Yeah I like the way it looks when the dowels show. Especially if they are a darker color. The method shown seems weird and like it could pop off if it was accidentally dropped or bumped.
The impact driver is for mechanics, you're supposed to use a wooden mallet on your chisels, A joiner typically doesn't use screws to join wood when you can cut an actual joint into the wood.
@owaind-g678 🤣 I must admit, I have trouble expressing my opinions to the intellectually disabled so I thought pictures would help but I guess there's no hope for some 😔
People who like to hide their joins like this normally don’t take pride their workmanship. I also like to see screws and joins which I can repair if they get damage, however that could just be me.
Не так не надо с деревом делать . причина одна и самая главная. У дерева садится межрезьбовая. канавка. Что примерно через полгода эксплуатации необходимо саморезы протягивать, то есть сделать ТО. А ЕСЛИ ВЫ ЗАКЛЕИТЕ САМОРЕЗЫ, ВЫ НЕ СМОЖЕТЕ СДЕЛАТЬ, ТО ВСЁ БУДЕТ БОЛТАТЬСЯ.
Dismantle it cause his pilot holes were bigger then the screw he put in so it was wobbly and falling apart. This is a good technique when done right. And it also usually let's go and separates eventually making it look alot worse then a couple exposed screws.
@@sicktrick111I dont think the pilot was bigger, perhaps the counter sink was throwing your eyes off. Either way, just use the right bit on your job and only take the time for this if your finished piece needs the aesthetics
Right? A butt joint with wood screws, hiding the screws isn't going to elevate this piece. Too much effort for something you don't care about, not enough for something you do. It's a joke.
@@matisan8407 that is a good technique. you are missing the point. hiding the screws this way can be used on anything. the post isn't about "this piece"
For cabinet making when doing trim, and sometimes applying wood moulding in a house, there's a small tool that's like a round chisel. You tap it into the wood at an angle, and it lifts a curl up. There's a hole in the blade, and you put a finishing nail through it, and set it a bit. Then you pull the chisel out and glue the little flap back down. Basically an invisible nail.
If I care that much about screws not being visible... 1. I'm using glue with dowels or some kind of tenon 2. I'm probably not using pine 3. Even pocket holes would make more sense.
That will splinter in short order, especially with a softwood like that. The shrinking and expanding will make that look like garbage. Just use glue and an air nailer to hide the fasteners, you can barely see the nail holes.
@jbirdmax lol you have no clue what your talking about. Tensile strength is a term for how much something can handle before failing.... so kinda irrelevant here. Unless your trying to overload your furniture??? And secondly. Screws are for fastening things. Such as boards to a wall, hanging a picture. Screws are widely used improperly. They are designed to snap and screw things down. A nail has 100x the tensile strength. Why they are used for building.... Homes anything you can thing of cause they don't snap. They will bend. And hold alot more weight. Nails are structural. Screws are not
@jbirdmax nails can suck when you use them for the wrong thing, too. Why we have screws. But nail has alot more tensile strength and you can get fastener nails too, which don't pull out as easily.
@@sicktrick111 and you say I’m the one who has no clue what I’m talking about 😂😂😂 To be fair, I could have said high tensile grip, hold, or adhesion. Not sure why you’re ranting about this though lol You of course would use construction or load grade screws which are ten times stronger than nails. Unless you’re using stainless steel nails. But tensile strength isn’t what you think it is mate. It’s how hard you can pull on something lengthwise before it gives. Screws have nails beat in this department by several orders of magnitude when it comes to how well they hold. This is why you don’t see people pull screws out with a hammer. But I digress. To each their own yea?
Your theory is only good with one board 90 degrees from another with zero load. If you actually built something with nails there would be zero issues with it and it would be alot stronger than something build with screws.
Nice work. Be sure to follow that up with some Thompson water sealer. Otherwise it might splinter or pop apart over time. With those screws it’s probably a good strong connection.
Nice tip, but why not glue the joint while you're at it?.. ..just sayin', screwing into end grain will likely reveal the screws in other ways eventually. ...
My guess is that glue is not enough when the join has to bear weight / stress. You want something more solid. However this tip for concealing the screw doesn’t impress me. “Experts” in the comments don’t seem impressed either.
