People going on about him using the expensive planers are missing the point. Just buy the wood planed and buy a router bit that is half the size of it. It was worth watching the video just to see the use of that pushing tool!
I don’t get it either. The machines are part of a regular woodshop - if you’re a hobbyist you should have very similar ones, but smaller, or at least hand ones that could be adapted. I saw a sliding table saw, a thickness planer, an edge sander, a router table and that’s it. Besides the planer, they could all be built at home for relatively cheap.
I think what people are getting at is that if you could afford all the equipment, you obviously wouldn't need a jig. The whole reason people look up how to do it without a jig is because they only have minimal equipment. So it'd be nice to see a video use "minimal equipment".
@@dbop_4674 I think you are missing the point. You just need strips twice the width of your router bit as spacers for the box joints. Use preplaned timber if you don't have a planer or leave it rough if you prefer. He obviously starts with a supply of rough sawn timber.
@@franceshawe9572 no, I understand. I'm just saying the people complaining(maybe not all of them) want something with just hand saws/square/and maybe a chisel. There's a lot of people who can't afford basic equipment that everyone says you should have
This was like a magic show. Suddenly there was a perfect finger joint. I went back and watched it about four times. It's a really simple, clever method for making this joints. This is exactly the kind of video I like.
Straight forward explanations, Clean, simplistic editing without irritating music or shouting, job done. EXCELLENT! Invaluable method to a newbie with very limited resources Thank you for sharing :))
Crying out loud! If you didn't learn anything from this video, move on and look for something that you feel can help you better. This man has taken the time to share some of his knowledge to some of us who are not experts on woodworking. Personally, I found it helpful, not only on the steps to do this procedure but in the way he tackles a problem. Thank you to Woodworking Finland.
That's a fantastic idea! I especially love it that you're using a serious of pre cut wood piece to control the spacing of the joints. -- such a simplistic and wonderful approach!!
this young man work is second to none amazing how he made cuts on all 4 sides at once astounding I'm 75 yrs old have never seen that may God Continue to bless your work great work.bottom line
Very innovative. For those complain about the machinery, it is not a problem to make joints with a saw, knife and chisel. If you are really good, like Roy Underhill on "The Woodright's Shop". My bet is that most watching this video aren't. Jigs don't work with slightly warped wood beyond about a 6" box. This method does. I have made a perfectly finished 24" by 24" box with this method, out of plywood with a very thin layer of veneer, that was slightly warped. Try that with a jig. Great idea this one.
I used to make boxes in Hampshire in England. Hundreds every month. So this was like a blast from the past for me. We always used to use a proper stacked set of cutters on a spindle moulder to make finger joints though. Never seen this method before. Brilliant! I'm going to keep this method in mind for making headstock joints for the guitars I now build. Cheers guys!
I am 70 years old and that was " EXCELLENT " from start to finish - have to make sliding drawers - for kitchen and bathroom - this is going to make my day !!!!!!! and fast - too - I might add - What an educational video - Wow = put this in my video collection - going to try this - after installing my French cleats - system - make my shelves - then make boxes to put on my shelves- Wow - Thank you for the wonderful experienced - watched three times - THANK YOU
Very good !!! In a very down to earth way he showed how you can make boxes using box joints and also showed you how to install the base to the box. Very clever!!!
I found this video to be *wonderful! No loud music, no talking down to people, just a well-filmed, short, pithy video. ❤ I, personally, could have used *more description, but then, I am very new to wood working. I have, however, been dressmaking and sewing quilts for about 50 years, and apparently, the mental skills overlap. 😆 I watched the video a half dozen times and answered all of my own questions. 👍 I don't think he has too many tools. I have many items in *my sewing room that you would also scoff at ... especially if the only sewing you do is to hem your pants or replace a button now and then. If you're making quilts for sale, or dressing the bride, both mothers, and six attendants, you understand my collection of sewing tools. I imagine Esa is the same. 👍 Thanks Esa, and much love from Texas, USA! 🇫🇮🇨🇱🇺🇲 ❤
Thanks for the video. I just tried your method and it works really well. I used 1" thick MDF for the spacers and a ½" router bit. The MDF thickness was very accurate, so I didn't need a thicknesser to make the spacers (although I have one). I've been woodworking for over 30 years and never got around to making a finger-jointed box. I'll be making plenty more now.
