Hello new sub here...Checked with Amazon on the Pocket Hole Jig and they are currently sold out but i did order one on Walmarts web site. Thanks for your videos.
I had to check that the player was on normal speed because you managed to say everything worth saying in less than 10 minutes, 1% of the time I've spent watching other videos on the subject. Excellent!
@@EveningWoodworker brilliant, most American videos I have to watch at 1.25- 1.5 x because of the slow speaking. Short and succinct is best. Even Paul Sellers who’s a fantastic Brit super craftsman (hand tools) I think oh my god 1h30 minutes to make a plane handle….. yes it’s a master class scenario but even so ….
Oh yeah. Under the old algorithm, this could have been several videos. I’m waiting for a competitor to force youtube to back away from their incentives to always make longer and longer videos. In the meantime, I’ll watch this guy who packs the max into ten minutes.
You've given the clearest description of wood expansion I've seen. Well done, sir. What I've done to eliminate the problem of splitting on the cross grain is to drill an oversize hole for the pocket screw. This allows the left to right expansion while the head firmly holds the pieces together. Thanks for the excellent video.
This was super helpful for a complete pocket hole novice! I see so many people just throw pocket holes in things, that I had no idea there were even rules around when it should be used and how.
I’m 66 years old hobby woodworker and that is the best explanation of wood movement and pocket hole attachments I have ever heard. Young man you just blessed and old man!!
Wow dude. I've been working with wood for 30 years and nobody has ever explained this to me. A lot of my botched builds make sense now. Glad I caught this before starting my cabinets for my camper conversion. Gonna be extreme temp and humidity changes in there.
I am surprised you have not learned that. That´s usually what you learn in the beginning. I am sorry you missed out for so long. Just remember wood can only work if get´s the moisture, you can prevent this by applying paint for instance or depending on your living conditions maybe the moisture in the air does not change too much and thus you don´t really need it, or your piece of furniture is small and thus the small movement does not matter much.
What a great explanation of how pocket holes and wood work together. I'm getting ready to build cabinets and you have probably saved me some headaches. Thanks so much!
Having built a number of outdoor pieces using pocket holes, I appreciate the information presented here and now realize why one particular chair's joins were failing after some time. Thanks!
As someone about to use pocket holes for the first time, and on an expensive piece I'm making, this is gold! Thank you. I especially liked the view of the screw in the exposed/cut open slot so I could see where the pilot hole was located.
Really like the bubble example to explain wood fibres. My daughter is taking a high school construction class. She is working on her 2nd project, which is a wooden step stool. The instructions state to use pocket holes in the side rails to attach the top. The rails have a horizontal grain. I took industrial arts in school, so I knew that this was a disaster waiting to happen. I needed to explain to her why you can’t do this. Kids never want to believe their parents, especially “Moms”, because we don’t know anything about wood 😉 This video was perfect, and now she actually understands why this is wrong. When she hands her project in to be graded, she will have to explain why she altered it. I told her to include this video link in her explanation. The school has an English instructor teaching the construction class, which is probably why the instructions are incorrect. Hopefully the teacher will learn something as well and be able to change the way he teaches or at least this project. Thank you so much!
Aside: I happen to think that sending one's children out of the home to be educated to be unnatural. One of the metamessages of this is the parents implicitly admit that they don't know enough and the "teachers" do. In truth, no one can educate your child better than you. Alas. In some homes this disastrous effect is unknown. In most homes, however...
Excellent explanation! I had to go back a few times and rewatch specific parts of the video, because there’s so much information that is hard to grasp at once. No need to say how passionate you are about this subject.
Great info. I live in the mountains and we have huge temp & humidity swings. I'm new to woodworking and would not have considered expansion/contraction when using the Kreg. Thanks for yet another fantastic info packed video.
I aso feel that you have given the clearest description of wood movement & use of pocket holes that I've ever come across. Excellent video. Thank you for taking the time!!
