Robert, Thank you so much for this deeply thought provoking comment. I had absolutely no idea that I had been living a heinous lie, in that I thought what I do on this channel could ever be considered Woodworking, until you came into my life and set me straight! I would have never imagined that one comment, from an authority on the subject such as you, could EVER make me rethink how I am living my life! Your opinion has crushed my soul into a million tiny pieces to the point where I am considering selling all of my saws and equipment. In fact, I have suddenly lost the will to live! Sadly, because of how dark my life is now, I now see my future as being nothing but a RUclips troll and lurking the comment section of videos with subjects that I know nothing about, and will never have the ability to do myself and make useless comments full of animus and distain, just to make myself feel better. On second thought... I think I'll just leave that to you. Thank you for watching! I need the Ad revenue! Next!
Look everybody, a nobody has been spotted, it's past your bed time, you're going to be late for work tomorrow, them burgers aren't going to flip themselves. Next
@@MandSWoodworks What a turd! I just discovered your channel after stumbling upon another inlay video. I just started my cnc journey less than a week ago and I'm learning a ton. This whole inlay process is blowing my mind. I think it will become my new obsession. The piece in this video is freaking awesome. Fantastic WOODWORKING and craftsmanship. The video is great too. Detailed explanations, good volume, video angles and zooms are right on. You got a new sub and like. Looking forward to digging through your channel. Great work and great content, sir! Keep doing what you're doing.
Never had an interest in cnc's in my woodworking but after seeing this and the amount of time that you showed in each design element, I can see another aspect of woodworking. Thanks for showing each step.
Just stunning craftsmanship. I've had my CNC for about a year now and made some great things but have not attempted wood inlays yet. You're describing your process and failures is inspiring and I need to just go for it. And, no shame in being a "RUclipsr", sharing your tips is helping others to create. Thank you.
HOLY CRAP!!! That is the most detailed cutting board I have ever seen! You may not think that you are a master, but you are overly humble! Also, your video presentation style is SPOT ON! No goofy annoying background music and the work goes on with no pauses as you narrate. This is one of the BEST RUclips videos that I've ever watched - both in terms of the workmanship of the project and the presentation of the video. I'm too late to the CNC game and I will never even attempt anything that complex.... but now that I see what can be done, I am excited to try something somewhat simpler. THANK YOU!!
I have been a hobby woodworker for decades and just purchased a CNC router. Thank you for sharing your experience, resources, and settings!!!! I have watched everything you have posted and appreciate your humor and craftsmanship!
hey, your a great teacher, the words you pass on from your lessons of failure and success make you a master craftsman. own it dude your a master at your craft an you have left a legacy.
Hey! Great video and really enjoyed your laid-back style and information! I make similar boards and also use VCarve Pro. If you're like me, you've probably landed on a "standard" carve depth, etc. and, if so, there's a way to trick VCarve into carving the male plugs in multiple passes instead of plunging all the way to your final Start Depth (SD) and potentially breaking bit tips as you mentioned. I go a bit deeper with my inlays so if you wanted to take three passes to get to a final carve depth of 0.345", you can run your first toolpath at a SD of 0.295" and a FD of 0.05". Then save that toolpath as your final depth toolpath (which would be your #3 toolpath). Create another toolpath with a SD of 0.2" and the same FD of 0.05" - this is your #2 toolpath. Then create your #1 toolpath with a SD of 0.075" and a FD of 0.05" (your FD stays the same throughout). Then manually reorder your toolpaths to group your clearance bits/paths in order from 1, 2, 3. Now... this sounds like a lot of work but in reality it only takes a couple of extra minutes and you minimize the chance of blowing a bit by down a deep plunge. And you can ramp up your ipm rate...!
wow are you kidding me? you are a master at this craft. these are the best inlay cutting boards I have ever seen on you tube or anywhere else. I been doing CNC and inlays for a few years and I have yet to produce anything even close to what you do. thanks, I love watching your masterful creations come to life.
you sir sound so humble and genuine i cnc my self i no the time and frustration that goes into a job but when you hand someone the end result its well worth that reward that comes from the heart..nice job!
