a regular problem I deal with. Thanks for putting out the great content.
We're not storing them for all that long. When we do though, we try keeping the rack full to keep them straight up. We used to store them horizontally but we use so many different sheet types that we don't have enough room to store them all individually and without fail, always need the ones on the bottom. That becomes difficult and time consuming to get those sheets out. Material handling and selecting is much easier with them stored vertically.
If you have a conveyor that comes off of the end of your edgebander you can do doors without having to walk all the way to the other end of the edgebander or edgeband one part and it conveyed its way back to you without having to move your edge banner
I am so very impress you have a very very serious cabinet shop and i like one best is a large table saw and im like wow and im sure you can make almost anything and nothing is impossible to make almost and good job and work and layout and planning space you have
Nice, nice, nice!!!
Excellent. Thank you.
Hey guys, very cool workshop and videos!, How do you build you workbenches?, to be dead flat and resistant in time
i have ben watching you guys for a while and really like the attention to small details on your projects! i try do the same however sometimes time/deadlines dont allow for that .
do you guys have any issues with the segmented feed roller on the planer maring the material?
What is your experience with a used edge bander? Any major tuning required? I am in the market for one since i am purchasing a Shop Sabre CNC for my custom shop.
I like your videos. I'm a general contractor in Santa Barbara Ca, I went to Wentworth Institute and I am wondering if that is still a viable asset for construction as it was for me in the early 1970's
Yes I do believe it still is.
G, day from Sydney, Australia
* great tour of the joinery
* other than the edge bander, is there any steps of manufacturing that travels backwards?
* would be good to see the finishing shop.
And remember... Eyes, ears and dust.
🌏🇭🇲
QQ: What's the brand of that lift cart you have? Blue one..9:25 mark
www.globalindustrial.com/p/material-handling/lift-tables/mobile-scissor/long-deck-mobile-scissor-li-with-oversized-63-x-32-platform-1100-lb-cap
How long does it take you to build a set of raised panel doors? The way we make our doors you must have to change your knives 4 times.
How happy are you with your Cantech machines?
I am looking into some of their stuff. I have been told that they are much better quality than powermatic which I have been over for years now. I was told that the Cantech are true industrial machines and being that you have several of them I would greatly appreciate hearing from you as to your experience with them. Thank you
I'm also curious about Cantech's quality.
What size is your shop?
I’d like to know too.
There is no splitter behind the sawblade on the sliding table saw which is not safe.
That's true but there's always reasons why it can't be on there for a particular cut. On the other had there's no need for Roscoe to be putting his fingers anywhere near the blade in most cases. That Cantech is way safer than the old Unisaw or Powematic without the guard.
You guys do deserve bigger shop, similar to one that April Wilkerson has! However I realize that if your projects are in downtown Boston, you now have 20 miles to there, so if you could get 2x sized shop from 40mi away, the joy of working with space would get lost to having to drive double the time each time :(
What about a more detailed look into your slider.. go over all the different uses your shop applies to cabinet building.
Ditch the sliding table saw and buy a Shopsabre.
U Need bigger shop
Hi, great tour of the shop and the equipment you use. One question -- you mentioned at the beginning there are parts that "came back from the finisher" and are all wrapped up, as they should be. I've been doing my own finishing and would love to outsource it instead, as it takes a ton of time and I'd rather we focus on milling and making and not spraying and dealing with all that finishing. But I can't seem to find finishers here in Atlanta, I think I must be searching for the wrong terms on Google, because the search results I always get back are for painters and the like to come into someone's home and refinish the cabinets that are already installed, which obviously isn't what I'm looking for. So any advice on what I should be looking for, what I should call it, etc etc.? Atlanta is a big market so there must be businesses her that do that kind of thing. Second question -- did you guys ever do your own finishing at any point? what were the key reasons you decided to outsource it?
Thanks!
Check in with the guys at "Buckhead Finishing Studio" and/or "Wurth Wood Group." Between those two, I'll bet you find a quality finisher in Atl. Wurth will at least be able to tell you who buys a ton of finishing product & that'll be a place to start. Best, Andrew Thiessen
@@branchandfoundry560 Thanks - I will check them out!