You are one of the few people who explain this in detail. Thank you so much. I understand when to and not to use pocket holes much better as it ve been staring at something I created to attach my 19 inch tv to an old video camera tripod I’ve repurposed. I’m using scraps of MDF in this case but think I’m going to use some plywood scraps I have. Thank you again for your time and great advice. God Bless!
This was SO exceptionally helpful! We're weekend warriors, with just enough knowledge to occasionally cause some major mess-ups. LOL! This helped explain our mistakes and prevent more in the future. Thank you!
This was great. I'm completely new to using pocket screws and loved them for the project I worked on. Now I know not to just use them anywhere thanks to your clear explanations.
Give your screws a quick reverse to minimize shifting. It will start a pilot in the board to be joined and the threads will clean out the pilot so it draws better and doesn't thread itself away from the joint. (Also pray to the tool gods for a castle tsm-12 to level up on the pocket hole game-no clamps or shifting.) Keep up the good work🔨👍
Great info. Taking note Wood expands in direction perpendicular to the grain. 2:20 Expansion in plywood is negligible because it consists of layers whose grain run perpendicular to each other. 2:55 more on plywood
What you didn't address was how the wood moves when screwing in the first pocket screw. Clamping is critical here to make sure that when the screw first hits the second piece of wood, the turning of the screw doesn't move the second piece and ruin the joint. I learned this the hard way. So, it is NOT just a matter of drilling a bunch of holes in the first piece and then merrily go about making perfect joints. One has to plan out where to put the screws and what is going to move when turning the screws into the second piece of wood.
Great job of clarifying the do's and don'ts'. You also cleared up the ambiguity about the angles you can use pocket screws for. Finally, thank you for showing the difference between a bevel head screw and a designed pocket hole screw.
I was all set to be the contrarian and defend my pocket hole screws. Then you taught me some stuff. This is a really smart, practical, and efficient video packed with great information and explanation. Nice job! And thank you for a well reasoned approach. I expected yet another video on why analog is superior to digital and what I got was how each is great for its own applications (I tried to think of a better metaphor, but it’s early and not enough coffee, yet). I’m saving this for future review!
Very educational. Your explanation of wood expansion and pocket holes will help a lot of us avoid grief and disaster. Your tips are highly appreciated. Thank you.
Thank you and learned a few things about pocket holes. I guess I've been fortunate to not accidentally use the screws in a way that would be counter to wood movement. While I started my journey with woodworking using a Kreg jig, I wish I had known about the Armor Tools jig 1st. I find their jig eliminates all the little annoyances I have with the Kreg version.
I learned SO much more in this one video than I have learned in all other videos combined about woodworking. I never realized any of this before, but now it all makes so much sense!
There is a mistake at 6:45 - when building a set of shelves you *CAN* attach the shelves to the sides using pocket holes. Yes the upright will increase in width, but the shelf will expand at EXACTLY the same rate. A dado will certainly help keep the shelf flat, but serves no function regarding the climatic expansion of the parts. A couple more screws will almost do the same to help keep cupping under control.
Good catch, if the grains are going the same direction then it should expand together, however if one is solid wood and the other is plywood, you could run into an issue.
and you can use one pocket screw (or some other fixed fastener) in the center of a skirt or other application when the grains are perpendicular. Kind of like your live edge cabinet when you fixed the back so all expansion is forward. Having 1 fixed point makes the top feel more solid imho.
nice video and explanation of expansion/contraction across the grain. however, the problem is not limited to pocket screws. any rigid joinery is going to suffer from the same problem across a lot of grain. a glued dado for breadboard ends provides more glue surface for the joint, but the wood fibers along the joint may eventually tear out just like pocket screws may loosen in that situation. i also think you overstate the problem a bit. in your example with of 6" boards with a butt joint, you said pocket screws might be a problem. but if you are using glue in the joint the problem is not different than a dowel or biscuit joint. these latter joints are stronger but not more resistant to expansion/contraction damage (a mortise and tenon would solves= that problem, if it's a problem). in practice, smooth sanding followed by a well-maintained surface finish will reduce the number of expansion/contraction cycles during daily relative humidity fluctuations and mitigate cycles during seasonal fluctuations. your topic is not really about when not to use pocket screws, but when to use joinery that will accommodate expansion and contraction across the grain
Good point, it can happen with other types of joinery too, it's just that I've seen so many designs with pocket screws everywhere, it seems to be a common area of confusion with pocket screws.