As someone who's devoted over 50 years to professional engineering machining, including 25 years in CNC, witnessing your skills in woodworking and CNC, despite being newer to these crafts, is truly inspiring. Drawing motivation from critiques is crucial; trust me, machining stands as a skill on par with any other
I know exactly the feeling you are talking about when you said you just felt in your DNA that you wanted to make stuff. I have been obsessing with woodworking and dabbling in metalwork for some time now, and i couldn't be happier with my journey.
As a fellow cnc’er that started with end grain cutting boards 2 years before I got my cnc this is amazing and you have got a subscriber in me. Love to see what you do next!
Thank You, Thank You, Thank You. This was an outstanding video. You give an old guy like me hope that we might actually be able to do something like this. Thank You again.
You very humble sir. This is a beautiful piece of art. I could listen to you talk about your work for hours. As a fellow Deep South fella myself, I applaud you and your work. Earned a sub and a like easily.
That was really fun to watch! I love to see the art that other people create. I can tell you that if my dad was still alive he would have watched your video again and again to enjoy all the details!
As one artist to another, never lose that attitude about not being the best. When one constantly seaks improvement in oneself, it's the single fomula in reaching Master status... which really never comes. But the joy is what you leave behind for the rest to appreciate. Cheers and beautiful work!
It turned out amazing and so are you, welcome to the RUclips community, you'll do very well here my friend. Liked, subbed and looking forward to more. cheers J
Your work is just incredible! The inlay work is beautiful,and the process you use for it just blew my mind! I can see why someone would pay top dollar for one of your boards.
Awesome job on this piece. Very nice. I been a professional woodworker for 40 yrs. and just starting my CNC journey. I'm really liking the inlay stuff.
Great work and video. I like quite a few things about your work no like the work holding (that’s like Broinwood). I also like that you shared your depth settings. Thank you. I’ve been doing quite a few and am Still learning how to get that super fine detail. It’s starts with end grain! I’ve learned that much too. Great job. Keep it up. I have my end grain board all glued up, now I just need to do my first cutting board inlay.
That’s great and thanks for sharing your settings. I am just starting with v carving on my hobby machine, and for the male rough cut I fudge the z height so I do it in two passes, rather than a deep single cut, but I will be moving to a more tapered bit as you use.
beautiful! I've been in love with Broinwood's work for awhile, Glad too see another amazing CNC artist as well. I've recently started trying my hand at inlays, hopefully your help will get me to the next level, can't wait to see more!
Absolutely amazing. Great work. Everytime you pushed an inlay in it just blew my mind. I only hope some day I'll be up to this level with my little cnc.
Very beautiful work! Yep Broinwood inspired me to get a machine. Made all the signs and some epoxy inlays so far. Ready to learn these beautiful Vcarve inlays you guys make. Thanks so much!
Really nice work. Glad you decided to share what you are learning with us. Its not always easy following what you want to do, really appreciate that you let folks know that mistakes will be made and that its inevitable but not the end of the world, its part of learning and everything will get better as long as you don't give up. From one Redneck to another, Keep it up.
Simply amazing work you have created. During the build I was thinking to myself I wouldn't ever use it as a cutting board since it's too beautiful. I'm glad to hear you buddy said a knife will not touch that board. GREAT WORK!
Your comment literally made me laugh, but in the best way possible. I don't have the polish and production savvy most folks on here have. So I am truly honored and humbled by your comment. Thank you!! Thank you for watching!
Absolutely amazing craftsmanship and I enjoy listening to you talk through the process. I've had my CNC a few years and have several failed attempts at inlays but you've inspired me to try again!
Thank you so much for your time and wisdom on inlays. I watched this video before purchasing a Cnc and now that I have one and I've been practicing I've rewatched and have gained a lot more from this video. Many thanks. I hope to be able to produce something close to this level myself in the future! we don't just hit run on a machine!
Great job man, I've been trying to do inlays now for a while but the numbers have always eluded me, I've been told by a few people the numbers to use, but they are either very shallow or parts wont fit at all, you gave me FREELY I might add, three things I needed, the Path numbers for deeper cuts for cutting boards, the type of bits to use and lastly was the same problem I was having with the boards after flattening, they bowed in the center, I hadn't even noticed that, so, THANK YOU, I'm going back to the drawing board as they say and try and try again. Thums up, and subscribed!
phenomenal work! I don't care what anyone else says this is great woodworking. I can only hope to achieve this level of craftsmanship someday. I want to do this with many designs.