@jackfromthe60s Sorry to bother you, I’m rather new to woodworking. I’d like to make a toy chest for my nephew. With 30 year of experience, I’m wondering what joints you used to make boxes, or what you found best for boxes?
@@EricRedbearLoL. They are two entirely different processes. You flatten one side of a piece of timber on a planer or jointer. Then you feed it through a THICKNESSER to make both faces parallel.
Thanks, you saved me money. I have a saw bench, and a router. All I needed was to watch your video, and my woodworking workmanship quality just went up a couple of notches. THANKYOU, We all have to start somewhere.
I tried this method today, for me this is the easiest way to produce box joints. It took me awhile to get the shims exactly the correct size & I added a face plate to the push block so I could clamp the stock to it ( I’m not comfortable having my fingers that close to the router cutter). Once you have the shims at the correct thickness you really can produce a box in a few minutes. Great video!
I'm wondering how critically important it is that the spacer boards be of precise equal widths so long as you use them in the same order each time you begin cutting. Contemporary aesthetics aside, so long as the spacers are at least double the width of the router bit, and the boards are cut in the same sequence, why couldn't spacer width vary for experimental aesthetics?
Although I have just come across your video, I'm pleased that I did. As a newbie in woodworking I need all the help I can get as I have been watching thousands of woodworking videos to get all the tips I found this one to be on my top five as I don't need a jig . Nice job I will catch up on all your videos but so far bloody good job.
I just had to tell you again, you are a genius and thanks for the video, I have made so many jigs and even bought a jig and something would always go wrong but just in the last few days I’ve done it your way and never had a problem works every time and so easy I can’t believe it, thanks again
Beautiful. I'm a hobbyist and love learning new ways to make my router productive. That was inspirational. My 'workshop' is my (cold) garage and I have no table saw, so I make most things with track saw and router. A table saw would be faster but I'm not on the clock, and so far I've been unable to justify buying one. My router table is used a lot, and with thought and planning it's amazing what can be achieved with one. Thanks for posting.
Yes, it's amazing what you can do with one. With a little imagination and a bit of scrap wood it becomes a "*SURFACE PLANER*"! With a Straight Bit and thin strip of Laminant on the out feed fence it becomes a "*JOINTER*"! Wakodahatchee Chris
What a GREAT IDEA for box joint construction. NO JIG REQUIRED! That is what I am going to use on the construction of my Wall Hung Tool Cabinet instead of Dovetails. So easy, quick, and accurate. BRAVO MAESTRO
You sir have saved me a beautifull amount of time in not making a box joint jig. Will be using your method to make boxes for my van conversion. So effective and yet simple. Thank you. 😁
Thank you for this video. A simple solution is always the best no matter what you are trying to accomplish. I made a living for over 40 years in Information Technology creating simple solutions to complicated problems.
Excellent! I watched this last week and have now made a brand new box for my Unimat DB200 mini lathe. I added some attachments and a base plate and it no longer fits in the excellent, old box that it came in. I now use that box to store all the various parts and attachments that do not live on the lathe, and the lathe itself goes in my new box that you helped me to figure out. Now I have to figure out the finish I want to apply to this box. THANKS for the excellent video, sir!
Are you kidding me I’ve been trying to make box joints forever and it always comes out wrong on one of the corners, flip the board over and all that , this is so simple way hasn’t anyone showed this way ? Great video and thank you so much
My 1st visit here was very pleasant! As Arnold once said..." I'll be back " Appears to be very skilled, and shows VERY NICE FINNISH PRODUCT. YES, pun intended! Thank you sir.
Excellent video and process. The easiest and most effective I've seen without the prep of time consuming jigs. Bless your heart. He knows what to do and not to do. Mr. Finland has all of his fingers and judging from his shop he knows about stay away from sharp objects. Thank you Sir for sharing. Keep up the excellent work.