Expansion/contraction is something to pay attention to. However, the pilot hole created by the jig (the narrow stepped part at the tip of the drill bit) is larger than the screw shaft. So unless you also glue the joint there is a bit of wiggle that could allow one piece to move laterally against the other.
Just another commenter adding that as a total pocket hole newbie, THANK YOU! this makes so much sense and also explains a lot of my confusion around pieces expanding and contracting
Pocket screws are great for aprons on table tops: you just have to slot the hole to allow for wood movement. Then that wonderfully unthreaded part of the screw acts as a spring to absorb the movement. The screw keep the table top held to apron while allowing for seasonal movement with the slotted opening. This is an old technique, been used as long as wood screws existed.
I’m a new woodworker and I associate the pocket hole technique with cheap furniture. I’d like to make cabinets myself for a house I’m building - can you tell me what to use INSTEAD of the pocket hole technique? It seems ubiquitous.
I have some drawers I want to make for my kitchen and this information is very helpful. I live in Texas and it is very humid here. I could have wasted a lot of money and time had I not seen your video. Thank you for posting this.
This is a very good explanation of wood expansion. The straws helps a lot to remember in what direction humidity affects wood 🪵. Very good! Thanks a lot !
Ok, video number two watched... I think I'll just get rid of some "other" woodworking subscriptions... Now that's a compliment..! Between your engineering knowledge, excellent video presentation and sharing it all... well, let's just say thank you from this "You Tube Academy" student... 😎👍
Great explanation and very detailed. Making an end table for my daughter who asked me for her birthday. Right after I finish with my pantry upgrade I will start. This will call for pocket joining. Again, Thak you for sharing your knowledge. Ernest
What an excellent tutorial. Very clear and well presented. I am about to make a unit and just wanted to remind myself of the correct way of doing them as it's been a while since I used them. Like you, I love wood and all things wooden. People say I'm bonkers when I say that wood is 'as if it's alive' . . . well, it moves doesn't it . . . never seen dead things move !!!!
Great video. Presented very well. I knew this when I built a bread board dinning room table but ignore it and paid dearly for it. The table expanded and split. Thanks.
Thanks for your informative video regarding when, or when not to use pocket hole journey. Equally, when making projects with pocket hole journey you have to think and build them upsidedown and inside-out so the pocket holes and plugs are not exposed. Thanks again great video.
Great video. i have to inspect a table i build with pocket screws and the boards split. I thought it was due to poor drying but now i have to check the use of pocket screws according to the grain. Great info! Thanks.
Although long, you kept my attention the entire video. Very informational, and you clarified the confusion I had about both wood and pocket screws. Thank you.
Very informative video, better than many I've watched. I built two chairside tables about 4 years ago. Still holding strong. Used pocket holes & glue. These tables are always indoors where the temperature and humidity is relatively constant. Gives more flexibility in pocket hole joinery; don't have to worry too much about wood expanding. Outdoor furniture is a different story. I don't think I would ever use that method for outdoor projects.
Of my knowledge of woodworking there has never been any "Don't use pocket-screws here" instructions really available. Thank you for this video. When talking about wood expansion I always remember a job of tightening up a back porch where my job was to stabilize the existing joints. I did some fine measuring and joining of wood with woodscrews. I have always been haunted by the fact that I didn't account for expansion or weathering of the wood. I don't know if that house is still standing anymore. I always think of that episode when woodworking.
1,000 comments already, so no idea if anyone already said this - Kreg does have a variety of pocket holes screws, enough that it could be it's own video for which to use when (coarse/fine thread, with/out washer head, micro-sized screws/holes, coated...) But as to the meat of this video and wood movement, thank you! I learned a lot ;^)
Check out more of my favorite woodworking tips & tricks: ruclips.net/p/PLV-F3MjIQnNSGeaOHEjQeFnUVlVj77_Au
Hello new sub here...Checked with Amazon on the Pocket Hole Jig and they are currently sold out but i did order one on Walmarts web site. Thanks for your videos.