Why buy/cut a plug when I can do this and spend 3 times longer prepping for screws, 3 times longer sanding, and risk having the whole thing tear out on me? I'm sorry folks, but if you do this, any actual wordworker will think you're an absolute greenhorn.
@@histguy101 I don't care how frequently you do it, this adds an extra step to the process and risks tearing more of the face out of your board than you intended to. Not to mention the fact that it makes your patch about 4 times larger than it needs to be. Are you a woodworker? Because I've seen plenty of woodworking done, and I worked for a carpenter for over 6 months, and not once has anyone who isn't this random lifehack channel has ever so much as suggested that this is a method you could use.
I actually tried this when I was I was a kid (fifty plus years ago) but haven't tried it since. It did not work for me as my wood pieces broke off, maybe they were too dry, but next book shelf, I'lll try it again. Thanks.
Está bien el trabajo, pero después con el tiempo si sufre algún desperfecto y para arreglarlo, para encontrar los tornillos es un "Problema", yo prefiero qué sean visibles, Saludos desde México 🇲🇽👍
Great idea! For all the critical critics… This does not apply to all projects. Use only when it works best for your task. Nice idea thanks for sharing @ToolTips 👍🏼👍🏼
Finished product looks really good after the video cut.😂
😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊
This is a reel
You’re the only one catching it 😊
Definitely I seen that immediately
Lo correcto profesionalmente es una Unión por espigado .
I asked my builder if he could frame my cabin this way. Sure, no worries. $9 million.
lmao 🤣.
Так и будет, геморой😅
Fair price.
😂
ادعمني بالف دولار
Oh, a non-serviceable joint, super cool, love those.
Serviceable?? The guys building a little box 😂😂😂
Thanks for showing me how to turn a simple job into a complete time consuming headache. I'll stick with dowels.
me too.. I'm old school and I like the dowels showing
Dovetails even better
Yeah I like the way it looks when the dowels show. Especially if they are a darker color. The method shown seems weird and like it could pop off if it was accidentally dropped or bumped.
@@twistedoldloony Dowl lover!
Who else is missing the kettlebell from their woodworking toolset?
use roof nails to hold them; next question ..
only thing your missing is the bell
@@nonicosiowas the moon landing real ?
@@ejeje641 proven to have been real, in addition the same science that allows you to send me that question has proven it: do you think I am real?
So THATS what that empty spot is in my toolkit! I knew it!
Желаю крепких нервов тому, кто будет это ремонтировать или разбирать по какой либо причине.
Он произнёс только одну фразу: "Какой три два раз это лепил!? ".
250 из 250
Да всё нормально! Порубил и в печку, и все дела!
Молоток в помощь. Он лучшая отвёртка.
А потом я ищу, как это аккуратно разобрать, и в итоге разношу вдребезги всю конструкцию😂
The impact driver is for mechanics, you're supposed to use a wooden mallet on your chisels, A joiner typically doesn't use screws to join wood when you can cut an actual joint into the wood.
I'm surprised he didn't use hammer drill for the hole...
Impact driver for mechanics 😂
@@Michael-vp6oi Would you like to express your opinion or are pictures how you communicate with other people?
@owaind-g678 🤣 I must admit, I have trouble expressing my opinions to the intellectually disabled so I thought pictures would help but I guess there's no hope for some 😔
@@Michael-vp6oi Bless you.
Haha, I dont know, boss. Neat idea. But if it takes four tools to hide a screw, Imma be lookin at screws.
That transition made the whole point! 👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾
You might want to put a piece of wax paper over the glued pieces before pressing with another piece of wood.
😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊
😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊
Why?
@@coppulor6500 So your press block doesn't end up glued to the joint.
@@georgeallen2479 thanks!!
i love the cut when hes sanding and changes to a new piece of wood
I mean he didn't, you can still see the 2 cuts from the side
I mean all you have to do is look at the wood grain on the board… it’s cleat the same piece. Nothing changed
@@CoolhyldaIf u look closely. U can see the right cut had to be glued twice.