Video ini sangat informatif dan disajikan dengan jelas. Penjelasan langkah demi langkah mengenai pembuatan box joint sangat membantu dalam memahami prosesnya. Box joint sendiri memiliki kelebihan dalam hal kekuatan dan stabilitas, yang menjadikannya pilihan populer dalam pembuatan berbagai proyek kayu seperti kotak dan laci. Terima kasih telah berbagi pengetahuan ini, sangat bermanfaat untuk diaplikasikan di proyek-proyek mendatang.
Wow, keep making more videos! It looks like your shop has a lot of handmade jigs and cool gadgets, show us how you made them. Thank you for this video.
I am truly flabbergasted. Sometimes the most simple process gets over thought. This is so easy and accurate with much less set up than a table saw jig or a traditional router jig. Holy shit. You just changed my life lol! Thanks man 👍 you just got a new subscriber!
@@WoodworkingFinland you're welcome! After seeing your video, I searched a thousand other box joint videos and no one has explained your style of doing it. You should make a video showing different sizes and bits and explain the process a bit more. I think you could help a lot of people interested in Woodworking. I can't wait to see what you guys come up with next!
I have seen several videos on the subject. At first I was a bit hesitant but your video made me want to make these little boxes again. Thank you so much for your help.
Outstanding episode. I have purchased a jig for these joints and no matter how well I set up the jig, I always ended up with some problem during the construction. This method is excellent, it would be nice to know how you determined the sizes of the spacer blocks. Thank you for sharing, as I said in the beginning - Outstanding. Best wishes from the UK.
Thank you for this video. I want to make box joints and would rather use my router table than table saw. Your way is so simple using the router table, for the table saw way I would have to spend a lot of time making a jig first, I'd rather spend my time making the boxes! I have subscribed, as there is a lot to be learned from your channel. Once again Thank You.
I like the Finnish way to do things on this video. He only shows how to do this thing, and doesn't talk or shout constantly like a machine. The main thing is the box and how to do it, not himself, unlike on too many videos like this, on which some airhead talks or SHOUTS like a machine throught the whole video. They are so annoying! But he is great and very Finnish.
People going on about him using the expensive planers are missing the point. Just buy the wood planed and buy a router bit that is half the size of it. It was worth watching the video just to see the use of that pushing tool!
Ridiculous. "He doesn't have the same exact equipment as me so why bother?!?"
I don’t get it either. The machines are part of a regular woodshop - if you’re a hobbyist you should have very similar ones, but smaller, or at least hand ones that could be adapted. I saw a sliding table saw, a thickness planer, an edge sander, a router table and that’s it. Besides the planer, they could all be built at home for relatively cheap.
I think what people are getting at is that if you could afford all the equipment, you obviously wouldn't need a jig. The whole reason people look up how to do it without a jig is because they only have minimal equipment. So it'd be nice to see a video use "minimal equipment".
@@dbop_4674 I think you are missing the point. You just need strips twice the width of your router bit as spacers for the box joints. Use preplaned timber if you don't have a planer or leave it rough if you prefer. He obviously starts with a supply of rough sawn timber.
@@franceshawe9572 no, I understand. I'm just saying the people complaining(maybe not all of them) want something with just hand saws/square/and maybe a chisel. There's a lot of people who can't afford basic equipment that everyone says you should have
This was like a magic show. Suddenly there was a perfect finger joint. I went back and watched it about four times. It's a really simple, clever method for making this joints. This is exactly the kind of video I like.
I agree. Did he flip 1/2 of them over so they would fit? I've got a miter and would like to try this.
Straight forward explanations, Clean, simplistic editing without irritating music or shouting, job done. EXCELLENT! Invaluable method to a newbie with very limited resources Thank you for sharing :))
Crying out loud! If you didn't learn anything from this video, move on and look for something that you feel can help you better. This man has taken the time to share some of his knowledge to some of us who are not experts on woodworking. Personally, I found it helpful, not only on the steps to do this procedure but in the way he tackles a problem. Thank you to Woodworking Finland.
Shut up.
I cannot stand it when ppl r not nice even towards ppl who made the effort to contribute positively. Thank u to woodworking Finland Yes !