I like dowel rods and pocket hole joinery.
Very good information 👍
I had to check that the player was on normal speed because you managed to say everything worth saying in less than 10 minutes, 1% of the time I've spent watching other videos on the subject. Excellent!
Thanks! I try to make my videos efficient, helpful, and not boring!
Ya, thanks for not saying "I'll get to that in a minute" thumbs 👍
@@EveningWoodworker brilliant, most American videos I have to watch at 1.25- 1.5 x because of the slow speaking. Short and succinct is best. Even Paul Sellers who’s a fantastic Brit super craftsman (hand tools) I think oh my god 1h30 minutes to make a plane handle….. yes it’s a master class scenario but even so ….
Oh yeah. Under the old algorithm, this could have been several videos. I’m waiting for a competitor to force youtube to back away from their incentives to always make longer and longer videos.
In the meantime, I’ll watch this guy who packs the max into ten minutes.
Perfect speed - a lot of info delivered in a short time
You've given the clearest description of wood expansion I've seen. Well done, sir. What I've done to eliminate the problem of splitting on the cross grain is to drill an oversize hole for the pocket screw. This allows the left to right expansion while the head firmly holds the pieces together. Thanks for the excellent video.
Yes, that's a good quick solution if you want to use pocket screws across the grain. Glad you liked the video!
🤢🤮 a.d.d. got me confused af
I couldn't agree more completely.
@@tumblindown5509 a d.d is a poor excuse for not learning self control
@@TingTingalingy what is that!?! Selph can't roll?
This was super helpful for a complete pocket hole novice! I see so many people just throw pocket holes in things, that I had no idea there were even rules around when it should be used and how.
Rules. Who knew?🤷♂️
🤣
I’m 66 years old hobby woodworker and that is the best explanation of wood movement and pocket hole attachments I have ever heard. Young man you just blessed and old man!!
Great! I'm glad we can learn stuff from each other. I'm sure you have lots of wisdom in areas I'm lacking.
Wow dude. I've been working with wood for 30 years and nobody has ever explained this to me. A lot of my botched builds make sense now. Glad I caught this before starting my cabinets for my camper conversion. Gonna be extreme temp and humidity changes in there.
I am surprised you have not learned that. That´s usually what you learn in the beginning. I am sorry you missed out for so long.
Just remember wood can only work if get´s the moisture, you can prevent this by applying paint for instance or depending on your living conditions maybe the moisture in the air does not change too much and thus you don´t really need it, or your piece of furniture is small and thus the small movement does not matter much.
What a great explanation of how pocket holes and wood work together. I'm getting ready to build cabinets and you have probably saved me some headaches. Thanks so much!
Glad it was helpful!
Having built a number of outdoor pieces using pocket holes, I appreciate the information presented here and now realize why one particular chair's joins were failing after some time. Thanks!
Glad it helped! Outdoor furniture will get expansion and contraction most severely.
That’s because pocket holes make for terrible joinery
@@davidmcgrath6507 Not in my experience.
@@davidmcgrath6507 Pocket holes are good when used wisely. A lot of people just don't know when and when not to use them.
@@MarkK01 Pocket holes are bad in your pockets. Stuff falls out all the time.
As someone about to use pocket holes for the first time, and on an expensive piece I'm making, this is gold! Thank you. I especially liked the view of the screw in the exposed/cut open slot so I could see where the pilot hole was located.
Great! I'm glad it helped
Really like the bubble example to explain wood fibres. My daughter is taking a high school construction class. She is working on her 2nd project, which is a wooden step stool. The instructions state to use pocket holes in the side rails to attach the top. The rails have a horizontal grain. I took industrial arts in school, so I knew that this was a disaster waiting to happen. I needed to explain to her why you can’t do this. Kids never want to believe their parents, especially “Moms”, because we don’t know anything about wood 😉 This video was perfect, and now she actually understands why this is wrong. When she hands her project in to be graded, she will have to explain why she altered it. I told her to include this video link in her explanation. The school has an English instructor teaching the construction class, which is probably why the instructions are incorrect. Hopefully the teacher will learn something as well and be able to change the way he teaches or at least this project. Thank you so much!
