I like it too my machines I collected in the last 30 years. The thickness planer (Zuckermann) is older than me, and I am turning 60. But this kind of machines are not to kill, the only you have to do sometime, is changing the bearings.
Very nice way of making tapered sliding dovetails using that shim on your jointer to create that tapered piece for your router to ride against. Well done sir
I'm in the process of designing a chabudai with a walnut slab top. I'm concerned because the slab is 2" thick flattened and I'm trying to avoid milling it thinner (because that's a lot of work and I'd have to buy the tools to do it). I've built a small desk with a 2" top before and it just looked clunky. That desk did have an apron though so that makes it look even thicker, and it was a standard height desk with chunky legs too. Your top looks good though. I think the contrasting dovetail plugs help cut the thickness as well. And it only being about a foot tall also helps. It'll probably be fine, I'm just being scared because it's like $800 in material and I don't want it to look bad. I suppose I should just 3d model it to get a sense of the proportions. I really like the way your table looks and it appears to be even thicker than my slab so that gives me confidence.
yes sir, agreed.. I really like all this power tools... and very good skill too.... I made my table with very limited tools... ruclips.net/video/5hWJpOgoYSw/видео.html
Lovely table and video work! It looked like you were tapering the legs on the jointer, which was cool because you don't see that a lot. However, I think you were just making a wider end to snug up the legs when you drove them home. Is that right? Beautiful work.
you look really experienced in woodworking seeing this little details in the video. Yes, a dovetail batten should always be made with a tapering, otherwise you can´t get a good snug fit. The only "parallel" dovetail batten we make is with hard wood into a very soft wood like basswood or pine.
Hi can you please provide tips on how you create the legs and the groove for the legs. How do you measure to ensure the legs slide in perfectly with the table ?
First we mortise the groove (5:05). At 5:20 you see a thin plate (3 mm) for setting the first table of the planing machine. Putting the woodpiece with the top on the second table and planing it you get a slope of 3 mm. We use this adjustment of the planing machine both for the conical wood lath (9:52) and for the conical foot (6:09). So the same conical form is guaranted. Now you can fit in the foot with fine tuning on the rooter. The joint should grip at the last 1/3 of the length. It should fit as tight as possible, but you should be able to beat the foot to the end position which needs quite a lot of pressure though.
Yes, it is possible to make the grooves with a chisel and a saw and a special plane for the ground. Years ago I made my sliding dovetails completely by hand without any machine.
Thank you for your help I am starting to make the legs, please can you give me tips on how you measure the legs and the grooves, I noticed on both ends you had either a cut out on the top or on the bottom of the legs?
We saw the log to a thickness of 30, 40, 50, 60, 80 Millimeter, the width depends on the diameter of the log, always the maximum. That is European standard.
Thanks for your interest. For Austria and Germany you can use our onlineshop www.hand-werk-statt.at, for the rest of the world send us an email, and you will get an offer from us. We send our products worldwide with DHL.
Very Well done! And I love the shop you have.
Such a Solid Piece!💐
I am insanely jealous of your shop. Amazing work
I like it too my machines I collected in the last 30 years. The thickness planer (Zuckermann) is older than me, and I am turning 60. But this kind of machines are not to kill, the only you have to do sometime, is changing the bearings.
2 artists letting their craft speak for itself. Subscribed
Very nice way of making tapered sliding dovetails using that shim on your jointer to create that tapered piece for your router to ride against. Well done sir
I'm in the process of designing a chabudai with a walnut slab top. I'm concerned because the slab is 2" thick flattened and I'm trying to avoid milling it thinner (because that's a lot of work and I'd have to buy the tools to do it). I've built a small desk with a 2" top before and it just looked clunky. That desk did have an apron though so that makes it look even thicker, and it was a standard height desk with chunky legs too.
Your top looks good though. I think the contrasting dovetail plugs help cut the thickness as well. And it only being about a foot tall also helps. It'll probably be fine, I'm just being scared because it's like $800 in material and I don't want it to look bad. I suppose I should just 3d model it to get a sense of the proportions. I really like the way your table looks and it appears to be even thicker than my slab so that gives me confidence.
In the Philippines we have that kind of table. We called it dulang made of molave or narra solid wood
These machines are so cool! Great works btw
yes sir, agreed.. I really like all this power tools... and very good skill too.... I made my table with very limited tools...
ruclips.net/video/5hWJpOgoYSw/видео.html
@@madieestouch8526 gonna tried it out too!
Beauty
The best deh Japan , sangat apik, bersih dan profesional , sangat menginspirasi
Great video! Make more!
Thank you! In the making!
Loved it ❤ just subscribed
Auto sub for your creativeness.
Love from malaysia
Beautiful video! Very inspiring! Also I think I have the same teapot! Haha
very nice
Thank you!
Very well
Awesome! That is excellent craftsmanship! Also, I was wondering what kind of stain did you use on the table.
Thank you! It's a simple hard oil finish.
@@frankastudio5552 Ok. Thanks!
Lovely table and video work! It looked like you were tapering the legs on the jointer, which was cool because you don't see that a lot. However, I think you were just making a wider end to snug up the legs when you drove them home. Is that right? Beautiful work.
You have already explained this on another comment. Thank you.
you look really experienced in woodworking seeing this little details in the video. Yes, a dovetail batten should always be made with a tapering, otherwise you can´t get a good snug fit. The only "parallel" dovetail batten we make is with hard wood into a very soft wood like basswood or pine.
@@frankastudio5552 Thank you and cheers.
Hi can you please provide tips on how you create the legs and the groove for the legs. How do you measure to ensure the legs slide in perfectly with the table ?
First we mortise the groove (5:05). At 5:20 you see a thin plate (3 mm) for setting the first table of the planing machine. Putting the woodpiece with the top on the second table and planing it you get a slope of 3 mm. We use this adjustment of the planing machine both for the conical wood lath (9:52) and for the conical foot (6:09). So the same conical form is guaranted. Now you can fit in the foot with fine tuning on the rooter. The joint should grip at the last 1/3 of the length. It should fit as tight as possible, but you should be able to beat the foot to the end position which needs quite a lot of pressure though.
Franka Studio thank you so much , do you think is possible to do without power tools, making the grooves with a chisel and saw
Yes, it is possible to make the grooves with a chisel and a saw and a special plane for the ground. Years ago I made my sliding dovetails completely by hand without any machine.
Thank you for your help
I am starting to make the legs, please can you give me tips on how you measure the legs and the grooves, I noticed on both ends you had either a cut out on the top or on the bottom of the legs?
What a piece! What are the dimensions?
My guess is something like 110/80/25
It is smaller - 90/60/16 cm, the slab is 70 mm. And you are right, it is a compact piece of wood standing hard on the ground.
I wonder if that's a 12/4 lumber
We saw the log to a thickness of 30, 40, 50, 60, 80 Millimeter, the width depends on the diameter of the log, always the maximum. That is European standard.
@@frankastudio5552 thank ya
Where can I order one of these?
Thanks for your interest. For Austria and Germany you can use our onlineshop www.hand-werk-statt.at, for the rest of the world send us an email, and you will get an offer from us. We send our products worldwide with DHL.
I did something like this a month ago with plans from Woodglut.