Great work. Thank you for posting/sharing. Really appreciate the time you put into the video. Enjoyed watching. Great footage and content. Perfect balance of content and timing. Looking forward to your next one.
Very cool and inspirational. Thanks for sharing your journey with this piece. I'm at the start of learning how to do inlays, hope they're this good one day.
Very nice woodworking. I've only had my CNC for maybe 9 months and I'm learning as I go and I ran across your page and I really wanted to learn how to do this type of woodwork.. may God bless your business
I’ve really been resisting cnc, because I just don’t how to get one that’s affordable, or even how to learn how to use it. Your work is amazing, and inspiring, and I thank you for posting it. I like your style. So many woodworkers on RUclips joke around so much it gets annoying. I just don’t like it. You get right to the point and your voice is very soothing. I guess I’m too old for all those youngsters channels. 😁 I have liked and subscribed, and I look forward to see what you make next. As a Navy veteran that grew up on an island off the coast of Maine, I love the sea, and I love this board so much! It is absolutely gorgeous! Okay my friend, you take care and I’ll be seeing you around! ☮️ & ❤️ from a fat old woodworker in rural Oklahoma!
Wow. Simply outstanding. Glad your buddy said it would never see a knife! I am still waiting for delivery of my CNC but am already trying to learn as much as possible about inlays so this video was fantastic and much appreciated. Keep posting.
Onefinity elite foreman. I just got the pwncnc water cooled spindle but have another 3 months wait for the Onefinity. I wanted the spindle to help keep noise down. There are cheaper alternatives to the pwnCNC spindle but I have enough on my plate learning vcarve, designing enclosure, and other woodworking projects so I opted to make some parts of my life easier.
@@r7j7t7 Nice. I've had the longmill for about a year and I wanted something a little better. I ordered a cnc4newbie which was the closest I could figure to a elite or shapeoko pro 5. Got here in about 3 days. So far in the box it looks very solid and no wheels or belts.
Awesome work. I'm going to have to do some more complex inlays after watching this. When it comes to using wenge, the thing I hate about using it is getting splinters. They really hurt and they seem to swell up quickly.
Fantastic board! It's great to see someone else make an inlay board to the quality of Broinwood. I for sure learned a few things from this video, thank!
I think that is the best compliment one could give. Thank you! I don't think that I am near the quality he puts out. I watched a recent video he released and I still felt like a beginner compared to him! Thank you for watching!
Incredible work, sir! This is truly inspirational and what you are doing transcends mere woodworking and easily lives in the space called “art”. Well done! Keep it up!
Magnificent, I'm a metalworker both manual and mostly CNC lathe and mill but I'm just now getting into this CNC router stuff, trying to first turn my Plasma table into a router table (we'll see) 53 yrs old so I can almost smell retirement to my shop (40x60 and intend to add more on) that's so full of all types of equipment both metal, woodworking, automotive, etc. I just love learning new things and keeping up with technology while keeping old and new skill sets up hopefully. Thanks for sharing this stuff, you seem very patient in your work. Larry in North Tx. here.
Great Job! Thanks for posting this. I've done a fair amount of inlays, but never this detailed. I'm always experimenting with bits, cut depths and feeds and speeds, This gives me more to try. I look forward to more of you videos!
CNC woodworking ? That’s not wood working .
Next
Robert,
Thank you so much for this deeply thought provoking comment.
I had absolutely no idea that I had been living a heinous lie, in that I thought what I do on this channel could ever be considered Woodworking, until you came into my life and set me straight!
I would have never imagined that one comment, from an authority on the subject such as you, could EVER make me rethink how I am living my life!
Your opinion has crushed my soul into a million tiny pieces to the point where I am considering selling all of my saws and equipment. In fact, I have suddenly lost the will to live!
Sadly, because of how dark my life is now, I now see my future as being nothing but a RUclips troll and lurking the comment section of videos with subjects that I know nothing about, and will never have the ability to do myself and make useless comments full of animus and distain, just to make myself feel better.
On second thought...
I think I'll just leave that to you.
Thank you for watching! I need the Ad revenue!
Next!