YOU DID NOT TAKE YOUR PROSAC TODAY HUH !!!
No push sticks. . .this fellow has cat burglar guts.
I learnt that I will have to make do with the router I have
Simple, yet effective. I loved how your video got straight to the point without endless talking. Thank you!
Am I the only one who loved the charisma of the host?
Nah I got chills
Yes
You deserve more likes. I was dying after the first sentence
I think Fins, Danes, etc. tend to go for the Stoic in social situations. Really nice work my friend. My house too small for that fine machinery.
I got kinda scared at one point 🥺
Masterly woodworking, no excessive talking. Finnish people are the best!!
the varnish seemed good but the finish wasn't too clever
No wasted talking. And no wasted movements. Excellent!!! That was masterful.
That's a fantastic idea!
I especially love it that you're using a serious of pre cut wood piece to control the spacing of the joints. -- such a simplistic and wonderful approach!!
No way. Love him. I’ve watched this video several times. He’s to the point and relaxing. Thank you for teaching me a new trick.
I almost choked on my coffee when he said “Yeeeesss”….. and that was all.
That did make me laugh 😂
this young man work is second to none amazing how he made cuts on all 4 sides at once astounding I'm 75 yrs old have never seen that may God Continue to bless your work great work.bottom line
i particularly liked the 'Finnish mallet' used to tap the joints in :D
😂
Ole meat hammers
that is as politicly incorrect, as a ten foot pole.
Yes, Mario Bonetta, me too... i just posted a comment to the same effect.
Very innovative. For those complain about the machinery, it is not a problem to make joints with a saw, knife and chisel. If you are really good, like Roy Underhill on "The Woodright's Shop". My bet is that most watching this video aren't. Jigs don't work with slightly warped wood beyond about a 6" box. This method does. I have made a perfectly finished 24" by 24" box with this method, out of plywood with a very thin layer of veneer, that was slightly warped. Try that with a jig. Great idea this one.
I used to make boxes in Hampshire in England. Hundreds every month. So this was like a blast from the past for me. We always used to use a proper stacked set of cutters on a spindle moulder to make finger joints though. Never seen this method before. Brilliant! I'm going to keep this method in mind for making headstock joints for the guitars I now build. Cheers guys!
Displaying the Finnish national spirit perfectly. They don’t say much, but that what comes out counts. Loving it!
GREAT VIDEO! Ten fingers, precise woodworking, no nonsense. Feve out of five stars.
Princess Leigha hair do = 6 stars
9 3/4.
I am 70 years old and that was " EXCELLENT " from start to finish - have to make sliding drawers - for kitchen and bathroom - this is going to make my day !!!!!!! and fast - too - I might add - What an educational video - Wow = put this in my video collection - going to try this - after installing my French cleats - system - make my shelves - then make boxes to put on my shelves- Wow - Thank you for the wonderful experienced - watched three times - THANK YOU
Very good !!! In a very down to earth way he showed how you can make boxes using box joints and also showed you how to install the base to the box. Very clever!!!
I found this video to be *wonderful! No loud music, no talking down to people, just a well-filmed, short, pithy video. ❤
I, personally, could have used *more description, but then, I am very new to wood working. I have, however, been dressmaking and sewing quilts for about 50 years, and apparently, the mental skills overlap. 😆
I watched the video a half dozen times and answered all of my own questions. 👍
I don't think he has too many tools. I have many items in *my sewing room that you would also scoff at ... especially if the only sewing you do is to hem your pants or replace a button now and then.
If you're making quilts for sale, or dressing the bride, both mothers, and six attendants, you understand my collection of sewing tools.
I imagine Esa is the same. 👍
Thanks Esa, and much love from Texas, USA!
🇫🇮🇨🇱🇺🇲 ❤
Thanks for the video. I just tried your method and it works really well. I used 1" thick MDF for the spacers and a ½" router bit. The MDF thickness was very accurate, so I didn't need a thicknesser to make the spacers (although I have one). I've been woodworking for over 30 years and never got around to making a finger-jointed box. I'll be making plenty more now.
