Someone's angry you started using them after 6 mins of the video. I am just glad I found someone who actually knows and explains their use! Thanks man, great video!
Thank you so much for this video. I used my Dremel grinding stone to remove excessive material from a pair of aluminum bumper brackets on my R/C monster truck and the stone got loaded up with the aluminum. I used your technique shown with the dressing stone and it removed all of the aluminum. I found that setting the speed control on my Dremel 4000 rotary tool to 20 worked the best and it helped speed up the process considerably. At first I tried setting it at 10 and that was taking too long. If this is your first time doing this, as it was for me a few days ago, be aware that the dressing stone will decrease the outer diameter of your grinding stone a little. That makes perfect sense since the stone is also used for reshaping grinding stones, as shown in the video. If you have a lot of aluminum stuck on your grinding stone like I did, you will have to really remove a lot of material from the stone to get rid of all of the aluminum and thus its outer diameter will be a little bit smaller compared to a new one. Thank you - you saved me from having to buy a new grinding stone!
Right on! I appreciate the video. I just got my Dremel about 6 months ago for something that I needed to make, and my other tools were just too big, really. I mean, they would have worked but it's a tool that I have wanted for a long time and that was the projects that justified my purchase. I was thinking that the stone might be something like that and the RUclips algorithm put you at the front of the list, so congratulations on that. After one month I don't have a brass, copper, chrome, or any type of metal trim pieces in my possession that arent shining bright as ever. I had an old rusty 18/20-inch kukri knife that had only had an edge on the belly to tip (about half the blade was 90deg. flat) I didn't care about the knife so I thought I would see how my free handling would do with the dremel only, no belt sander or grinder, I have never made a knife or really detailed shaped steel, I have however worked in fab and machine shops on and off for the last 30 + years. It actually came out well, its a compound bevel and I was able to freehand the bevel geometry the rest of the way through with some stones and sanding drums, and its pretty dang right with the other one, but I would work it for 30 minutes or an hour a night taking my time because I'm only playing around. I now need to figure out the steps i need to go through to get the finish to match the rest of the knife and I might like this thing. The Dremel is a cool little tool that can do some neat things for a single unit. I'm going to try to do the finish and all using only the tool. Just because I can show what that little thing can do. In capable hands! Lol.
If you’re going to use a grinder on soft metal like aluminum, touch the wheel to a candle or a block of wax first. It will keep the soft metal from penetrating the wheel and perhaps also keep the wheel from exploding in your face.
Thank you I was curious as to what those were used for. I kept all mine and to me they just looked like little wetstones for sharpening knives. So this video just saved a few of my grinding bits.
I never knew what those were used for! You have definitely answered my age old question! I work with many mediums and have an EXTENSIVE collection of bits, new and inherited... I'd like to thank you so so much for all the info 👍 it's much appreciated
Thanks for watching. Watch out for free tool giveaways, 3 more to be announced shortly. All you have to do is be a subscriber and leave a comment on the proclaimed video.
Thank you for showing this ! I must have close to 2 dozen of those dressing stones accumulated over 20 years of using a Dremel. I just didn't know how to use the damn things. That "silver paint" you were able to remove? I just thought the bit was worn down to bare metal. I did save them all over the years. Now I can repurpose them. Thanks again.
The only thing in focus was the rug. I sooo wanted the camera to focus. It was like watching blurred out porn... uh... so I've heard (wink). Nah, I still caught the intension of the video, so thanks. Although I was looking more for how to clean the stone of debris rather than reshaping it. Or is that the only way?
Having owned several rotary tools I have never once used this piece. I had not a clue what it was for, so my thanks indeed, I have ruined my share of these bits now I know I can refurbish them a bit and get another go from them.
Work on focusing the camera, cameras don't do well with super closeups usually! Thanks for the video I am trying to look up what all these parts are for and proper use of them..
