My 10 year old son and I are hooked and can’t stop watching these videos. He is already noticing that fine detail work is time consuming but it pays off in the long run. Keep it up! Thank you for posting and sharing your knowledge.
Your work is out of site. Your planning & execution of each project show the thought that went into each job before you started. Keep up the great work
Those JessEm stock guides work great. The rollers are canted into the fence and with the downward pressure they keep the stock tight to the fence and as a pluss they are a great anti kickback safety.
Its a little tricky if you don't use the right method. You want to tack nail your second to last board on, then figure out what your width will be on your last board at the widest point....cut a block equal to that distance and that is your scribing block. Run it along the wall and make a scribe line on the the second to last board that you have tacked up. Now take it down, cut the scribe, and the board that you had tacked up will become your last board and have a perfect scribe cut on it. Its hard to explain, hopefully that makes sense.
Insider Carpentry , Makes perfect sense, easy to copy when an Angel of the most high shows you how. You Sir, are a genius cause you stress the minutia of the thang.👉🏼🙃👈🏼
@7:05 when most workers are ready to start their day at 7:15 a.m. all fresh and clean, have all the energy from their favorite Gas station coffee joint.... then you realize this guys meant 7:15 p.m. ( evidence by the black sky in the garage door lights ). What is the difference between greatness and average and ordinary, you ask ??? This is what it takes to win in the free enterprise system. In these United States today.
Spencer I noticed you have a Sawstop crosscut sliding attachment on your table saw. What do you think of it? Is it worth the money, does it hold square and cut square and is it difficult to reset? Thanks!
It’s terrible. The only purpose it serves is to help the sheet good slide. Otherwise I hate it. I never use the fence attachment. Never stays calibrates.
Insider Carpentry, wow! I appreciate the information. There were a couple of sliding attachments available on the market for awhile but now they don’t seem to be available anymore. I guess I will have to stick to my shop made sled.
This was a cost plus job, and the shiplap was the last item I wanted to do before pulling off the job. I just billed for my time no questions asked. It was way more efficient to mill it myself than order and wait on it. Usually it doesn't work that way on billing but that is how they were handling the billing on this job.
Keep up the nice work. You will have 100k subscribers easily with your skills. Keep them coming. I watch your instagram. If you could do more how to on RUclips for the less experienced carpenters and diy crowd you will grow your subscribers like crazy
Thanks for the encouragement. The DIY crowd is huge but that's not really who I am or who I want to appeal to. I'm more in it for the tradesman so I kind of except the fact that the channel won't be huge.
Thx. The fence that comes up is for a miter saw. I think my question wasn't clear tbh. The adapters that u put on the table saw fence to keep the pressure down while dado-ing.
Hi Spencer. What happened to your Instagram page? Was researching a new tool purchase this weekend and I can't pull up your content. Your presence is missed
The cantilever beam kinda loses any sense of reality on the exterior wall, right? Since there couldn't actually be a long beam hidden behind the wall. Or are there other walls that the beams line up with? I can't quite tell in the video.
Aha! Gotcha. I remember you talking about some sort of cantilever in a previous video or on instagram, so I got stuck thinking it was supposed to be a cantilever. I didn't recognize the design without any sort of corbel or brace underneath the hammerbeam.
Carl Petterson The inspiration photo had a large corbel detail bit I couldn’t have anything project down that far because of the space I was working with. Just rolling with the punches as usual trying to make the best of what I have to work with and give the client what they want.
Well the final product looks awesome! Keep rolling with the punches - that's why we are all here! To learn from your experience, thank you for sharing! I'm new-ish to carpentry, so I'm trying to absorb as much as I can from skilled carpenters.
What a beautiful barrel ceiling! Very nice job. Thanks
My 10 year old son and I are hooked and can’t stop watching these videos. He is already noticing that fine detail work is time consuming but it pays off in the long run.
Keep it up! Thank you for posting and sharing your knowledge.
That is awesome!
Bro, your work is so good. That ceiling is gorgeous. Like a cathedral. Thanks for the videos
It's refreshing to see a Craftsman and not a production hack in operation. 👍
Your work is out of site. Your planning & execution of each project show the thought that went into each job before you started. Keep up the great work
Stunningly beautiful work. You teach well.
Those JessEm stock guides work great. The rollers are canted into the fence and with the downward pressure they keep the stock tight to the fence and as a pluss they are a great anti kickback safety.
Absolutely fantastic video series on the curved arches! You are truly a craftsman.
On the dado blade set. Really love the dial for micro adjustments
Excellent work as always. Beautiful craftsmanship. Keep up the great work my friend. Aloha, from O’ahu
Nicely done!