Thats awesome.
@jackfromthe60s
Sorry to bother you, I’m rather new to woodworking. I’d like to make a toy chest for my nephew. With 30 year of experience, I’m wondering what joints you used to make boxes, or what you found best for boxes?
"thicknesser" .... LOVE IT!
But if you ever go shopping for one it's called a Planer.
@@EricRedbearLoL. They are two entirely different processes. You flatten one side of a piece of timber on a planer or jointer. Then you feed it through a THICKNESSER to make both faces parallel.
Thanks, you saved me money. I have a saw bench, and a router. All I needed was to watch your video, and my woodworking workmanship quality just went up a couple of notches. THANKYOU, We all have to start somewhere.
This is how it's look like when you know what are you doing! I can tell he got immense experience in woodworking! Best regards from Hungary!
Great to see this demonstration with no annoying background music. Thank you.
I tried this method today, for me this is the easiest way to produce box joints. It took me awhile to get the shims exactly the correct size & I added a face plate to the push block so I could clamp the stock to it ( I’m not comfortable having my fingers that close to the router cutter). Once you have the shims at the correct thickness you really can produce a box in a few minutes. Great video!
I'm wondering how critically important it is that the spacer boards be of precise equal widths so long as you use them in the same order each time you begin cutting. Contemporary aesthetics aside, so long as the spacers are at least double the width of the router bit, and the boards are cut in the same sequence, why couldn't spacer width vary for experimental aesthetics?
How do you work out the shim size I think I missed that?
Hello to Finland. I made Boxes with Finger joints by using your method. It worked out very well. Thank you very much.
Gotta love that organic dead-blow hammer. Kind of like karate training. I like your spacer block method very much and will try it.
Your a master jointer 👍
Yep, once you have made the spacers, save them and use them over and over!! Each time you want a different thickness, just make them!!
Smart guy, few words and straight to the point. A master gentlemen, no doubt at all. Greetings from Costa Rica, Central America. Alberto Corrales
The simple approach is often the best, love it and will definitely use it
was about to post the same comment
nicely done "eeessss" finnish carpenter :D
Loved it. Nice & simple. Love the intimate closeness of fingers & blades. Loved the ears.
tried this myself on my table saw with a dado stack.... this is just brilliant!
Agreed, game changer for us builders/DIY'ers.
Absolutely brilliant. No need for explanation. No jigs No problem and exponentially faster.
Although I have just come across your video, I'm pleased that I did. As a newbie in woodworking I need all the help I can get as I have been watching thousands of woodworking videos to get all the tips I found this one to be on my top five as I don't need a jig . Nice job I will catch up on all your videos but so far bloody good job.
I just had to tell you again, you are a genius and thanks for the video, I have made so many jigs and even bought a jig and something would always go wrong but just in the last few days I’ve done it your way and never had a problem works every time and so easy I can’t believe it, thanks again
Love what you did here. I’ve been wanting to make some new boxes. I’m doing this tomorrow. Thank You!
No loud music, no advertising, no nonsense just a great educational lesson, excellent.
Beautiful. I'm a hobbyist and love learning new ways to make my router productive. That was inspirational.
My 'workshop' is my (cold) garage and I have no table saw, so I make most things with track saw and router. A table saw would be faster but I'm not on the clock, and so far I've been unable to justify buying one. My router table is used a lot, and with thought and planning it's amazing what can be achieved with one.
Thanks for posting.
Yes, it's amazing what you can do with one. With a little imagination and a bit of scrap wood it becomes a "*SURFACE PLANER*"! With a Straight Bit and thin strip of Laminant on the out feed fence it becomes a "*JOINTER*"!
Wakodahatchee Chris
What a GREAT IDEA for box joint construction. NO JIG REQUIRED! That is what I am going to use on the construction of my Wall Hung Tool Cabinet instead of Dovetails. So easy, quick, and accurate. BRAVO MAESTRO
Love it. This is men’s TV! Not much talking. Very Finn style. Cool.
You sir have saved me a beautifull amount of time in not making a box joint jig. Will be using your method to make boxes for my van conversion. So effective and yet simple. Thank you. 😁
Great instructional video :) no nonsense and straight to the point. Kudos!