I buy stones in bulk and only use a dressing stone to true them back up before they get too far out of shape and only while I'm actively using them. If they get too worn or grooved, I chuck them in a box and use them for oddball projects or ones that will use them up quickly but don't need them to be exactly true, like general grinding or paint and rust removal. If I need one to be precice or an exact angle or plane I just grab a new one.
I can't see anything your trying to show me when you hold it in your hand up to the camera. The more you zoom in the blurrier everything gets. I can see everything clearly when it's placed on the flat surface.
Thank you! I've seen this done somewhere else but you did a much more thorough presentation! I have to do this because I make a bloody mess of my grinders trying to clean mystery substances from project material. Lol, always a good time ;). Very helpful topic and I hope many people learn much by watching ;). Peace and be well, Jules
The coarse stone is for the purpose shown (reshaping stones, etc), while the finer stone is intended to crudely sharpen bits. Of course, don't use any stone on coated (diamond, etc) bits.
Can I make a suggestion? You have great information but your videos are long and dry.. if you could shorten them, maybe get right to the point. Save the subscribe stuff till the end. Time lapse might help as well.
I think catching the footage of the task, and then editing to reduce the wait time between tasks and adding the audio would help a great deal. I'm sure your conversational style is amazing in the classroom or shop and encourages students to ask questions. It's not a great format for videos. I find myself skipping to the specific parts I want to see.
You have good information but a faster paced style would be better. Thanks for sharing your knowledge. I bought a rotary tool kit and I was wondering about the square stone.
I love my Dremel. So many things I couldn't have done without it. I even have a Dremel scroll saw. I always wondered what that stone was for. Thanks for explaining it.
FYI Dressing Stones should be soaked in water before use. They should never be used dry. The object that you are cleaning should be rubbed up against the stone not ground into it at high speeds.
What is a Dremel used for mostly? I bought mine thinking I would use it alot. I used to polish something once but a rag worked faster. I think I used it one other time for something. What do most people do with them?
Lots of people use them for jewelry related stuff. Making it or restoring it. Wood carving, engraving, etc.. You can polish tight spaces. The little cut off wheels and sanding drums are probably the most used tools for people. I mainly use mine for polishing with the felt wheels. Bolts and screws and things like that.
Dremels have many uses. Grinding and Polishing are only a few of the thousands of things they can be used for. Watch some videos and you can see a few demonstrations of its varied uses. Search for DREMEL but the generic name for this type of tool is ROTARY TOOL. With the right tool tip you can do anything!
That’s not silver paint. It’s aluminium. A lot of my stones are covered in that stuff as I cut and grind aluminium a lot. Nice to know what will remove it
Well I must got my first dremel and I was wondering wtf that stone was for. I told the wife its suaqre like or reqtangler and it doesn't have a metal shaft in it so wth is it for lol. Well now I know
Thanks for the nice video. Some stuff was not in focus but I didn't miss something because of that. Now for a few questions. I've searched for dremel dressing stones and could only found the #415 dressing stone, which looks like the coarse one (the one you used most in the video). I couldn't find the fine one you show at the end. Another question - do the dressing stones themselves go out of flat eventually? With stones used for sharpening (especially waterstones) it's necessary to flatten them from time to time (e.g. on a diamond lapping plate). The Dremel dressing stone looks like a rather small item at not that low of a price. I am wondering if there is a more cost-effective alternative - for example, a diamond wheel dresser (used to true up bench grinder wheels, very similar function) which is more expensive, but larger and possibly more durable? Do you have advice regarding which RPM to set on the Dremel for this job? And final question, what are those neat-looking parallel jaw locking pliers you're using? Thanks :)
Admittedly, I clicked on this video just too see why it would take 12 minutes to explain something that can be done in a matter of seconds. OK, let's be generous as say 2 minutes with examples. This video shows zero consideration toward the viewer.