That's an awesome story! I love that she was able to learn from it and hopefully educate some adults too. I hope her project went well!
Aside: I happen to think that sending one's children out of the home to be educated to be unnatural. One of the metamessages of this is the parents implicitly admit that they don't know enough and the "teachers" do. In truth, no one can educate your child better than you. Alas. In some homes this disastrous effect is unknown. In most homes, however...
@@EveningWoodworker Her project turned out well. There are no worries that the legs will ever fall off. Her final grade was an “A”.
what if you’re more ignorant than the teachers? There are a lot of ignorant teachers but there even more dumb parents.
Excellent explanation! I had to go back a few times and rewatch specific parts of the video, because there’s so much information that is hard to grasp at once. No need to say how passionate you are about this subject.
I’m a total beginner and this video was very helpful…thank you 👍🏼
Nice explanation and love your pieces of furniture.
As a beginner woodworker I would have completely missed this. Thank you for the advice!!
That soap trick at 0:28 was the coolest thing I've seen in a while. Thanks for the education!
Great info. I live in the mountains and we have huge temp & humidity swings. I'm new to woodworking and would not have considered expansion/contraction when using the Kreg. Thanks for yet another fantastic info packed video.
Glad you liked it! Definitely something to consider in your designs
I aso feel that you have given the clearest description of wood movement & use of pocket holes that I've ever come across. Excellent video. Thank you for taking the time!!
Thank you! I appreciate that!
You are one of the few people who explain this in detail. Thank you so much. I understand when to and not to use pocket holes much better as it ve been staring at something I created to attach my 19 inch tv to an old video camera tripod I’ve repurposed. I’m using scraps of MDF in this case but think I’m going to use some plywood scraps I have. Thank you again for your time and great advice. God Bless!
Great tutorial! You're a good teacher. This video was clear and concise. Thanks for sharing it with us.
Thanks!
I see others have mentioned it but I agree: your straw analogy of wood grain is great. Nice job.
This was SO exceptionally helpful! We're weekend warriors, with just enough knowledge to occasionally cause some major mess-ups. LOL! This helped explain our mistakes and prevent more in the future. Thank you!
I'm glad it helped! Good luck on your projects!
This has to be one of the best presentations on using pocket screws. Much appreciated.
Thanks I'm glad you liked it!
This was great. I'm completely new to using pocket screws and loved them for the project I worked on. Now I know not to just use them anywhere thanks to your clear explanations.
All about the expansion/contraction. Great seminar. Thanks from the woodworking world!
Give your screws a quick reverse to minimize shifting. It will start a pilot in the board to be joined and the threads will clean out the pilot so it draws better and doesn't thread itself away from the joint. (Also pray to the tool gods for a castle tsm-12 to level up on the pocket hole game-no clamps or shifting.) Keep up the good work🔨👍
Have the tsm 30 it’s awesome
thx for making the vid! As a newbie I can't tell you how valuable this is. You cut out a lot of trial and error for me
Thanks, well done. I needed to be reminded about the width dimension.
I have used pocket holes for years and you are spot on. and I am 70 years old.
Great info.
Taking note
Wood expands in direction perpendicular to the grain.
2:20 Expansion in plywood is negligible because it consists of layers whose grain run perpendicular to each other.
2:55 more on plywood
Well done explanation of wood expansion and the need to be aware of how to connect the wood pieces.
Thanks for the info!
Very technical and simple at the same time.
Cheers!
I don't know what you missed but I can tell you I learned a ton! Very well put together and incredibly informative. Thanks!
Thanks! Glad you learned something!