Look everybody, a nobody has been spotted, it's past your bed time, you're going to be late for work tomorrow, them burgers aren't going to flip themselves. Next
@@MandSWoodworks What a turd! I just discovered your channel after stumbling upon another inlay video. I just started my cnc journey less than a week ago and I'm learning a ton. This whole inlay process is blowing my mind. I think it will become my new obsession. The piece in this video is freaking awesome. Fantastic WOODWORKING and craftsmanship. The video is great too. Detailed explanations, good volume, video angles and zooms are right on. You got a new sub and like. Looking forward to digging through your channel. Great work and great content, sir! Keep doing what you're doing.
So do you think ppl who use a lathe to turn wood aren't woodworkers either? What an ignorant comment.
What a shallow comment
I really like your style of instruction. Very concise and detailed without being too complicated.
Never had an interest in cnc's in my woodworking but after seeing this and the amount of time that you showed in each design element, I can see another aspect of woodworking. Thanks for showing each step.
Just stunning craftsmanship. I've had my CNC for about a year now and made some great things but have not attempted wood inlays yet. You're describing your process and failures is inspiring and I need to just go for it. And, no shame in being a "RUclipsr", sharing your tips is helping others to create. Thank you.
"I dont think im the best but im workin on it"
Way to stay humble my brother. Thats an amazing piece and i hope to someday be as good as you
HOLY CRAP!!! That is the most detailed cutting board I have ever seen! You may not think that you are a master, but you are overly humble! Also, your video presentation style is SPOT ON! No goofy annoying background music and the work goes on with no pauses as you narrate. This is one of the BEST RUclips videos that I've ever watched - both in terms of the workmanship of the project and the presentation of the video. I'm too late to the CNC game and I will never even attempt anything that complex.... but now that I see what can be done, I am excited to try something somewhat simpler. THANK YOU!!
I have been a hobby woodworker for decades and just purchased a CNC router. Thank you for sharing your experience, resources, and settings!!!! I have watched everything you have posted and appreciate your humor and craftsmanship!
hey, your a great teacher, the words you pass on from your lessons of failure and success make you a master craftsman. own it dude your a master at your craft an you have left a legacy.
Hey! Great video and really enjoyed your laid-back style and information! I make similar boards and also use VCarve Pro. If you're like me, you've probably landed on a "standard" carve depth, etc. and, if so, there's a way to trick VCarve into carving the male plugs in multiple passes instead of plunging all the way to your final Start Depth (SD) and potentially breaking bit tips as you mentioned. I go a bit deeper with my inlays so if you wanted to take three passes to get to a final carve depth of 0.345", you can run your first toolpath at a SD of 0.295" and a FD of 0.05". Then save that toolpath as your final depth toolpath (which would be your #3 toolpath). Create another toolpath with a SD of 0.2" and the same FD of 0.05" - this is your #2 toolpath. Then create your #1 toolpath with a SD of 0.075" and a FD of 0.05" (your FD stays the same throughout). Then manually reorder your toolpaths to group your clearance bits/paths in order from 1, 2, 3. Now... this sounds like a lot of work but in reality it only takes a couple of extra minutes and you minimize the chance of blowing a bit by down a deep plunge. And you can ramp up your ipm rate...!
Thank you for the info!
I'm gonna give that a try!
Thank you for watching!
This is how i do mine as well. Its a great tip.
I just watched this with my kids, who were all under the age of 10, and they were captivated and loved it. Great work! “I loved it.” - Stella.
This is the best comment I have gotten yet!
Thank you so much for watching!!
wow are you kidding me? you are a master at this craft. these are the best inlay cutting boards I have ever seen on you tube or anywhere else. I been doing CNC and inlays for a few years and I have yet to produce anything even close to what you do. thanks, I love watching your masterful creations come to life.
Super kind words!
Thank you for the compliments and thank you for watching!
you sir sound so humble and genuine i cnc my self i no the time and frustration that goes into a job but when you hand someone the end result its well worth that reward that comes from the heart..nice job!
Best is a relative statement. What I saw was some pretty darn good work!
I do 3D carvings with my CNC mill but I do like the looks of the inlay work.
I can’t believe I didn’t find this sooner, but this is a fantastic video! Love the wasteboard design as well!