I don't understand you problems people.. If you are in a hurry just fast forward it or just skip to the parts you need! It's not force-playing on a live TV 80s broadcast. It's God damn yt. LMAO
This is a great video. I have a small photography suggestion. It looks like you need a macro lense and either a joby gorillapod tripod or a big tripod for the close up shots. An SLR macro lense looks great can be pricey. Another low cost option is a canon point and shoot camera with a rotating screen. The movable screen is important for low angle close up shots. These cameras often have a really good macro function, the have a deep depth of field and also a realatively wide angle perspective. These features would probably make your videos look even better. All the best.
I knew that stone was for something, 🤔I just didn’t know what until now. Good video, thanks! (And if there wasn’t over four minutes of superfluous stuff before you got down to business, it would have been a GREAT video! Coz life’s too short in this digital age - and attention spans even shorter😉)
decided to get a dremel earlier today to get into wood and stone carving. how many times can you generally use the whetstone before you need to get a new one?
I have had these go through 10-15 reshaping jobs before needing to replace. The longevity really depends on how you use these to reshape the grinding wheel and the profile needed. On another note, I have never purchased one of these individually as they wilol come with almost every accessory pack. Thanks for watching.
Hi, enjoyed the video. Unfortunately you went 'out of focus' when grinding the last stone. Got the idea anyhow. Have looked up on google for Dremel dressing stones and can't find these. Can you tell me the code number ?
Hopefully you could see your Dremel moving and about to free itself in that excuse of a clamp, I mean, how could they think a metal clamp will hold a plastic body down, smh.
@@ScrollsawVideo You can also get the hyperdiamond* diamond-sharpening-plate sharpener from AliExpress at a discount. The problem is they go blunt pretty quickly, what with sharpening diamonds. * Yes, hyperdiamond IS a thing: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aggregated_diamond_nanorod
@@ScrollsawVideo As a FYI, the comment above is an IKYABWAI (ie. I know you are, but what am I). One of three ways to automatically forfeit a discussion on the 'net.
Learn how to get your camera to focus if you want to do these kinds of videos with so many close ups. Great information in your video impeded by the annoying out of focus views of what you are trying to show.
It took you 7 minutes to explain 4 minutes worth of information. I had an idea of how to use but was double checking on how to. Thanks for your time. Work on getting to the point instead of explaining set up etc.
Set up is part of the process, if you don't need it please be aware that some do. I try to make vids that will cover all the points instead of just a few. Thanks for watching.
You have good valuable information but not to be rude just trying to be helpfull it was extremely hard to watch. I had to skip ahead alot you should plan the video before shooting it and cut out alot of the unnecessary talking I almost gave up on the video. I'm truly not meaning to come across as rude or anything just want to help because you could be making awsome valuable videos.
Yeah honestly, you wasted alot of time "showing" the close-up blurry shots, and blah blah blah, let's go ahead and get started half way through the video, you lost me, I gotta find a different video now so I can get this done now.
Someone's angry you started using them after 6 mins of the video.
I am just glad I found someone who actually knows and explains their use!
Thanks man, great video!
Well said
Thank you so much for this video. I used my Dremel grinding stone to remove excessive material from a pair of aluminum bumper brackets on my R/C monster truck and the stone got loaded up with the aluminum. I used your technique shown with the dressing stone and it removed all of the aluminum. I found that setting the speed control on my Dremel 4000 rotary tool to 20 worked the best and it helped speed up the process considerably. At first I tried setting it at 10 and that was taking too long.
If this is your first time doing this, as it was for me a few days ago, be aware that the dressing stone will decrease the outer diameter of your grinding stone a little. That makes perfect sense since the stone is also used for reshaping grinding stones, as shown in the video. If you have a lot of aluminum stuck on your grinding stone like I did, you will have to really remove a lot of material from the stone to get rid of all of the aluminum and thus its outer diameter will be a little bit smaller compared to a new one.
Thank you - you saved me from having to buy a new grinding stone!
Right on!
I appreciate the video.
I just got my Dremel about 6 months ago for something that I needed to make, and my other tools were just too big, really.
