Thank you. I'm glad you're enjoying it. One thing I learned in this video, do not use Tightbond 3 with light colored woods. It dries dark and leaves visible seams.
I was looking at bent laminations and some folks use Weldwood glue. It is gap filling but you must use a respirator when using it. I am looking at a vacuum press since you only use one side of the form or caul. Also using clear packing tape on all of the form surfaces prevent the glue from attaching to the caul. Nice video. Thanks for making it.
This was the first time I've ever attempted bent laminations, so there is a lot of room for improvement. The vacuum press cost more than the MDF, foam and packing tape, so I tried it this way. At the time, I had only seen people using regular wood glue rather than the Woodweld resin. I may try that if I ever do bent lamination again. Thanks for watching.
Nice video. I think if I were to make it, I would run the laminate sheets through the thickness planer to remove that groove from the table saw. And I'd probably use the jointer for both sides of the arm - I know it doens't ensure parallel lines, but looks easier to manage.
Ideally, I would have had a drum sander. I was a bit afraid of running something that thin through the planer. Also, I didn't want to loose too much overall thickness of the finished piece. But yes, running it through the planer with very light passes would have been fine. I should have done it. It would have saved me some time down the road.
I am sorry, I do not understand the question. It seems like a Google translate failure. I think you're asking why I cut the armrest on the table saw rather than a handheld circular saw. I could have made the cut with the handheld circular saw, but I did not even think about doing that. Using the handheld circular saw would probably been safer and I should have used that. I would have used a fence to register off the side that I squared up on the jointer. Or maybe you are asking why I did not use the jointer to flatten both sides of the armrest. If I had done that, I could not have been sure that both edges were parallel.
My armrests didn't really spring back much, even though I planned on it. And working with something that can cut me like glass does not sound pleasant. Just like anything in woodworking, if you ask 10 different woodworkers how to do something, you will get 12 different answers. Thanks for watching and commenting.
Enjoying the build! A morris chair build is on my bucket list.
Thank you. I'm glad you're enjoying it. One thing I learned in this video, do not use Tightbond 3 with light colored woods. It dries dark and leaves visible seams.
Amazing job sir👌
Thank you for the compliment. And thank you for watching!
I was looking at bent laminations and some folks use Weldwood glue. It is gap filling but you must use a respirator when using it. I am looking at a vacuum press since you only use one side of the form or caul. Also using clear packing tape on all of the form surfaces prevent the glue from attaching to the caul. Nice video. Thanks for making it.
This was the first time I've ever attempted bent laminations, so there is a lot of room for improvement. The vacuum press cost more than the MDF, foam and packing tape, so I tried it this way. At the time, I had only seen people using regular wood glue rather than the Woodweld resin. I may try that if I ever do bent lamination again.
Thanks for watching.
@@HandlebarWorkshops Well you did a good job and I appreciated your thoughtful instructions. There is always something new.
Nice video. I think if I were to make it, I would run the laminate sheets through the thickness planer to remove that groove from the table saw. And I'd probably use the jointer for both sides of the arm - I know it doens't ensure parallel lines, but looks easier to manage.
Ideally, I would have had a drum sander. I was a bit afraid of running something that thin through the planer. Also, I didn't want to loose too much overall thickness of the finished piece. But yes, running it through the planer with very light passes would have been fine. I should have done it. It would have saved me some time down the road.
why did they dissolve the lamellae on the circular and not the flying saw?
I am sorry, I do not understand the question. It seems like a Google translate failure.
I think you're asking why I cut the armrest on the table saw rather than a handheld circular saw. I could have made the cut with the handheld circular saw, but I did not even think about doing that. Using the handheld circular saw would probably been safer and I should have used that. I would have used a fence to register off the side that I squared up on the jointer.
Or maybe you are asking why I did not use the jointer to flatten both sides of the armrest. If I had done that, I could not have been sure that both edges were parallel.
dont use yellow glue. its like rubber. plastic resin has no springback. its like glass. it will cut you.
My armrests didn't really spring back much, even though I planned on it. And working with something that can cut me like glass does not sound pleasant. Just like anything in woodworking, if you ask 10 different woodworkers how to do something, you will get 12 different answers.
Thanks for watching and commenting.