What you didn't address was how the wood moves when screwing in the first pocket screw. Clamping is critical here to make sure that when the screw first hits the second piece of wood, the turning of the screw doesn't move the second piece and ruin the joint. I learned this the hard way. So, it is NOT just a matter of drilling a bunch of holes in the first piece and then merrily go about making perfect joints. One has to plan out where to put the screws and what is going to move when turning the screws into the second piece of wood.
Good point, if you don't clamp the joint properly when putting those screws in, due to the angle, things can move before you even realize it!
I have used a pilot hole (3/32) thru the bore of the pocket hole, into the receiving piece of wood to minimize the movement problem. And clamps
@@EveningWoodworker How bout a vid on how to minimize pieces shifting when driving together
@@anyfoolknowthat - do you really need a video to explain such a simple thing as using a backing board and a clamp that suits your particular work??
@@johncoops6897 I still have wood shift, even with multiple clamps
Great job of clarifying the do's and don'ts'. You also cleared up the ambiguity about the angles you can use pocket screws for. Finally, thank you for showing the difference between a bevel head screw and a designed pocket hole screw.
I was all set to be the contrarian and defend my pocket hole screws. Then you taught me some stuff. This is a really smart, practical, and efficient video packed with great information and explanation. Nice job! And thank you for a well reasoned approach. I expected yet another video on why analog is superior to digital and what I got was how each is great for its own applications (I tried to think of a better metaphor, but it’s early and not enough coffee, yet). I’m saving this for future review!
Thanks! I'm glad you got something out of it!
Very educational. Your explanation of wood expansion and pocket holes will help a lot of us avoid grief and disaster. Your tips are highly appreciated. Thank you.
Thank you and learned a few things about pocket holes. I guess I've been fortunate to not accidentally use the screws in a way that would be counter to wood movement. While I started my journey with woodworking using a Kreg jig, I wish I had known about the Armor Tools jig 1st. I find their jig eliminates all the little annoyances I have with the Kreg version.
I really enjoyed your explanation of wood expansion. You broke something down so well that anyone can easily understand it! Thanks!
Super explanation - very practical and, I expect, really useful - thank you 👍👏
Very informative, detailed and without unnecessary dialog. You have a new follower.
Thank you, this was a very well thought out and informative video, great job explaining 💫
Glad you liked it!
@@EveningWoodworker sooo what about using pocket holes for MDF?
I learned SO much more in this one video than I have learned in all other videos combined about woodworking. I never realized any of this before, but now it all makes so much sense!
I'm glad it helped!
There is a mistake at 6:45 - when building a set of shelves you *CAN* attach the shelves to the sides using pocket holes. Yes the upright will increase in width, but the shelf will expand at EXACTLY the same rate. A dado will certainly help keep the shelf flat, but serves no function regarding the climatic expansion of the parts. A couple more screws will almost do the same to help keep cupping under control.
Good catch, if the grains are going the same direction then it should expand together, however if one is solid wood and the other is plywood, you could run into an issue.
and you can use one pocket screw (or some other fixed fastener) in the center of a skirt or other application when the grains are perpendicular. Kind of like your live edge cabinet when you fixed the back so all expansion is forward. Having 1 fixed point makes the top feel more solid imho.
Wow. Even though I knew all about expansion and contraction of the wood, I never thought about how it can affect pocket joinery. Thanks for this. 👍🏼🇨🇦
nice video and explanation of expansion/contraction across the grain. however, the problem is not limited to pocket screws. any rigid joinery is going to suffer from the same problem across a lot of grain. a glued dado for breadboard ends provides more glue surface for the joint, but the wood fibers along the joint may eventually tear out just like pocket screws may loosen in that situation. i also think you overstate the problem a bit. in your example with of 6" boards with a butt joint, you said pocket screws might be a problem. but if you are using glue in the joint the problem is not different than a dowel or biscuit joint. these latter joints are stronger but not more resistant to expansion/contraction damage (a mortise and tenon would solves= that problem, if it's a problem). in practice, smooth sanding followed by a well-maintained surface finish will reduce the number of expansion/contraction cycles during daily relative humidity fluctuations and mitigate cycles during seasonal fluctuations. your topic is not really about when not to use pocket screws, but when to use joinery that will accommodate expansion and contraction across the grain
Good point, it can happen with other types of joinery too, it's just that I've seen so many designs with pocket screws everywhere, it seems to be a common area of confusion with pocket screws.
