New method of planking using progressive bevel planing
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- Опубликовано: 20 сен 2024
- Latest video on the REMORA (1928) restoration brought to you by Jamestown Distributors www.jamestowndi.... Learn Lou's method of planking using progressive bevel planing. Watch the entire REMORA restoration - • REMORA (1928) - Herres...
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You can see why apprenticeships are 5 years long when you watch the level of skill and knowledge displayed in these videos. Then a lifetime of working is spent refining those skills to the point we see here. Fantastic!
It’s so inspiring to see a master craftsman at work, particularly on a wooden boat. This gentleman is likely one of a handful of artisans in the United States capable of this highly skilled work.
I'm by no means a boat builder but I am however a traditional jointer by hobby . The rounded bottom "Coffin " plane with radius iron is magical . I am making one my next project now as I could think of at least a dozen other uses for this . I love watching this guy . #hooked
This video shows the awesome power of retaining the timeless subset of traditional wisdom and adapting it with a completely open and inventive mind. This is a fantastic example of what once made America truly great.
THANK YOU !!!!😇😇😇😇
YOU HAVE CHANGED MY LIFE !!!😀😀😀
I've been a carpenter for 42 years and I love learning from Louis!! It's amazing what transfers from boat building to house building, I too have an old porter cable trim worm drive, love it, one of the most useful saws there is.
Yes the old porter worm trimmer saw trick...should have known...Maxwell Smart.
Skill, ingenuity and sheer perseverance. Hats off.
A practical and direct approach to a subject that has so many variables. Thank you for sharing your craft with us mere mortals.
i have absolutely no interest in boats however i could watch these videos all day!
Great narration and a very skillful craftsman.
You make it look simple, but there's years of skill, technique, experience, and craftsmanship behind it.
You are one smart cookie......compliments and regards from central Texas, fm
I allready love this channel:
quote: … I used a metric measuretape because it divides in the 10-system…
splendid!
Inch tape lol. It's mm these days
@@dollarking9641 Metric is mm, imperial is inches
Louis, sir, thank you so much for the tip (around 2:20) about laying the side of the plane on the bench to ensure 90 degrees on the top of the plank. So simple, so excellent!!
I really admire your skill and the way you explain what you are doing. Thank you.
I'm very happy I found your videos. You get bonus points for your accent. I'm a Californian, but my folks were from Rhode Island. It brings back fond memories.
great video, really enjoy your techniques, I've worked on a ton of wooden & glass boats, Ive never stop learning. I've used so many little tricks I've picked up watching your videos. Thank You for sharing. Vinny
This bring memories as my father did seam thing as kids we help but when we did put to mach pressure on planks bending on fire or let get smoki than we ran for life ha ha . I am looking in to all the different speciality plane to collect them and still wishing to build similar boat soon. Thank you is not many old timers who know this art of boat build and fix,God bless you and keep teaching as long as you can. In my family in Dubrovnik Croatia still is going on and second oldest Ship yard is in World 18 ml from my house there.In Korčula birth place of Marko Polo . part of my house is coll Šangaj similar to Shanghai. All the best to you from Chicago,I wish I do that with you,
Super, prawdziwy Szkutnik, min maszyn i narzędzi - max wiedzy i umiejętności!!! Prostymi środkami osiąga wspaniały efekt. Gratuluję!!!
Fantastic tutorial - thank you, Louis!
Skills you can really admire, from a time when work was satisfying and challenging. I take my hat of to you Tips from a shipwright.
thank you for teaching me something new.AGAIN!!
Tips,i love these tutorials.I was a boat builder once upon a time but using steel and aluminum.These techniques are useful for many other things making for faster,ease of construction,and more durable end product.Your videos should be mandatory in vocational technical carpentry schools and you would naturally be the professor.By the way my father's neighbor would pass for your identical twin.
richardpinell
I agree - so many of us know framing carpentry, but very few of us know how to look at a beautiful stack of hardwood, know which boards are most appropriate for which applications, how the grain moves, I could go on and on. I'm no slouch, but I'm still a birch plywood, red oak/poplar from HD type of guy. If you gave me a nice supply of white oak or mahogany, I'd probably stare at it for a month before I had the courage to tear into it and try anything :)
This is truly high level craftsmanship at work.
Thank you for posting. I really enjoy these videos.
Very interesting to see these practical tricks for getting a perfect fit. I imagine that boat and shipbuilders in the past used the same techniques
MAN, what a craftsman! Thank you for the GREAT video and transference of knowledge. You, Sir, are a great craftsman!
This is a lovely method, very clean, very simple. The bevel planing is very clever.
Great information and a lot of useful tips for all kinds of woodwork, Thanks !
Howdy Jon Peters! This guy is amazing!
One of the first shipwrights I worked with showed me the curved coffin plane technique. He made one right in front of me! Great video. I’m sure I’ll come back and reference it soon.
Very cool Will!
