#Shoptalk

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  • Опубликовано: 30 янв 2025

Комментарии • 56

  • @gillie-monger3394
    @gillie-monger3394 Год назад +7

    That hand guard was amazing! And the demonstrator had total confidence - he wasn't even looking! I'll never be in a position to justify a saw like that but I really appreciate fine engineering.

  • @NSResponder
    @NSResponder Год назад

    Those wooden prototypes show exceptional cleverness on Mr. Altendorf's part. He's right up there with the top inventors of all time in my book.

  • @FinishCarpentryTV
    @FinishCarpentryTV Год назад +2

    Super cool. Thanks for sharing.

  • @karstenlund-tiger900bonded2
    @karstenlund-tiger900bonded2 10 месяцев назад

    Worlds best sliding saw. Period. And Markus is brilliant btw

  • @stevend9960
    @stevend9960 Год назад +1

    What a fascinating video!

  • @briannelson4122
    @briannelson4122 Год назад +1

    What a great tour! The old saws and the new technology is awesome! Very cool!

  • @christopherinteriors6521
    @christopherinteriors6521 Год назад +1

    Thank you for such a great video. I love seeing the early basic versions of modern machines and how they have progressed. It is amazing to see how great wooden machines were. That wooden panel saw that with all the mood movement/expansion/contraction etc still manages to slide like butter!

  • @BischBaschBosch
    @BischBaschBosch Год назад +1

    Awesome video mate. Very interesting. 👍

  • @kymmarshall1116
    @kymmarshall1116 Год назад +1

    Really enjoyed the video, thanks 👍🏾🇦🇺

  • @scottearlsmithFTC
    @scottearlsmithFTC Год назад +1

    I have been absolutely binge watching your channel since it popped up on my feed about 5 days ago. Love it! I've got a fledgling channel similar to yours but without the dream shop and awesome machinery. Just amazing content. I also like your attitude about owning great machinery and tools. Basically if it makes you more competitive and gets the job done with a little more precision - why not? My limitation is the size of my shop, but I make the best of it. Contemplating a Zeta at the moment. Well done mate.

  • @bertmacdonald337
    @bertmacdonald337 Год назад +1

    Very interesting, nice one Andy !

  • @WalterMitty1966
    @WalterMitty1966 Год назад +1

    Awesome vid , thanks.
    Cheers
    Phil

  • @Woods-BC
    @Woods-BC Год назад +1

    Great video Lad

  • @paulmacey9084
    @paulmacey9084 Год назад +1

    wow thank you really enjoyed their one

  • @GK-ye3fr
    @GK-ye3fr Год назад +1

    Great video

  • @acerjuglans383
    @acerjuglans383 Год назад

    I've used maybe 7 sliding saws in my life, and luckily Altendorf was one of them. And it was the BEST of them. It was a joy just to change the blade.

  • @johnsanchez1619
    @johnsanchez1619 Год назад +2

    Great video! I love tools and technology, and I really enjoyed seeing their early models. Also, the new safety system is impressive. It is great to see the safety technology develop. Cheers!

    • @ManorWood
      @ManorWood  Год назад

      I loved the old machine as well , was very cool

  • @l.k.1011
    @l.k.1011 Год назад +1

    Very impressive technology.

  • @vulgarwoodworks
    @vulgarwoodworks Год назад +3

    I got to see the Felder version of their "finger saver" technology, and it also quite impressive. Having a Hammer K3 myself, I could see making the jump to a saw with that technology. Very cool behind the scenes look at the history.

    • @AndreaArzensek
      @AndreaArzensek Год назад +1

      I have the Felder K700 (around 8k euros), but the one with finger protection really bumps in the price. I don't think they run under 30k Euros.

    • @vulgarwoodworks
      @vulgarwoodworks Год назад +1

      @Andrea's Workshop so true. You can save quite a lot of cash (and hopefully fingers) with proper and safe techniques. Fancy saws though.

  • @NickJamesFurnitureMaker
    @NickJamesFurnitureMaker Год назад +1

    Great video! Was a great couple of days + you explained pained it all really well. You getting a new saw then?

  • @marcinkosin7107
    @marcinkosin7107 Год назад +1

    Amazing!!! Great machine and video!!!

  • @ralphpavero7760
    @ralphpavero7760 Год назад +1

    Loved it thank you

  • @alessandrosuppini943
    @alessandrosuppini943 Год назад

    Thank you, very interesting stuff indeed 👍

  • @antonoat
    @antonoat Год назад +1

    Fascinating stuff, I can't help but think these are seriously complicated machines just for cutting a piece of wood, lol showing my ignorance here ! I do prefer their solution of removing danger by lowering the blade, the Sawstop solution always makes me think too close for comfort! the Looking forward to your new workshop walk around, it will be an education for me! Thanks for sharing the factory tour! Cheers.

    • @acerjuglans383
      @acerjuglans383 Год назад

      If you stood at a machine all day long, 5 days a week, handling large heavy sheet goods by yourself, knowing that you are the first and last line of defence in the precision of the product you're manufacturing for a customer's hard earned money.....you'd understand you're not just cutting a piece of wood.

  • @NSResponder
    @NSResponder Год назад

    The SawStop technology is a great idea, but this is clearly superior.