Whoaaaa! 😱 So inventive!!! Love this! 👍🏻💕🤗🇺🇸
You had me blowing off the dust
hell yeah me too
I also reflexively blew it
Wtf??🤔
Another one bites the dust...toodoodoomdoomdoom...
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣 omg.... That was hilarious!!!!
Необходимо скотч приклеить, чтобы щепки не меняли формы и не отломились.
Pra desmontar se for preciso como faz ???
IN Haven bro 😂@@JoaoGomes-gi1lw
People who like to hide their joins like this normally don’t take pride their workmanship.
I also like to see screws and joins which I can repair if they get damage, however that could just be me.
Excellent... I use masking tape to hold down the pieces.
Не так не надо с деревом делать . причина одна и самая главная. У дерева садится межрезьбовая. канавка. Что примерно через полгода эксплуатации необходимо саморезы протягивать, то есть сделать ТО. А ЕСЛИ ВЫ ЗАКЛЕИТЕ САМОРЕЗЫ, ВЫ НЕ СМОЖЕТЕ СДЕЛАТЬ, ТО ВСЁ БУДЕТ БОЛТАТЬСЯ.
здесь показана всего лишь идея
Я делал так, только ещё в отверстия из шприца (без иглы) заполнял густым ПВА. Всё крепко-насмерть!
@@user-if6vo1kv3xyeah people get way to bent out of shape on these youtube shorts don't they
Eso solo si usas madera verde sin estacionamiento
Mi padre Carpintero hace más de 75 años usaba ese método y es infalible e invisible
Красиво! А потом люди мучаются если разобрать нужно будет!
Если люди и будут это разбирать, то только для того чтобы в печку. А это можно сделать и кувалдой!
Есть кувалда для этого
Wowww the best trick of carpenter 👍👍❤️
Так увлёк процесс,что попыталась сдуть опилки😂.Очень хорошее качество видео.
😂😂😂😂😂
Good luck the the guy who will need to desassemble for some reason
Dismantle it cause his pilot holes were bigger then the screw he put in so it was wobbly and falling apart.
This is a good technique when done right. And it also usually let's go and separates eventually making it look alot worse then a couple exposed screws.
@@sicktrick111I dont think the pilot was bigger, perhaps the counter sink was throwing your eyes off. Either way, just use the right bit on your job and only take the time for this if your finished piece needs the aesthetics
😂
@@sicktrick111yeah, like Daniel said, it was the counter sink
Hhhhhh😅
Kleiner Tip: nicht ganz so viel Leim angeben, dafür zwischen Werkstück und Zulage etwas (Frischhalte-)Folie - dann leimt die Zulage nicht fest....
"Serv- Pro like it never even happened . " 😁😂🤣👍🏻
Lovely bit of wood butchery there 😆
Если отпарить слегка дерево, то щепка не отколется при изгибе.
"Tip for Carpenter and joiner" don't take tips from this guy
Right? A butt joint with wood screws, hiding the screws isn't going to elevate this piece. Too much effort for something you don't care about, not enough for something you do. It's a joke.
@@matisan8407 that is a good technique. you are missing the point. hiding the screws this way can be used on anything. the post isn't about "this piece"
Holy crap. This old dog just learned a new trick.
I just counter sink screw. Then I mix some wood glue with sawdust as a filler
Right!!
Same here. All that other stuff is overkill and timely.
Looks good, very professional❤
it never crossed my mind to do this.....simple idea.....this is great !
Came here to see what all the Armchair Carpenters all had to say !!😂😂😂
That's me all right.
we don t like it
@@TheMarioramos80may I ask what is wrong with it or how the proper way should be? I'm a total amateur without any knowledge, hence my question
@@robertwolfgan I am an armchair carpinter, we never like anything. Ask a professional hahahaha
Right! 😂😂😂
What ghetto project are you building with framing lumber that you would have to do this?
Super cool trick. How have I never thought of that? I love these “duh” moments that keep us in check in life! There is always something to learn.
OK let me teach my grandpa. He was wrong all this time
For cabinet making when doing trim, and sometimes applying wood moulding in a house, there's a small tool that's like a round chisel. You tap it into the wood at an angle, and it lifts a curl up. There's a hole in the blade, and you put a finishing nail through it, and set it a bit. Then you pull the chisel out and glue the little flap back down. Basically an invisible nail.