I mean, they would have worked but it's a tool that I have wanted for a long time and that was the projects that justified my purchase.
I was thinking that the stone might be something like that and the RUclips algorithm put you at the front of the list, so congratulations on that.
After one month I don't have a brass, copper, chrome, or any type of metal trim pieces in my possession that arent shining bright as ever.
I had an old rusty 18/20-inch kukri knife that had only had an edge on the belly to tip (about half the blade was 90deg. flat) I didn't care about the knife so I thought I would see how my free handling would do with the dremel only, no belt sander or grinder, I have never made a knife or really detailed shaped steel, I have however worked in fab and machine shops on and off for the last 30 + years.
It actually came out well, its a compound bevel and I was able to freehand the bevel geometry the rest of the way through with some stones and sanding drums, and its pretty dang right with the other one, but I would work it for 30 minutes or an hour a night taking my time because I'm only playing around.
I now need to figure out the steps i need to go through to get the finish to match the rest of the knife and I might like this thing.
The Dremel is a cool little tool that can do some neat things for a single unit.
I'm going to try to do the finish and all using only the tool.
Just because I can show what that little thing can do.
In capable hands! Lol.
If you’re going to use a grinder on soft metal like aluminum, touch the wheel to a candle or a block of wax first. It will keep the soft metal from penetrating the wheel and perhaps also keep the wheel from exploding in your face.
Thanks for this awesome tip! - maybe the OP can make an 11 min video to demonstrate
Thank you I was curious as to what those were used for. I kept all mine and to me they just looked like little wetstones for sharpening knives. So this video just saved a few of my grinding bits.
I never knew what those were used for! You have definitely answered my age old question! I work with many mediums and have an EXTENSIVE collection of bits, new and inherited... I'd like to thank you so so much for all the info 👍 it's much appreciated
Thanks for watching.
Watch out for free tool giveaways, 3 more to be announced shortly. All you have to do is be a subscriber and leave a comment on the proclaimed video.
Thank you for showing this ! I must have close to 2 dozen of those dressing stones accumulated over 20 years of using a Dremel. I just didn't know how to use the damn things. That "silver paint" you were able to remove? I just thought the bit was worn down to bare metal. I did save them all over the years. Now I can repurpose them. Thanks again.
I had some idea what the stones are but had never seen them used. Thanks. This should save me some money!
Best rug video on youtube.
Pretty confident that I have no idea what you are saying.
The only thing in focus was the rug. I sooo wanted the camera to focus. It was like watching blurred out porn... uh... so I've heard (wink). Nah, I still caught the intension of the video, so thanks. Although I was looking more for how to clean the stone of debris rather than reshaping it. Or is that the only way?
Having owned several rotary tools I have never once used this piece. I had not a clue what it was for, so my thanks indeed, I have ruined my share of these bits now I know I can refurbish them a bit and get another go from them.
Loving your videos. I just got my first Dremel 3000, then I went crazy buying accessories. I too kept looking at that little stone weird.
I have had my dremel for many years and never had a clue what that damn stone was.
I hope you have a use for it now. Semms like no one knew the use and Dremel never advertised it.
Same here, but it looks so obvious now! :)))
@@ScrollsawVideo I'm guessing Dremel wants to sell more bits, so why advertising something that will lower their profits!
I knew I just never used it except on rare occasions when the bit just got clogged but you made a lot of good points about shaping
Yep, all the times I have seen that in bit kit, and never knew what was for.
that multi vise is cool. need to get one of those.
Work on focusing the camera, cameras don't do well with super closeups usually! Thanks for the video I am trying to look up what all these parts are for and proper use of them..
Try using your camera's "macro" focus for close-up shots too.
I always wondered what that stone was for. Thought it was some kind of sharpening stone. Thanks a bunch.