Thank you for this video. A simple solution is always the best no matter what you are trying to accomplish. I made a living for over 40 years in Information Technology creating simple solutions to complicated problems.
I enjoyed your video and learned a new way of making Boxes, THANKS!
Excellent! I watched this last week and have now made a brand new box for my Unimat DB200 mini lathe. I added some attachments and a base plate and it no longer fits in the excellent, old box that it came in. I now use that box to store all the various parts and attachments that do not live on the lathe, and the lathe itself goes in my new box that you helped me to figure out. Now I have to figure out the finish I want to apply to this box. THANKS for the excellent video, sir!
Are you kidding me I’ve been trying to make box joints forever and it always comes out wrong on one of the corners, flip the board over and all that , this is so simple way hasn’t anyone showed this way ? Great video and thank you so much
My 1st visit here was very pleasant!
As Arnold once said..." I'll be back "
Appears to be very skilled, and shows VERY NICE FINNISH PRODUCT. YES, pun intended!
Thank you sir.
Very very well done, i've watched other YT channels make elaborate jigs that take up more time than its worth. Thanks so much for sharing
I searched how to make a box and this is what came up. The boxes are great, thanks for the video..
Excellent video and process. The easiest and most effective I've seen without the prep of time consuming jigs. Bless your heart. He knows what to do and not to do. Mr. Finland has all of his fingers and judging from his shop he knows about stay away from sharp objects.
Thank you Sir for sharing. Keep up the excellent work.
Video ini sangat informatif dan disajikan dengan jelas. Penjelasan langkah demi langkah mengenai pembuatan box joint sangat membantu dalam memahami prosesnya. Box joint sendiri memiliki kelebihan dalam hal kekuatan dan stabilitas, yang menjadikannya pilihan populer dalam pembuatan berbagai proyek kayu seperti kotak dan laci. Terima kasih telah berbagi pengetahuan ini, sangat bermanfaat untuk diaplikasikan di proyek-proyek mendatang.
Wow, keep making more videos! It looks like your shop has a lot of handmade jigs and cool gadgets, show us how you made them. Thank you for this video.
Thank you for this feedback!
You made my day. Pure beauty and simplicity. Zero waste video. Very pleasant to watch.
Thank you. What an excellent idea. Now, all I need is a thickness planer and a router and a router table. No problem. Blessing to you and yours.
Damn that is just ingenious. And a beautiful finish too! Can't wait to try this out for a few projects.
Easiest box-joint making method I have seen on YT. Well done! Greetings from South Africa.
I'd like to spend a few days with you to learn your perfection. Thank you!!
Wow. This is definitely the best video I've seen on box joints. Simple, easy to follow steps. And that cool "YES" at the end. Love this dude.😎
I am truly flabbergasted. Sometimes the most simple process gets over thought. This is so easy and accurate with much less set up than a table saw jig or a traditional router jig. Holy shit. You just changed my life lol! Thanks man 👍 you just got a new subscriber!
Wow. Thank you very much!
@@WoodworkingFinland you're welcome! After seeing your video, I searched a thousand other box joint videos and no one has explained your style of doing it. You should make a video showing different sizes and bits and explain the process a bit more. I think you could help a lot of people interested in Woodworking. I can't wait to see what you guys come up with next!
NICE. Clear.Concise.Practical- I will definitely try this technique. Thank you.
Minus the hands by the blade.....R.I.P Sergio
Perfect results. It's great to learn new and simpler methods, keep up the great work! 👍
I have seen several videos on the subject. At first I was a bit hesitant but your video made me want to make these little boxes again. Thank you so much for your help.
Outstanding episode. I have purchased a jig for these joints and no matter how well I set up the jig, I always ended up with some problem during the construction. This method is excellent, it would be nice to know how you determined the sizes of the spacer blocks. Thank you for sharing, as I said in the beginning - Outstanding. Best wishes from the UK.