As someone who's devoted over 50 years to professional engineering machining, including 25 years in CNC, witnessing your skills in woodworking and CNC, despite being newer to these crafts, is truly inspiring. Drawing motivation from critiques is crucial; trust me, machining stands as a skill on par with any other
Thank you for the kind words!!
And thank you for watching!!
I know exactly the feeling you are talking about when you said you just felt in your DNA that you wanted to make stuff. I have been obsessing with woodworking and dabbling in metalwork for some time now, and i couldn't be happier with my journey.
As a fellow cnc’er that started with end grain cutting boards 2 years before I got my cnc this is amazing and you have got a subscriber in me. Love to see what you do next!
This is a real beauty. Your friend is getting an exceptional gift that would make a great heirloom.
I'm sure your friend is more than proud to have that work of art on his wall or countertop. I's beautiful.
Wow! Right up there with broinwood! I now have so many questions that I don't know where to start! Thank you!
Thank You, Thank You, Thank You. This was an outstanding video. You give an old guy like me hope that we might actually be able to do something like this. Thank You again.
You very humble sir. This is a beautiful piece of art. I could listen to you talk about your work for hours. As a fellow Deep South fella myself, I applaud you and your work. Earned a sub and a like easily.
That was really fun to watch! I love to see the art that other people create. I can tell you that if my dad was still alive he would have watched your video again and again to enjoy all the details!
As one artist to another, never lose that attitude about not being the best. When one constantly seaks improvement in oneself, it's the single fomula in reaching Master status... which really never comes. But the joy is what you leave behind for the rest to appreciate. Cheers and beautiful work!
@@theamericanthinker
Wise words indeed, sir.
Thank you dearly for the compliments and thank you so much for watching!!
Wow, fantastic work, I had no idea you could make something this detailed on a CNC. Thank you for sharing!
It turned out amazing and so are you, welcome to the RUclips community, you'll do very well here my friend. Liked, subbed and looking forward to more. cheers J
Thank you for the kind words! Truly!
And thanks for watching!
@@MandSWoodworks you're more than welcome. Keep it up. You did a great job. Cheers J
I'm liking that jig that holds all the pipe clamps in position, gave me an idea!! Great video and i am also looking to get into inlays.
I think we are all digging it!!! Thx!
Are you convincing me to buy a CNC router and become a "not woodworker" too? Because I am convinced by this beautiful art. Take care you too.
I don't want to suffer alone. 😁
Thank you for watching!!
Thank you. Stunning.
One of the few video's I watched from start to finish without fast forwarding, Extreme craftsmanship and a lovely piece.
That's gorgeous. Thank you for posting your process and result!
Your work is just incredible! The inlay work is beautiful,and the process you use for it just blew my mind! I can see why someone would pay top dollar for one of your boards.
Fantastic work! looking forward to the next video.
Awesome job on this piece. Very nice. I been a professional woodworker for 40 yrs. and just starting my CNC journey. I'm really liking the inlay stuff.
Beautiful piece of craftsmanship I hope to be able to do things like this over the next couple of years.
You've done a mighty fine job. I'm inspired. Sir Your humility and attention to detail have not gone unnoticed. ❤❤
Thank you so much for watching!
I am digging that glue up jig you have!! I haven't seen that before.
Videos like this give me the confidence to try inlays. Thank you!
What a beautiful friend. Lovely work and what a friend because you put a lot of time into this from thought all the way to creation
Great work and video. I like quite a few things about your work no like the work holding (that’s like Broinwood). I also like that you shared your depth settings. Thank you. I’ve been doing quite a few and am
Still learning how to get that super fine detail. It’s starts with end grain! I’ve learned that much too. Great job. Keep it up. I have my end grain board all glued up, now I just need to do my first cutting board inlay.
That’s great and thanks for sharing your settings. I am just starting with v carving on my hobby machine, and for the male rough cut I fudge the z height so I do it in two passes, rather than a deep single cut, but I will be moving to a more tapered bit as you use.
Beautiful work man. Your approach is a new twist on the CNC teaching. I can’t wait to watch your next video.
beautiful! I've been in love with Broinwood's work for awhile, Glad too see another amazing CNC artist as well. I've recently started trying my hand at inlays, hopefully your help will get me to the next level, can't wait to see more!