Of all the tips that I've seen over the last 40 years, this "new tip" keeps showing up😂😂
Just got done watching a master Japanese carpenter joining wood like a magician, to this shit has got me lol
If I care that much about screws not being visible...
1. I'm using glue with dowels or some kind of tenon
2. I'm probably not using pine
3. Even pocket holes would make more sense.
Okay mister wizard.
It's a demonstration bud, no need to get your panties bunched up in your pushy....
Just build it how you like 😄
if i had a nickel for every time a douchebag shit on pine, i'd have, like, 276 nickels.
chill dude. it’s a cool short cut.
Nobody asked what you care about
Now that's a good trick👍👍👍 never seen this before, respect👍👍
Ur joking right
This is not a tip, folks. It's an absolute masterpiece.
A master piece of $#!t. 🤦♂️🙄🤦♂️
I love when people use ideas from old books and try to make it seem like they came up with it
😅 thank god I’m a repair man, gunna be rich for years to come thanks to all these pointers
That will splinter in short order, especially with a softwood like that. The shrinking and expanding will make that look like garbage. Just use glue and an air nailer to hide the fasteners, you can barely see the nail holes.
Far less tensile strength in the structure from nails though.
And if followed up with some quality water sealer or stain varnish….
@jbirdmax lol you have no clue what your talking about. Tensile strength is a term for how much something can handle before failing.... so kinda irrelevant here. Unless your trying to overload your furniture???
And secondly. Screws are for fastening things. Such as boards to a wall, hanging a picture. Screws are widely used improperly. They are designed to snap and screw things down. A nail has 100x the tensile strength. Why they are used for building.... Homes anything you can thing of cause they don't snap. They will bend. And hold alot more weight. Nails are structural. Screws are not
@jbirdmax nails can suck when you use them for the wrong thing, too. Why we have screws. But nail has alot more tensile strength and you can get fastener nails too, which don't pull out as easily.
@@sicktrick111 and you say I’m the one who has no clue what I’m talking about 😂😂😂
To be fair, I could have said high tensile grip, hold, or adhesion.
Not sure why you’re ranting about this though lol
You of course would use construction or load grade screws which are ten times stronger than nails. Unless you’re using stainless steel nails.
But tensile strength isn’t what you think it is mate.
It’s how hard you can pull on something lengthwise before it gives. Screws have nails beat in this department by several orders of magnitude when it comes to how well they hold.
This is why you don’t see people pull screws out with a hammer.
But I digress.
To each their own yea?
Your theory is only good with one board 90 degrees from another with zero load.
If you actually built something with nails there would be zero issues with it and it would be alot stronger than something build with screws.
Nice work. Be sure to follow that up with some Thompson water sealer. Otherwise it might splinter or pop apart over time.
With those screws it’s probably a good strong connection.
Thui clip gives my eyes Very releaving and happy feelings , please do upload such creative magical work
Exam me Kam marks aake papa "dhoye dhoye"
Aur Manish relatable "hoye hoye"
Nice tip, but why not glue the joint while you're at it?.. ..just sayin', screwing into end grain will likely reveal the screws in other ways eventually. ...
not really
@@234i9 explain yourself or don't get involved
Love that finished right there!
Wonderful tip! Thanks so much.
It’s disgusting that someone who claims to be a craftsman, would stoop to this crap…
Don't ever do this.
- carpenter of 25 years.
Why?
What's the reason
Because customers come to expect it? It's a hastle.
@@lancemill5683 1 - Screws into endgrain have poor holding capability. 2 - Learn to make good looking, functional, strong joints without fasteners.
@@lancemill5683because it looks shite even in this video, never mind when the adhesive starts failing and the wood he splintered starts peeling back
Amazing 😍 who would have thought of that. You did great
Ughh! When kids leave a shallow sycophantic comment in the hopes of gaining a meaningless internet like from another sycophantic kid.
@@michaelc3977 what ???
Like it never happened. I love it
Very innovative way to conceal these annoying screws and nails for cosmetic purposes ! Brilliant!!