Very welcome
Got a Dremel for Christmas. I wondered what that thing was for. Thanks
Well... now I know what that stone is. This vid also serves as a great SALES tool... for the vice 🤣
I buy stones in bulk and only use a dressing stone to true them back up before they get too far out of shape and only while I'm actively using them. If they get too worn or grooved, I chuck them in a box and use them for oddball projects or ones that will use them up quickly but don't need them to be exactly true, like general grinding or paint and rust removal. If I need one to be precice or an exact angle or plane I just grab a new one.
I can't see anything your trying to show me when you hold it in your hand up to the camera. The more you zoom in the blurrier everything gets. I can see everything clearly when it's placed on the flat surface.
Thank you for this video. I knew what the dressing stones were... but not how to use them! Thanks again.
Glad it was helpful!
Thank you! I've seen this done somewhere else but you did a much more thorough presentation! I have to do this because I make a bloody mess of my grinders trying to clean mystery substances from project material. Lol, always a good time ;).
Very helpful topic and I hope many people learn much by watching ;).
Peace and be well,
Jules
Thanks for the kind words and for watching.
The coarse stone is for the purpose shown (reshaping stones, etc), while the finer stone is intended to crudely sharpen bits. Of course, don't use any stone on coated (diamond, etc) bits.
Always wondered what those little blocks were for, thanks for the education!
Good lord!!! did you not watch this before you posted it? Its give me a anxiety attack wanting it to focus so bad.
Take your medicine and go watch more videos.
I don't think that's paint on the tool. It looks like aluminum embedded
@@robomilicianofacista6072 I agree. Embedment is the norm for grinding metal and its no different to keeping a bend grinder stone in good shape.
Bench grinder.
That’s why you never grind aluminum on bench grinders it gets stuck in it and could make the grinder wheel explode and injury or kill you
Yo, when you hold something near the camera for a close up, and the focus is off, then you need to reshoot in focus.
Can I make a suggestion? You have great information but your videos are long and dry.. if you could shorten them, maybe get right to the point. Save the subscribe stuff till the end. Time lapse might help as well.
I think catching the footage of the task, and then editing to reduce the wait time between tasks and adding the audio would help a great deal.
I'm sure your conversational style is amazing in the classroom or shop and encourages students to ask questions. It's not a great format for videos. I find myself skipping to the specific parts I want to see.
I agree he just needs a little more editing for the videos
I just sped the video up to 1.5 speed.
Sorry about your ADD.
Need to work on focus and keep what you are doing in the camera’s view.
You have good information but a faster paced style would be better. Thanks for sharing your knowledge. I bought a rotary tool kit and I was wondering about the square stone.
Now I know what those little stones are for. Thanks
Question: should an oil be used or water?
I love my Dremel. So many things I couldn't have done without it. I even have a Dremel scroll saw. I always wondered what that stone was for. Thanks for explaining it.
I scored a FREE Dremel scroll saw. A guy was clearing out his garage. Still in the box, never used.
Thank you always wondered what that dressing block was for. Great video but it was a little long
Glad it was helpful!
Good job on the video! Have a good day, and a better tomorrow stranger.
Always wondered what it's for. Thanks
Happy to help
How to make sharp drill bits on this please tell me or make a short video please it's my request 🙏🙏🙏
Yes, I learned something new! ...and I appreciate it! Thanks much!
Wow, that last one you did really confirmed it
FYI Dressing Stones should be soaked in water before use. They should never be used dry. The object that you are cleaning should be rubbed up against the stone not ground into it at high speeds.
Touche my friend. Thank you very much. I should have known it was a dressing stone but I still googled it, lol.
Thanks!!! Now i know what they're *for!*
Thanks for watching.
I couldn't figure out what those rectangular stone were for the longest time.
I was wondering what it was for thanks
Been watching a few of ur videos now and thanks to this one I now know what this block is for thanks
Rock on!! This is a great video and well done. Thank you for teaching me what the block is used for.
What is a Dremel used for mostly? I bought mine thinking I would use it alot. I used to polish something once but a rag worked faster. I think I used it one other time for something. What do most people do with them?