A true work of art for cutting boards very nicely done
A job well done, if I ever saw one. Thank you for sharing. / Peter
That was one of the most inspiring CNC videos I’ve seen. Thank you so much for making this video!
Thank you for sharing. Love your work and the style of your video. Looking forward to future projects.
Yeah, you’re the real deal my friend. 99th percentile. Excellent work on the piece and on the video. You’ve left me inspired and better educated.
Absolutely amazing. Great work. Everytime you pushed an inlay in it just blew my mind. I only hope some day I'll be up to this level with my little cnc.
Amazing cutting board! I've recently been experimenting with overlapping inlays; watching this video was very helpful to me. Thank you.
I dont think youre giving yourself enough credit. As a woodworker, I say you are definitely a woodworker. Very nice work.
Very beautiful work! Yep Broinwood inspired me to get a machine. Made all the signs and some epoxy inlays so far. Ready to learn these beautiful Vcarve inlays you guys make. Thanks so much!
Really nice work. Glad you decided to share what you are learning with us. Its not always easy following what you want to do, really appreciate that you let folks know that mistakes will be made and that its inevitable but not the end of the world, its part of learning and everything will get better as long as you don't give up. From one Redneck to another, Keep it up.
What a pleasure to watch. Stunning results. Just got my Vcarve pro sofware and very pleased so far.
Simply amazing work you have created. During the build I was thinking to myself I wouldn't ever use it as a cutting board since it's too beautiful. I'm glad to hear you buddy said a knife will not touch that board. GREAT WORK!
Gorgeous work!! Thank you for the tutorial and your #’s.
Is there an award for best new youtuber of 2023? You have my vote.
Your comment literally made me laugh, but in the best way possible.
I don't have the polish and production savvy most folks on here have.
So I am truly honored and humbled by your comment. Thank you!!
Thank you for watching!
Absolutely amazing craftsmanship and I enjoy listening to you talk through the process. I've had my CNC a few years and have several failed attempts at inlays but you've inspired me to try again!
Don't give up!
You'll get it!
Thank you for watching!!
Thank you so much for your time and wisdom on inlays. I watched this video before purchasing a Cnc and now that I have one and I've been practicing I've rewatched and have gained a lot more from this video. Many thanks. I hope to be able to produce something close to this level myself in the future! we don't just hit run on a machine!
Beautiful Work! Thanks for the inspiration - I'm just dipping my toe into CNC Routing, and I appreciate your insights!
A really nice job! I had seen when broinwood did this vector and I also like it alot.
I'm starting my woodworking career now and this was captivating. Absolutely beautiful work sir.
Great job man, I've been trying to do inlays now for a while but the numbers have always eluded me, I've been told by a few people the numbers to use, but they are either very shallow or parts wont fit at all, you gave me FREELY I might add, three things I needed, the Path numbers for deeper cuts for cutting boards, the type of bits to use and lastly was the same problem I was having with the boards after flattening, they bowed in the center, I hadn't even noticed that, so, THANK YOU, I'm going back to the drawing board as they say and try and try again. Thums up, and subscribed!
You do some beautiful work. Enjoyed every second of your video.
With this quality, you've definitely minded your Ps and Qs. Seriously though, great craftsmanship. Lookin fwd to your next video.
Beautiful board! Very informative. Thank you for that. Most videos just skim the surface.
Absolutely beautiful work.
Unflipping real - that is incredible!!! You do an outstanding job and explained this so well - thank you.
And yes you are a woodworker.
Thank you!!
phenomenal work! I don't care what anyone else says this is great woodworking. I can only hope to achieve this level of craftsmanship someday. I want to do this with many designs.
Duuuude! this is just gorgeous!
Absolutely stunning work mate.
Amazing work and great presentation with the video.
that is one beautiful board. Keep it the great work. Its a pleasure watching a artist perform
Great work. Thank you for posting/sharing. Really appreciate the time you put into the video. Enjoyed watching. Great footage and content. Perfect balance of content and timing. Looking forward to your next one.
Thank you very much!
Wow! Very Impressive! Just a beautiful piece of workmanship.
Very nice project and well executed. It is defenitly useful video. Cheers
WOW. It is the best I have ever seen. You are a true craftsman.
