Making a marking knife and using a mortising chisel -Stumpy Nubs Old Timey Woodworking #1
HTML-код
- Опубликовано: 9 июн 2013
- STUMPY'S WEBSITE►www.stumpynubs.com
SUBSCRIBE► / stumpynubsworkshop
The first episode of a whole new show! Stumpy takes you back to a time of simple woodworking pleasures! This time he shows you how to make your own marking knife and how to use it for a lot more than marking! Then he demonstrates how to use a traditional mortising chisel. All this and everything else that has made Stumpy Nubs videos among the most watched in woodworking!
Glad to see you still inspiring us 9 years later.👍
Great to go back and see the past!
I was amused at ‘sniffing 2x4’s’...but then you kept emphasizing “We Love Wood!” -and the giggles started, the tears flowed and eventually I peed myself a little (still deciding what to be most ashamed..or proud? of)..
Yes! Following the process of hands-on building stuff is what I was missing on your shows. Probably my favorite episode so far.
Stumby Nubs your videos are great! I especially love the old timey woodworking videos.
Wow I love the old theme of woodworking
Thanks for the new hand tool show. Can we see more of these please!! Keep them coming....because we deserve it my friend....thanks
Been watching your videos for some time now and have purchased some of your plans as well. Just wanted to say thanks for all that you do. I love the hand tool show and hope to see many more in the future.
First rule in woodworking: You can never have too many tools.
Actually different hand planes are for different purposes, but you don't need nearly that many. For a mostly power tool workshop you can get buy with two or three.
I am glad to see some one else other than me uses the word oldtimey
Great video. Looking forward to more of this series. Thanks for sharing.
If you make a knife with a slight arc blade like a veneer knife/saw it will have a better shear angle across the fibres.
I am a very big fan of your channel, I send all my friends to your channel, regardless if they wood work or not. Some have actually started doing it as a hobby. Love the old videos too. keep up the good work.
enjoyed the new segment on hand tools! again I learned something!
Enjoyed this very much
You had me at sniffing 2x4's. Was doing that not even 2 hrs ago.
This was so interesting... and hilarious!
Much better I think I will go out and make one now.
ThanksStumby
Btw. I always enjoy your blogs. Great stuff.
It's an old Millers Falls that was designed for drilling in corners, like a wall close to a floor. It's an interesting contraption!
Wow awesome video. Just subscribed. Thanks for all the info.
that was a super video. v informative and entertaining to watch. Thanks, Stumpy.
Luv me some Stumpy!
Congrats on your Rocker video win!
Just by having a look in any workshop I understood this rule!
I'm actually on the way of building my own shop, mainly stationary powertools. Table saw, band saw, router and a power drill no more than that, the rest of it going to be hand tool.
Thanks
Standing O, well it would be standing ovation if I was not sitting and typing. I am looking forward to the next episode.
Striking knives, just looking at them, probably all got turned into (or mistaken as) chisels, since they're visibly similar to one.
you sir just got a new subscriber
That's a cool looking brace hanging on your shop wall, underneath the axe and froe. What's it used for? It looks very specialized. I have an old egg beater drill and a more conventional brace that I inherited from my father, but I admit that I nearly always use my Makita cordless drill instead. Lazy, I guess, but I am drifting back to using more hand tools versus power tools. There is something very satisfying using manual tools that I don't get with power tools (plus they're quiet!)
you're the Shwarz of the U.P!
Wood? You mean that’s why I have been buying and making tools?!
Man, I've never seen so many hand planes.
Papa was gone to walk with grandma before I realized why he told me to always mark with a nail, not a pencil... I just thought he was cheap until I realized... I shed a tear that day
and sir can you make a video about how to make that drill you used
Never stuck a hand in a pocket with an upturned marking knife but did put my hand in a bag with an upturned chisel last week.
Ouch!
I'm a recent subscriber and I'm sure may had explain it earlier, but, Why having so much hand plane? is it for collection purpose or do they all have a use?
Thanks for your vids!
When are you going to list the building plans for the open sided drum sander
If you absolutely don't have space in your tool chest for the marking knife AND an awl, then turning the single bevel knife over and 'scratching' with the point of the non-sharpened side can work to prevent the knife from following the grain.
...
Well Donne
Pencils have their place too!
behind the ear.
James, will you be reviving this Old Timey series by creating any new episodes?
So you want a MN the same width as your blade?? Hmm... I had always used something thin. Like one of those black office style paper clips... I saw once where prisoners would use them to cut his 18” bone crusher shank from his bed frame...
I love picking up useful info!
OMG! I was sitting here with a bag of Cheetos and a cold one. Well, coffee, but it had set here long enough to get cold. But, whatever...Stumpy Nubs is spying on me!
Ok, I admit it, I'm the idiot who put his hand in his pocket with a marking knife in it. These video are brilliant for a newbie like myself, I know what to do with my Logan blades now.
My marking knife has a small leather sheath made for it. Worth it.
Redwings?
A router to cut mortises? Every Old Timey Woodworker knows a ‘Router’ is in fact a hand plane!
What’s the difference between a marking and utility knife for scribing?
Bevel is to one side, the larger flat side you press against work face or square for perfect line up. Utility knife blade is too thin and it will flex and wander in the grain by having to be extended out far enough to cut, has small flat side to register on. The more mass of the blade greatly overpowers grain tendency to cause blade edge to track it. Any wandered off scribe lines will show up big time in any stain finish.
@@MrBonners thank you!
O.K. but YOU used a pencil to make the mark on the stock for the new marking knife
& yes I did like the Vid thank you for all your postings
Now you've shamed me, Stumpy. I'm going to have to take the plastic handle off of my buggered-up-Phillips-head-screwdriver-turned-scratch-awl and put a 'proper' wooden handle on it! Thanks for sharing.
Wouldn't a utility knife serve the same purpose? Or even a nice pocket knife?
A marking knife is more accurate because one side of the blade is flat and the other beveled whereas a utility knife and a pocket knife have both sides of the blade beveled.
With a flat side, the blade rides along the side of the straight edge marking the wood right where you have the straight edge set on the wood.
A double beveled blade will place the mark slightly away from the straight edge and the distance away depends entirely on how thick the blade is.
Thx, cleared that up for me.
dude i am drinking beer and eating my daughters cheetos right now, no joke.
I wish if I’m going home on my shop Chito‘s and something to drink guess what no I’m seating my car wait Mike wife she is in a mall
I'm eating pringles not cheetos, your a bad salker
I actually kind of hate wood.