Lots of people use them for jewelry related stuff. Making it or restoring it. Wood carving, engraving, etc.. You can polish tight spaces. The little cut off wheels and sanding drums are probably the most used tools for people. I mainly use mine for polishing with the felt wheels. Bolts and screws and things like that.
Dremels have many uses. Grinding and Polishing are only a few of the thousands of things they can be used for. Watch some videos and you can see a few demonstrations of its varied uses. Search for DREMEL but the generic name for this type of tool is ROTARY TOOL. With the right tool tip you can do anything!
It would be great if you could get a closer-focusing camera, or a manually-focusing one
Thank God for the "skip forward" feature!
RUclips added that feature...God works on more important issues.
Thanks for watching.
That’s not silver paint. It’s aluminium. A lot of my stones are covered in that stuff as I cut and grind aluminium a lot. Nice to know what will remove it
Well I must got my first dremel and I was wondering wtf that stone was for. I told the wife its suaqre like or reqtangler and it doesn't have a metal shaft in it so wth is it for lol. Well now I know
Thanks for the nice video. Some stuff was not in focus but I didn't miss something because of that.
Now for a few questions. I've searched for dremel dressing stones and could only found the #415 dressing stone, which looks like the coarse one (the one you used most in the video). I couldn't find the fine one you show at the end.
Another question - do the dressing stones themselves go out of flat eventually? With stones used for sharpening (especially waterstones) it's necessary to flatten them from time to time (e.g. on a diamond lapping plate).
The Dremel dressing stone looks like a rather small item at not that low of a price. I am wondering if there is a more cost-effective alternative - for example, a diamond wheel dresser (used to true up bench grinder wheels, very similar function) which is more expensive, but larger and possibly more durable?
Do you have advice regarding which RPM to set on the Dremel for this job?
And final question, what are those neat-looking parallel jaw locking pliers you're using?
Thanks :)
It's carborundum(silicone carbide) dressing stone it is hard and cheap
Thank You so so so much , this video clip is really helpful , God bless you my instructor.
You are very welcome
6 minute in and he’s actually doing what the description says....... you’re welcome 🤦🏻
Admittedly, I clicked on this video just too see why it would take 12 minutes to explain something that can be done in a matter of seconds. OK, let's be generous as say 2 minutes with examples. This video shows zero consideration toward the viewer.
Thank you
I don't understand you problems people.. If you are in a hurry just fast forward it or just skip to the parts you need! It's not force-playing on a live TV 80s broadcast. It's God damn yt. LMAO
I need glasses now
What speed did you set the dremel on?
I like way you present. Thanks for this!
This is a great video. I have a small photography suggestion. It looks like you need a macro lense and either a joby gorillapod tripod or a big tripod for the close up shots. An SLR macro lense looks great can be pricey. Another low cost option is a canon point and shoot camera with a rotating screen. The movable screen is important for low angle close up shots. These cameras often have a really good macro function, the have a deep depth of field and also a realatively wide angle perspective. These features would probably make your videos look even better. All the best.
Thanks for the tips.
Respect for the sharing 🤚
How do I sharpen a 115w carving and engraving bit the ones I have still have a lot of life left I don't won't to just trow them away you no
That was very helpful thank you.
The silver is probably aluminium. If you grind aluminium it tends to get hot and melt onto the stone
Sir, Your efforts are truly appreciated, but the blurry shots give me vertigo, so I have to go...Regretfully...
I knew that stone was for something, 🤔I just didn’t know what until now. Good video, thanks! (And if there wasn’t over four minutes of superfluous stuff before you got down to business, it would have been a GREAT video! Coz life’s too short in this digital age - and attention spans even shorter😉)
Thank you 😊
You're welcome 😊
Thank you so much
You're most welcome
Thanks for the video my friend.
