Cut and Assemble Triangle Shelves
HTML-код
- Опубликовано: 8 сен 2017
- My sister-in-law had a request. She wanted triangular shelves. I imagined how to build them using some power tools and shipping pallet wood. My method was to cut three equal lengths of wood and then trim each edge at a 60-degree angle. When I looked at other examples later, I saw that it is much more common to cut opposing 30-degree edges when putting together triangular shelves.
Explore more from Tiny Little Workshop
The website is www.tinylittleworkshop.com
Find us on Twitter at / tinylitworkshop
We also have a Facebook thingy at / tinylittleworkshop
Subscribe at / @tinylittleworkshop
Bill presents in this video. He can be found at renderanything Хобби
Thanks! I love your comment about the pieces now being good enough that people want them! I just had a friend ask for a couple of the "Magic Balancing" wine bottle holders that I've been making to get some basic skills down. I can't wait to make some of the 30 degree cuts and try to make a shelf.
Thank you so much I was stuck trying to figure out what angle to use and you completely solved my problem!
Just a tip I learned recently. When you don't have a clamp, using blue painters tape works like magic!!
Thanks man was thinking of making some triangular shelves you just made it a whole lot easier
Cheers
Tim from wood 4 nothing
Thanks so much for this, Ive been trying everything to figure out these cuts!
This was by far the simplest but more helpful video I could find on this. Thank you !!
Where you from
I second this! Learned this while assembling a truncated dodecahedron this summer :)
- Thanx a multimillion for you relevant demo on making simple cuts that work fine. Thanx 4 sharing.
thanks man. that is exactly what I was looking for! I am making acoustic diffusers
thanks for sharing 👍🏻👍🏻i
i need that new
The 60s look better to me. Also, damn...watch your thumb bro.
I'm commenting to help this video get more attention.
Thanks a lot.
Thank you, that's really useful
Use tape to hold it together or a ratchet strap.
Thank you! I don’t know why I didn’t think of the 30° angle method, and it will do perfectly for what I’m trying to accomplish.
Thanks for supporting our channel! We just subbed you back #246!
come and play with me
هاي
Tiny little workshop about to turn into the zero finger workshop, your way to comfortable with your hands close to your miter saw, your jointer, and well you probably get your fingers to close to the table saw to, idc how much experience you have, your regards to saftey looks to be none existent. I would never ever in a billion years use a jointer with out the fence or with out the blade gaurd, and I would never in a billion years get my hands with in a about 8inches or so to my miter saw, one kick back is all it takes and your gonna end up in the hospital. If you give your self more room between your hands and any spinning blade, the odds of you reacting fast enough to get your hands out of danger will be much higher then if your hands were closer to the blade. Unless your part robot and have millisecond reaction time your doing it all wrong, sorry for the rant but it just grind my gears to see people using these vary dangerous tools wrong!
не, для 6 класса средней школы покатит
I recommend Woodprix to every beginner and not only.
I know you can find solutions to this problem in the Woodprix plans.