When I grow up I want your abilities. lol Great work as always
great video as always,
would love to see the method of how you scribed that board in the last shot.. thanks
Its a little tricky if you don't use the right method. You want to tack nail your second to last board on, then figure out what your width will be on your last board at the widest point....cut a block equal to that distance and that is your scribing block. Run it along the wall and make a scribe line on the the second to last board that you have tacked up. Now take it down, cut the scribe, and the board that you had tacked up will become your last board and have a perfect scribe cut on it. Its hard to explain, hopefully that makes sense.
@@InsiderCarpentry so basically the same cheater board method in flooring nice! Thanks for explaining
Insider Carpentry Whenever you do that again, I’d appreciate seeing it done.
Insider Carpentry ,
Makes perfect sense, easy to copy when an Angel of the most high shows you how. You Sir, are a genius cause you stress the minutia of the thang.👉🏼🙃👈🏼
Gold! Dropping gold! 👍🏾🌟
@7:05 when most workers are ready to start their day at 7:15 a.m. all fresh and clean, have all the energy from their favorite Gas station coffee joint.... then you realize this guys meant 7:15 p.m.
( evidence by the black sky in the garage door lights ).
What is the difference between greatness and average and ordinary, you ask ???
This is what it takes to win in the free enterprise system. In these United States today.
Exactly right.
Man u gotta make some serious $ ur work is 👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
Did you RIP the shoulder to create the nickel gap without using spacers in the gap?
Very nice work
your work is amazing thanks for sharing
Spencer I noticed you have a Sawstop crosscut sliding attachment on your table saw. What do you think of it? Is it worth the money, does it hold square and cut square and is it difficult to reset? Thanks!
It’s terrible. The only purpose it serves is to help the sheet good slide. Otherwise I hate it. I never use the fence attachment. Never stays calibrates.
Insider Carpentry, wow! I appreciate the information. There were a couple of sliding attachments available on the market for awhile but now they don’t seem to be available anymore. I guess I will have to stick to my shop made sled.
What kind of wood?
Looks good! Did you know you would use the dado stack when you told the owner you would mill the wood yourself? How did you figure cost for this?
This was a cost plus job, and the shiplap was the last item I wanted to do before pulling off the job. I just billed for my time no questions asked. It was way more efficient to mill it myself than order and wait on it. Usually it doesn't work that way on billing but that is how they were handling the billing on this job.
Looks awesome!
What Table saw r u using?
Keep up the nice work. You will have 100k subscribers easily with your skills. Keep them coming. I watch your instagram. If you could do more how to on RUclips for the less experienced carpenters and diy crowd you will grow your subscribers like crazy
Thanks for the encouragement. The DIY crowd is huge but that's not really who I am or who I want to appeal to. I'm more in it for the tradesman so I kind of except the fact that the channel won't be huge.
@@InsiderCarpentry As a Trim Carpenter I can't tell you how much I appreciate that. Thanks for the awesome content!
Fence tool link??
Google "easy speedy fence" by custom fabricating solutions
Thx. The fence that comes up is for a miter saw. I think my question wasn't clear tbh. The adapters that u put on the table saw fence to keep the pressure down while dado-ing.
@3:47 “...how high should l crank up the blade boss ??? Until it hits the gauge thingy ??”
“.... that’s too high, just make the gauge tickle ☺️😂🤣”
Hi Spencer. What happened to your Instagram page? Was researching a new tool purchase this weekend and I can't pull up your content. Your presence is missed
James Shea having some technical difficulties. It should be back up soon.
Great job..
Thank you !
face nail?
Take from a guy doing this 47 year saftey glasses
The cantilever beam kinda loses any sense of reality on the exterior wall, right? Since there couldn't actually be a long beam hidden behind the wall. Or are there other walls that the beams line up with? I can't quite tell in the video.
Look up hammer truss, or hammer truss beam. This is a common timber frame design.
Aha! Gotcha. I remember you talking about some sort of cantilever in a previous video or on instagram, so I got stuck thinking it was supposed to be a cantilever.
I didn't recognize the design without any sort of corbel or brace underneath the hammerbeam.
Carl Petterson The inspiration photo had a large corbel detail bit I couldn’t have anything project down that far because of the space I was working with. Just rolling with the punches as usual trying to make the best of what I have to work with and give the client what they want.
Well the final product looks awesome! Keep rolling with the punches - that's why we are all here! To learn from your experience, thank you for sharing!
I'm new-ish to carpentry, so I'm trying to absorb as much as I can from skilled carpenters.
Carl Petterson let me guess u could do much better ?yeah what ever
"crank your knob"
Efficient method. A properly set infeed roller stand would make the start of the cut a little more foolproof.
$250 for two rollers? You gotta be joking