Excellent presentation. AND in all the woodworking videos I’ve seen no one has ever discussed this. Thank you!
Glad I can provide some clarity!
Expansion/contraction is something to pay attention to. However, the pilot hole created by the jig (the narrow stepped part at the tip of the drill bit) is larger than the screw shaft. So unless you also glue the joint there is a bit of wiggle that could allow one piece to move laterally against the other.
True there's a bit of wiggle room, but for large tabletops, that might not be enough
Just another commenter adding that as a total pocket hole newbie, THANK YOU! this makes so much sense and also explains a lot of my confusion around pieces expanding and contracting
Pocket screws are great for aprons on table tops: you just have to slot the hole to allow for wood movement. Then that wonderfully unthreaded part of the screw acts as a spring to absorb the movement. The screw keep the table top held to apron while allowing for seasonal movement with the slotted opening. This is an old technique, been used as long as wood screws existed.
That's true, if you allow for wood movement with a slotted hole, even a pocket screw could work to hold a table top on.
Sure, ever had a look at a drawing board ?
Can you explain this more or link a video showing it? Which end of the hole gets a slot? Do you mean where the screw exits should be wider ?
This was very informative. I'm just learning wood work and had no idea these issues could arise. Thank you sir.
I've been a Cabinetmaker 40+ years and never ever used pocket holes. We use real joinery and assemble properly.
I’m a new woodworker and I associate the pocket hole technique with cheap furniture. I’d like to make cabinets myself for a house I’m building - can you tell me what to use INSTEAD of the pocket hole technique? It seems ubiquitous.
@@dianearnold5381you would use mortise and tenon joinery.
A treasure trove of valuable information in a such a short video! OMG Thank you!
Superb subject matter knowledge and explained in a simple straightforward manner. Thank you !!
Precise and concise, I'm a newbie to pocket hole joinery. I just bought a pocket hole jig, so glad I came across this video....
Love from Bangladesh.
They're pretty useful... Good thing you're learning about it before messing up any big projects!
Great information. Beginner here, and I'm pocket hole obsessed.
I have some drawers I want to make for my kitchen and this information is very helpful. I live in Texas and it is very humid here. I could have wasted a lot of money and time had I not seen your video. Thank you for posting this.
Glad it was helpful!
Amazing video! Best 10 minutes spent on RUclips. Problem is, there is so much good info here, I keep watching it over and over. lol
I'm glad you like it! Feel free to watch it over and over again!
Wowza. Best video in pocket hole screws I have seen. Well done.
Thanks for the video. I'm just getting into woodworking and didn't know about the wood expansion effect. This was a very helpful video.
I had no idea…wood-anatomy. What an awesome video! Very informative! Thank you for sharing!
Best pocket hole tutorial I've seen , good job!
Thanks! I'm glad it was helpful!
This is a very good explanation of wood expansion. The straws helps a lot to remember in what direction humidity affects wood 🪵. Very good! Thanks a lot !
Thanks! I'm glad it helped
Ok, video number two watched... I think I'll just get rid of some "other" woodworking subscriptions... Now that's a compliment..! Between your engineering knowledge, excellent video presentation and sharing it all... well, let's just say thank you from this "You Tube Academy" student... 😎👍
Great explanation and very detailed. Making an end table for my daughter who asked me for her birthday. Right after I finish with my pantry upgrade I will start. This will call for pocket joining. Again, Thak you for sharing your knowledge. Ernest
Glad it helped!
Hey, we got that same cool. We've used it few times. Never did we ever thought about the expansion situations. Good tips. Thanks 👍
Wonderfully composed and edited video. Conveyed all the needed info with just the right amount of detail. Bravo!
Thank you sir!
What an excellent tutorial. Very clear and well presented. I am about to make a unit and just wanted to remind myself of the correct way of doing them as it's been a while since I used them. Like you, I love wood and all things wooden. People say I'm bonkers when I say that wood is 'as if it's alive' . . . well, it moves doesn't it . . . never seen dead things move !!!!