Gute Sache 👍🏼
(Nächstes mal, ein Blatt Papier zwischenlegen)
I am about to finish my two years professional teaching course. Your video makes me want to change my teaching profession to carpenter
Beautiful work 😊
Looks great after your jump cut. Don't take woodworking advice from someone who doesn't let their chips out of the hole they're drilling.
Bravo ❤ great job Man ❤❤❤❤
i like how its all calm and peaceful until the first screw goes in then the camera shakes like a leaf in a thunderstorm
Very cool way of hiding the screws!
That’s a cool move
❤what a clever idea.l love it.
Zabardast Very Nice Idea.
Try replicating this reliably enough to combat lumber costs and you have a profitable idea
That’s the dumbest solution ever
I don’t get it! Wasn’t the glue alone not enough?
Yes, I am a woman, I get it, but I wanna learn so a little of an explanation would be awesome! 😎
Stick to your lane, lady :) The correct answer is an eye roll
@@shoveldoggermafiaweak man you commenting that to someone who just wants to learn. Nothing manly about being cunty
this is a bad idea dont trust this channel lol
My guess is that glue is not enough when the join has to bear weight / stress. You want something more solid. However this tip for concealing the screw doesn’t impress me. “Experts” in the comments don’t seem impressed either.
Glued long grain (top piece) to end grain (side/vertical piece). Most often should be reinforced.
I am mesmerised after seeing these amazing techniques...
As professional hunter I can tell you this is satisfying
Why buy/cut a plug when I can do this and spend 3 times longer prepping for screws, 3 times longer sanding, and risk having the whole thing tear out on me? I'm sorry folks, but if you do this, any actual wordworker will think you're an absolute greenhorn.
Because if you used this method frequently you'd be good at it and it doesn't take long. No, "an actual woodworker" would not know they were there.
@@histguy101 I don't care how frequently you do it, this adds an extra step to the process and risks tearing more of the face out of your board than you intended to. Not to mention the fact that it makes your patch about 4 times larger than it needs to be. Are you a woodworker? Because I've seen plenty of woodworking done, and I worked for a carpenter for over 6 months, and not once has anyone who isn't this random lifehack channel has ever so much as suggested that this is a method you could use.
If you watch how much glue squeezed out, you‘ll see the excess you applied.
....until you want to take it apart! 😂
that's all well and good if it's something you will never have to take apart.
I actually tried this when I was I was a kid (fifty plus years ago) but haven't tried it since. It did not work for me as my wood pieces broke off, maybe they were too dry, but next book shelf, I'lll try it again. Thanks.
Está bien el trabajo, pero después con el tiempo si sufre algún desperfecto y para arreglarlo, para encontrar los tornillos es un "Problema", yo prefiero qué sean visibles, Saludos desde México 🇲🇽👍
That's crazy. Genius man
Thnk you for such great tip... Carpenters could be messy sometimes here in Dominican Republic
The traditional "all-hands and no metal joinery" woodworkers are hitting the ceiling right now.
это шедеврально,аплодирую стоя
This man is a genius
Super se bhi upar weldon
حبيبي ع الشغل النظيف .. لقالوا شغله نظيف فمعناتو هذا هو . 😍😍😍
Hai Good Evening Wow super idea super job ❤ Super knowledge
GooD 🌟🥇
This is brilliant. Thank you.
Great idea! For all the critical critics… This does not apply to all projects. Use only when it works best for your task. Nice idea thanks for sharing @ToolTips 👍🏼👍🏼
Not gonna lie, when it looped I'm thinking, "Ah no, your chisel!" 😅
Best thing I watched all month
Ikea would love to hire this guy with blink of an eye
Wow amazing
I'm about to make a desktop, you have given me a very good idea, thanks so much❤
Who else saw the flaps picking up while he was sanding😭
A master of its craft, I see. 10/10
This is awesome!😎
That’s some slick sht I like it!👌
Best part of this video was the drill bit!!
The worst scars on my hands are from chisels. ...it turns out they can be sharp.
Peeeeerfectisimo!!!
Felicidades Bro!!!
Wow great idea
Ron would approve.