Hello! I made an end grain cutting board from Walnut, Ash and Beech! ► ALL Woodworking Plans: allflavorworkshop.com/woodworking-plans/ ► All My Tools & Gear: allflavorworkshop.com/tools-and-resources/ Can you spot the glitch? 😉 Check out the description for more details. 👆
The cutting board is really amazing! I've always wondered how they did it! But also the sled and jigs you made for your router are very interesting! Did you make any video about them?
Hey. Depending on the size of the board you want to make you can count the volume of the board. But there will be always cutoffs. If you use a planer you need to count with snipe - that is typically 4-5 cm on each side (although there are methods how to reduce snipe on a planer). If you use a flattening jig, that will be much better. But typically you can count with 20% cutoffs if this is one of your first boards. I would recommend to get planed boards if you can. How large of a board do you want to make?
@@AllFlavorWorkshop Thank you for answering!! Well any size. I made one starting 20x13.5 inches and ended up 15x 13 x1.4 inches thick after all the planing jointering and straightening up. This is my 1st one, I wanted it to be about an inch longer. I just didn't know how to get started and wood is so freaking expensive. I actually just learned about board feet!
Wow, 20 inch, that is quite long. That is a nice board@@firstlast6292 . Did you you a planer and ended up with snipe? That's is why there is this reduction of 5 inches?
After I cut the glued up board into strips and set it up as an end grain board, it got short. Then I planed it and one inch of the board did have to be cut off, it got shredded, now I know not to plane endgrain boards. Snipe is not much of a problem, I am doing this in a club kind of wood shop the equipment is really good. They told me to shove a scrap board behind the real board and the scrap gets the snipe and not my board. Going from face grain to end grain cause a lot of loss but I don't know how to end up with a certain size of end grain board@@AllFlavorWorkshop
@@firstlast6292 Yes, the sacrificial board helps a lot 👍 Have you thought of using a flattening jig? That one completely avoids any snipe. I am interested in the shredded part, what happened exactly? And where did that happen? Thanks
Hello! I made an end grain cutting board from Walnut, Ash and Beech!
► ALL Woodworking Plans: allflavorworkshop.com/woodworking-plans/
► All My Tools & Gear: allflavorworkshop.com/tools-and-resources/
Can you spot the glitch? 😉 Check out the description for more details. 👆
Thank you :) @BAWOVINA
The cutting board is really amazing! I've always wondered how they did it!
But also the sled and jigs you made for your router are very interesting! Did you make any video about them?
Hello, thank you! :) Yes I have the videos on the other jigs under my channel. Check them out :)
I know how they are made, but still enjoyable to watch someone else make one and see how they do it ... very nice 👍
Thanks Barry. Yes, the process is quite enjoyable :)
Mad looking cutting board, Lukas! 😃
Fantastic work!!!
Stay safe there with your family! 🖖😊
Haha, thank you! 😊 You too.
What if you don't have a scrap pile and you have to go buy wood. How do you figure out how much board feet to buy?
Hey. Depending on the size of the board you want to make you can count the volume of the board. But there will be always cutoffs. If you use a planer you need to count with snipe - that is typically 4-5 cm on each side (although there are methods how to reduce snipe on a planer). If you use a flattening jig, that will be much better. But typically you can count with 20% cutoffs if this is one of your first boards. I would recommend to get planed boards if you can. How large of a board do you want to make?
@@AllFlavorWorkshop Thank you for answering!! Well any size. I made one starting 20x13.5 inches and ended up 15x 13 x1.4 inches thick after all the planing jointering and straightening up. This is my 1st one, I wanted it to be about an inch longer. I just didn't know how to get started and wood is so freaking expensive. I actually just learned about board feet!
Wow, 20 inch, that is quite long. That is a nice board@@firstlast6292 . Did you you a planer and ended up with snipe? That's is why there is this reduction of 5 inches?
After I cut the glued up board into strips and set it up as an end grain board, it got short. Then I planed it and one inch of the board did have to be cut off, it got shredded, now I know not to plane endgrain boards. Snipe is not much of a problem, I am doing this in a club kind of wood shop the equipment is really good. They told me to shove a scrap board behind the real board and the scrap gets the snipe and not my board. Going from face grain to end grain cause a lot of loss but I don't know how to end up with a certain size of end grain board@@AllFlavorWorkshop
@@firstlast6292 Yes, the sacrificial board helps a lot 👍 Have you thought of using a flattening jig? That one completely avoids any snipe. I am interested in the shredded part, what happened exactly? And where did that happen? Thanks
Impressive workmanship, Lukas.
Thank you so much Mick!
@@AllFlavorWorkshop You're more than welcome, Lukas. I love to see a workman at work. 😉♥