Thanks!
Have just 2 words about this video, perfect explanation .
Fantastic,...every sentence full of info and insight....great show!
Very interesting! Super clear explanations! Congratulations!
Great video. Presented very well. I knew this when I built a bread board dinning room table but ignore it and paid dearly for it. The table expanded and split. Thanks.
Thanks! Hope your table is salvageable
Thanks for your informative video regarding when, or when not to use pocket hole journey.
Equally, when making projects with pocket hole journey you have to think and build them upsidedown and inside-out so the pocket holes and plugs are not exposed.
Thanks again great video.
Yes, exactly!
I'm a rookie at this and you explained this really well. Thank you.
Wow, just what I needed! I'm figuring out out a toolbox project, and wasn't sure where to use pocket screws.
Subscribed!
Thank you sir!
thank you for this deep dive on PHJ. i’ve never seen this info presented by anyone else. you just earned a new sub.
Thanks! Glad it helped
Real good info for those of us who build inconsistently....Thanks
Thanks - especially liked the clear explanation about the screws.
As a fairly new woodworker, this helps a lot. Thank you 👍🏻
You're welcome! Good luck!
Great video. i have to inspect a table i build with pocket screws and the boards split. I thought it was due to poor drying but now i have to check the use of pocket screws according to the grain. Great info! Thanks.
I just stumbled across this video. Never thought about the placing of my screws as far as expansion. Very good video. Thanks.
I'm glad it helped!
Although long, you kept my attention the entire video. Very informational, and you clarified the confusion I had about both wood and pocket screws. Thank you.
Excellent video. You hit the nail right on the head...
Loaded with valuetainment !!! Learned a lot today. Thank you sir!
Glad it was helpful!
Very informative video, better than many I've watched. I built two chairside tables about 4 years ago. Still holding strong. Used pocket holes & glue. These tables are always indoors where the temperature and humidity is relatively constant. Gives more flexibility in pocket hole joinery; don't have to worry too much about wood expanding. Outdoor furniture is a different story. I don't think I would ever use that method for outdoor projects.
Yeah the outdoor stuff definitely gets the worst of it. Even inside though can have some humidity swings, at least where I live!
best video on wood expansion by far!
Awesome, the straw analogy makes sense and will help me with my woodworking!
Wow, you just saved me a lot of headache and I learned so much in a short video. Thank you!
Very very well described , thorough short but to the point. Cheers
Of my knowledge of woodworking there has never been any "Don't use pocket-screws here" instructions really available. Thank you for this video. When talking about wood expansion I always remember a job of tightening up a back porch where my job was to stabilize the existing joints. I did some fine measuring and joining of wood with woodscrews. I have always been haunted by the fact that I didn't account for expansion or weathering of the wood. I don't know if that house is still standing anymore. I always think of that episode when woodworking.
We all have that one (or more) regret where we didn't account for the wood expansion... I feel you man. Just gotta learn for the next time!
Nice explanation, ty. Also nice tip about the screw thread.
Superb video. Learned so much in a short space of time.
SO clear and concise. Instant follow
Excellent, very thorough video.
Thank you! I learned a lot in less than 20 minutes!!!
Awesome explanation and brilliant example using straws.
1,000 comments already, so no idea if anyone already said this - Kreg does have a variety of pocket holes screws, enough that it could be it's own video for which to use when (coarse/fine thread, with/out washer head, micro-sized screws/holes, coated...) But as to the meat of this video and wood movement, thank you! I learned a lot ;^)
very good, down to the point.
Thanks from California.
Whoa! That's crazy RH range. We average 85% year round, range is 60-90 with out dehumidifiers.
Also, great overview too.
Thanks for this video. Even tho I knew about wood expanding I never gave it much consideration when using pocket holes. Thanks for the reminder.
Great presentation. Very helpful as I just acquired a Kregg jig and will be making a farmhouse dining table.
Glad it helped! Good luck on your table