Very cool and inspirational. Thanks for sharing your journey with this piece. I'm at the start of learning how to do inlays, hope they're this good one day.
Love your clamp setup ! Especially the glue up table !
Thanks you for sharing your valuable knowledge, both informative and inspiring!
Very nice woodworking. I've only had my CNC for maybe 9 months and I'm learning as I go and I ran across your page and I really wanted to learn how to do this type of woodwork.. may God bless your business
I’ve really been resisting cnc, because I just don’t how to get one that’s affordable, or even how to learn how to use it. Your work is amazing, and inspiring, and I thank you for posting it. I like your style. So many woodworkers on RUclips joke around so much it gets annoying. I just don’t like it. You get right to the point and your voice is very soothing. I guess I’m too old for all those youngsters channels. 😁 I have liked and subscribed, and I look forward to see what you make next. As a Navy veteran that grew up on an island off the coast of Maine, I love the sea, and I love this board so much! It is absolutely gorgeous! Okay my friend, you take care and I’ll be seeing you around! ☮️ & ❤️ from a fat old woodworker in rural Oklahoma!
Thank you for there kind words.
And thank you for your service sir!
You can build your own for under 1000 dollars and can do inlays with it as well.
That’s incredible!! Your passion is going to make you a RUclips legend!!
Very well done on both the woodworking and the explanation! Keep moving, you're doing great!
Wow. Simply outstanding. Glad your buddy said it would never see a knife! I am still waiting for delivery of my CNC but am already trying to learn as much as possible about inlays so this video was fantastic and much appreciated. Keep posting.
What kind did you get?
Onefinity elite foreman. I just got the pwncnc water cooled spindle but have another 3 months wait for the Onefinity. I wanted the spindle to help keep noise down. There are cheaper alternatives to the pwnCNC spindle but I have enough on my plate learning vcarve, designing enclosure, and other woodworking projects so I opted to make some parts of my life easier.
@@r7j7t7
Nice. I've had the longmill for about a year and I wanted something a little better. I ordered a cnc4newbie which was the closest I could figure to a elite or shapeoko pro 5. Got here in about 3 days. So far in the box it looks very solid and no wheels or belts.
Awesome work. I'm going to have to do some more complex inlays after watching this. When it comes to using wenge, the thing I hate about using it is getting splinters. They really hurt and they seem to swell up quickly.
Amazing stuff. Great board and great video.
Fantastic board! It's great to see someone else make an inlay board to the quality of Broinwood. I for sure learned a few things from this video, thank!
I think that is the best compliment one could give. Thank you! I don't think that I am near the quality he puts out. I watched a recent video he released and I still felt like a beginner compared to him!
Thank you for watching!
Thanks. Super nice work!
Incredible work, sir! This is truly inspirational and what you are doing transcends mere woodworking and easily lives in the space called “art”. Well done! Keep it up!
Awesome job. Very well done.. Nice the vision you had and using different types of wood. your right about a lobor of love. Keep up the great work.
Absolutely beautiful work. You are a true craftsman and it looks like you have found your calling.
Fantastic Video. Beautiful project. thank you for including your V-carve tool path settings.
Your work is outstanding my friend and i could listen to you for hours!
You are too kind!
Thank you for watching!!
Excellent work. You are very talented.
Magnificent, I'm a metalworker both manual and mostly CNC lathe and mill but I'm just now getting into this CNC router stuff, trying to first turn my Plasma table into a router table (we'll see) 53 yrs old so I can almost smell retirement to my shop (40x60 and intend to add more on) that's so full of all types of equipment both metal, woodworking, automotive, etc. I just love learning new things and keeping up with technology while keeping old and new skill sets up hopefully. Thanks for sharing this stuff, you seem very patient in your work. Larry in North Tx. here.
Thanks Larry!!
I find myself wanting a metal lathe.
I don't know what I'd make, but I'd figure something out. 😁
Thank you for watching!!
Very nice job. I really like the changed you made to the design.
Beautiful! Thank you. And really enjoyable to hear Forrest Gump’s voice
Thank you for the... um...compliment.
Great Job! Thanks for posting this. I've done a fair amount of inlays, but never this detailed. I'm always experimenting with bits, cut depths and feeds and speeds, This gives me more to try. I look forward to more of you videos!