Looks like the spacer blocks are 2x the bit size? That would add up
This is to the point and that makes it great to watch and simply understand! Great video
"esss" :)) . I like this guy
yesssss
3:08
I love this guy as well lol
That is brilliant how you cut them all at the same time! That is so efficient my brother, thank you for sharing.
Perfecf and beautiful! Beatiful machines too! Beautiful your kindles.... Long life to you! Thanks from south of Brasil!
this video shows how to maximize the potential of every tool in your arsenal. Such an amazing work. Subscribed!
How does this guy still have all his fingers?
I was thinkin' that, too! Lol
Also. I was litterly feeling my fingers shiver watching.
That's the first thing I noticed, too!
You must not be too attach to something you have 9 of. Polish style of thinking coming from a polock
@@danielfr9234 He has all his fingers, because he knows what he's doing and he takes care when doing it.
Happy and amazed this guy still has both his thumbs.
That was very cool, never would have thought of it myself and don't need any jigs. Thanks
Straight to the point, easy to follow for an amateur like me, and Finnish. That's a sub from me.
Well done !
Thanks, and thanks for narrating in English, I appreciate that!!!!!
Very smart, I like these kind of well thought-out solutions !
FANTASTIC! You have a great shop. Thanknyou for the video..people ask if I'm a Finish carpenter..no I'm Norwegian ...
Nice and easy, just how it should be! 👌🏽
Awesome work, mate 👍🏽
Love your video! Will save and look forward to watching more! Thanks for posting!
brilliant , simple and well presented im signing up !!!
Thank you for this video. I want to make box joints and would rather use my router table than table saw. Your way is so simple using the router table, for the table saw way I would have to spend a lot of time making a jig first, I'd rather spend my time making the boxes!
I have subscribed, as there is a lot to be learned from your channel. Once again Thank You.
I like the Finnish way to do things on this video. He only shows how to do this thing, and doesn't talk or shout constantly like a machine. The main thing is the box and how to do it, not himself, unlike on too many videos like this, on which some airhead talks or SHOUTS like a machine throught the whole video. They are so annoying! But he is great and very Finnish.
...I agree!!! (I just LOVE Finnish Culture!!!.... They need to stop allowing refuse, from the trd world to enter their Nation!!... ; (
he also didn't say HEYYYY GUYSSSS! and spend the first 2 minutes telling you how to like and subscribe
Had a good friend who was Finnish. Knew him four years. This guy is a chatterbox.
I loved the fact that he was not playing repulsive music the whole time.
its brilliant!! life can be simple if you know how..... this guy knows!! many thanks!!
Never too old to learn, thank you.
Kerouacf 00 that's right. You can teach an old dog tricks when the old dog listens.
Never too old to learn.
Absolutely Brilliant!!!! Thank you for this video. I have been looking for a way to make this joint without having to build a jig or buy dado blades.
Very good. I usually do mine with a jig on table saw. Ill have to try this. Looks way simplier. Subbed.
Your work is second to none beautiful precise cuts mama Mia perfect God continue to bless you and your family great work.Bottom line
This guy is 10 kinds of awesome. "Yes." 👍
Elegant method for box joints. Once the spacers are produced for a particular router bit setup for future projects is minimal. Well done!
@2:46 how satisfying that must have felt when it all hit square and flush :)
Excellent! And just in time; I'll be using your techniques to build a bunch of drawers for my kitchen and laundry room. Very best to you and Finland!
Simple, elegant, and effective. The three elements of genius.
- Thanx 4 sharing. The router is my very favorite tool. Thanx a multibillion for showing your technique to extend it's use.
Nothing like good old-fashioned Finn-genuity!
Loved the video, charisma is great, no need for rubber mallet either.
Excelent, I've been searching a Real good way to make that kind of joints, thanks a lot.......👌👌👌
Thank you, Woodworking Finland. Best video on the topic. Really the simplest way to do it!
Это лучшее что я когда либо видел! Спасибо тебе мужик!
best box joint idea I have ever seen, thanks for sharing
perfect! thanks from Argentina :D
Brilliant and simple. Thanks from NZ!
Excellent sir. I'd never seen this method before.
My sonny boy...I am now salivating profusely...thanks fro the video