  • @StripLV
    @StripLV Год назад +1

    Cool!.you where in Minden.. I also know Markus and about 6 other people working there. Have met them many times.I have also a F45 fully loaded (CNC and so on). I have the PQS Miter Fence. Also in the middle but CNC and the angle is shown on the display of the Elmodrive. The Team is amazing.

    • @ManorWood
      @ManorWood  Год назад

      Epic , set up you have !!

    • @StripLV
      @StripLV Год назад +1

      @@ManorWood Thanks. I also have the Vakuum and the Airtable. I don't know the correct English words but I guess you know what I mean. I love it. Only the Display and Software is terrible. So outdated... from 2006. I love the Martin and also the Felder much more.

  • @mariushegli
    @mariushegli Год назад +1

    I have nothing to say really, but I appreciate your content, and wish to help with the yt-algorithms.

  • @aaronoconnor606
    @aaronoconnor606 Год назад +1

    Wish I could afford one amazing tool

  • @michael.knight
    @michael.knight Год назад +3

    Great video, interesting to see those original panel saws were made from wood. Hope this is the first in a series! Next up Felder and SCM factories?

    • @ManorWood
      @ManorWood  Год назад +1

      If I get an invite, I will take you all along :)

  • @Woods-BC
    @Woods-BC Год назад

    I’m contemplating to either go with the F45 Elmo-drive Control with the handguard option. Or the Felder Kappa 550X with the PCS
    The Felder delivers more Bang for the buck 😢

  • @AndreaArzensek
    @AndreaArzensek Год назад +4

    Fantastic saws from Altendorf! I have a Felder, but I wouldn't mind exchanging for one of these :)
    One important note:
    Your audio is bad as you have pointed throughout the video, but adding the music makes it much worse. Lower to a minimum or get rid of the music all together, it isn't needed and it makes it harder to hear what you and others want to say. This is no hate, just feedback.

  • @Will-cl1ve
    @Will-cl1ve Год назад

    Cool machines and a nice video, but if your talking about the tool that changed everything, then it’s surely the battery drill no?

    • @Will-cl1ve
      @Will-cl1ve Год назад

      Imagine what life in woodworking was like before the planer thicknesse

  • @MrZOMBIE170
    @MrZOMBIE170 Год назад +1

    the man from Altendorf might want to look at a history books as he says at 6:50 that the saw as made in 1906 and then at 7:57 he says the reason the saw was made with wooden because it was time of world war number one he's 8 years to early for world war one it started in 1914 a thing a germen should know

  • @kevinC5611
    @kevinC5611 Год назад

    These Guys reached their peak in about 2015-2016, Altendorf is just a name now.

  • @dougsaunders8109
    @dougsaunders8109 Год назад +1

    Lovely German engineering. Germans are good at investing in their home grown industries 👍🏻

  • @jeffk464
    @jeffk464 Год назад +1

    We had one of these in a cabinet class. It's one impressive machine, but no hobby saw.

    • @ManorWood
      @ManorWood  Год назад

      WA6 , cover hobby to pro that another cracker 👍

  • @Arfabiscuit
    @Arfabiscuit Год назад

    Vorsprung durch technik .

  • @zorkabaljak3919
    @zorkabaljak3919 Год назад

    The author does like to from scratch, ruclips.net/user/postUgkxbnOKZBE4evMO5V2vroHeCjq6d_MV6wJO shaping and trimming wood from large blocks into fine finished products. As another reviewer mentioned, most projects require a lot of high-dollar equipment that most of us don’t have the room or budget for. But, knowing how to do these things, even if we won’t be able to practise the full stack project, is still great.

  • @lundqvistmachinsnickeri
    @lundqvistmachinsnickeri Год назад

    A lot of strange statements here. Altendorf did not invent the sliding table 1906, that has been around since at least 1851 with J. A. Fay & Co and in Sweden Jonsered and other makers made them from 1879. Same with the roller on steel rods, that is an old standard from 1880 and available in Europe and US before the time of Altendorf.

    • @Attraktor63
      @Attraktor63 Год назад

      Ok, so what is your source of information that J. A. Fay & Co, etc. were making sliding table saws before Altendorf? I cannot find any information on this. If you go to the Wiki for Panel Saws, you only see Altendorf mentioned as the inventor. Just so we're clear, we're talking about a "sliding table saw", right?
      Please give us some more information about your claims, including sources.

    • @ManorWood
      @ManorWood  Год назад

      Hmm I never know that

    • @an2thea514
      @an2thea514 9 месяцев назад

      1906 is the year Altendorf registered his company, not the year he first built his machines.

    • @lundqvistmachinsnickeri
      @lundqvistmachinsnickeri 9 месяцев назад

      @@Attraktor63 Well I for one does not only look at wiki pages, I look in old catalogues and books. Also I usually look at my sliding tables from 1898 when I work making my living as a cabinet maker

  • @andrzej3511
    @andrzej3511 3 месяца назад

    The inventor of the circular saw is Sarah "Tabitha" Babbitt!!!!! Although she did not patent any of her inventions, the fact is documented as the world's first water-powered circular saw.
    It is true that some claim that Sarah "Tabitha" Babbitt is not the inventor. However, the second truth is that many more inventions and innovative designs appeared in her environment. This fact seems to support the thesis that Sarah "Tabitha" Babbitt is the original inventor.
    So it is CERTAINLY NOT the Altendorf company that invented the circular saw. It is also NOT the inventor of the sliding saw.