Thank you too
Learned something new always wondered what the stone was for thanks
When ypu zoom in, it get out of focus
decided to get a dremel earlier today to get into wood and stone carving. how many times can you generally use the whetstone before you need to get a new one?
I have had these go through 10-15 reshaping jobs before needing to replace. The longevity really depends on how you use these to reshape the grinding wheel and the profile needed.
On another note, I have never purchased one of these individually as they wilol come with almost every accessory pack.
Thanks for watching.
video starts at 6:14
Hi, enjoyed the video. Unfortunately you went 'out of focus' when grinding the last stone. Got the idea anyhow. Have looked up on google for Dremel dressing stones and can't find these. Can you tell me the code number ?
Hopefully you could see your Dremel moving and about to free itself in that excuse of a clamp, I mean, how could they think a metal clamp will hold a plastic body down, smh.
I came here to learn how to focus camera thanks
hard to see properly...camera focus very bad.
Thanks for sharing......
Carburandum stone grinding wheel stone dresser
Says zooming in to show detail, secretly switches camera out for a potato.
I found your video educational, but frustrating, partly because your first dressing (the silver paint one) was a fail.
In baseball 50% would make me a multi millionaire.
Thanks for watching.
@@ScrollsawVideo In a shop, 50% would get you fired on the spot.
Is there a tool to sharpen this stone? Is there an infinite chain of Dremel sharpening tools?
Maybe a diamond sharpening plate...Home Depot sells them at a fair price.
@@ScrollsawVideo
You can also get the hyperdiamond* diamond-sharpening-plate sharpener from AliExpress at a discount. The problem is they go blunt pretty quickly, what with sharpening diamonds.
* Yes, hyperdiamond IS a thing:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aggregated_diamond_nanorod
Thanks.
Send me some Dremel/Rotary tool accessories
Most are easily obtained from your nearest home goods store.
Haha, hell ya..
Sir you do not need a pointy stick EVER!!!
LOL...one of the channels that I follow, KnopTop, the author uses a little rubber hand with a pointy finger.
My goosh 😒😒😳😳🤔🤭man any longer i would of died 😒😒🖐️🛑🛑🛑😳😒🗣️🗣️🥺🥺🙂👀👀👀🧤
Almost as long as those emoji's you just posted.
@@ScrollsawVideo As a FYI, the comment above is an IKYABWAI (ie. I know you are, but what am I). One of three ways to automatically forfeit a discussion on the 'net.
your camera needs work on focusing. Cant watch to annoying.
Learn how to get your camera to focus if you want to do these kinds of videos with so many close ups. Great information in your video impeded by the annoying out of focus views of what you are trying to show.
I go out of my way to not be 'Hollywood' and to show actual footage from an average Joe.
Thanks for watching.
can barely hear you. up your audio.
It took you 7 minutes to explain 4 minutes worth of information. I had an idea of how to use but was double checking on how to. Thanks for your time. Work on getting to the point instead of explaining set up etc.
Set up is part of the process, if you don't need it please be aware that some do. I try to make vids that will cover all the points instead of just a few.
Thanks for watching.
Am I the only one who use their attachment way beyond their natural life
Nope....i use mine beyond recognition. LOL....have some socks over 10 years.
Thanks for watching.
You have good valuable information but not to be rude just trying to be helpfull it was extremely hard to watch. I had to skip ahead alot you should plan the video before shooting it and cut out alot of the unnecessary talking I almost gave up on the video. I'm truly not meaning to come across as rude or anything just want to help because you could be making awsome valuable videos.
I love your comment and thanks for watching.
Yeah honestly, you wasted alot of time "showing" the close-up blurry shots, and blah blah blah, let's go ahead and get started half way through the video, you lost me, I gotta find a different video now so I can get this done now.
Thanks for watching the entire video though.
it's 2018 get a better camera
LOL....camera is awesome, skills need improving.
@Deborah Schildberg - Rude!
Good information but maybe RUclips "how to video" Thanks
C- presentation.