An old shipwright's saying: "The only straight line on a ship [boat] is the 'North Line' on the compass card."
Excellent craftsmanship!!! After so many labor hours, that's a very expensive boat for it's usefulness. 2 centuries ago not so much.
Just watched your whole skiff series in the last two evenings.. thanks mate for sharing your knowledge and know how..great stuff mate!
Awesome to watch a master like this at work!!
Wonderful - the sharing of such skill to me is the best the internet can offer
u are a mSter at ur craft kind sir for sure and u have a knack for teaching and explaining wat u are doing and why u are doing it ,if the world had more people like u it would be a much mor brighter and beautiful place to live in ,thank u for ur videos ,i hope u dont stop making them love the skiff u built i wish i had the talent u have ,or even a 3rd of it ,if i could id work for you for the experiance and education alone ,
Wow, what an idea, If I keep watching your videos I'll be able to build any boat. Thank You.
Keep it up Mark, you will!
Superb technique - really enjoyable to watch. Thanks for sharing👍
Incredible work as always, thanks for taking the time to show us mere mortals.
Wow! Real craftsmanship. Love it!
Incredible work here, years of experience in action...
This guy is Magic
He's the Bob Ross of boat building.
Ro Yo Mi 😂 that was awesome!!! You might be the Bob Ross of the comment section 😃 ✌🏻
Love to see a master at work. Thank you
I really enjoy this video. Thank you Mr Louis
Just loving these videos. Binging on them actually.
genius idea to such a complex thing so easily! you are a master!
For a very brief moment there, I thought he was going to say, "The reason I use a metric tape is because it's the sensible thing to do, and so simple to understand".
But no, he stated the obvious, it works on units of tens.
I DO like his work though, very therapeutic and he has a great, easily understood way of explaining what he's doing and going to do.
lol. sometimes, obvious statements are made so as to make it easy for people who are dense to understand the obvious.
Luis Sauzede... I LOVE YOU! This video beckons a mans soul to pick up a plane and start wrighting a boat.
Amazing craftsmanship. It is wonderful to watch you performing this soon to be lost art. I owned two wooden sailboats. A 26' sloop while I was in Coco Solo, Panama and an all wood 5.5 meter US46 when I was in Pensacola, Florida.
Makes it look so easy . Incredible to say the least.
nice work lou
Nice job with the plank and by using the metric system....a lot easier! I think I have may have met you many years ago when I was looking for material for my Alden designed Indian. Dennis
Woah. That was something it was. :D
Awesome techniques, awesome filming, awesome everything :)
Great job mate I like your chops
Great trick for the progressive bevel. Have not heard of that one.
Brilliant idea, all the better for its simplicity. Thank you 👍
Wonderful video, thank you for the thorough demonstration.
Incredible craftsmanship!
That's what's know as "Brilliant Craftsmanship. " Well done!
Great idea for planking !
Thank you,I really appreciated it.
Very nice! I'm learning a lot of good stuff here.
Amazing... Great video and great instructions.
You sir, are a great teacher.
Lou, absolutely love the videos. Am trying to follow your explanation about using the metric tape to divide the hull into 7 even boards. My hesitation comes from the fact that the lines on the interior have to be smaller since the two measurements have to be different, do you just measure it twice inside and outside??
YOU SIR ARE A VERY SKILLED MAN
Fantastic to watch, thanks for sharing.
pretty much just one comment.......Wow, you sir are a true craftsman.
Very nice job !
It's like using the previous plank as a shooting board. I like!
That is beautiful!
Wow. True craftsmanship.
All those small trix and details. What a great way to pass this on to future generations of boat builders. If I had more than two thumbs to put up, you would get them.
Fantastic work sir.
Really looking forward to seeing the Remora when she's all shipshape again.
I am very impressed. Thank you for your video.
Am I ever likely to be planking a boat?... NO! Did I find your video interesting, entertaining, and useful?... HELL YEAH! Thanks very much for a clear well-paced video. :o)
I have been wondering for a long time how to cut a progressive bevel on planks...ever since I saw Mr. Sauzedde's technique using his band saw and a circular saw. I own neither equipment, but I own some hand planes. This video is very helpful for guys like me who don't own a lot of power tools but want to build a boat some day.
PS scraping the residue with a chisel at [2.23] made me cringe! But a chisel does not have quite the same utility and reverence in a boat builder's shop as it does in a woodworker's shop. So I understand why a chisel is used.
I made a jig for my circular saw so I could cut a straight line. Well almost straight. This old dude pulls out an ancient beat up ol saw and free hands scribed curve absolutely perfect. Ya I suck.
Thus the term "skill saw" hahaha
He's not an 'old dude'! Try to to use your peabrain to imagine how you would appreciate that comment when you are his age!
Would not bother me. Nothing you can do about getting old. I'm getting there myself. Only the lucky make it. This old dude made it and has a lifetime of skills to show for it.
Great tips!
If most people knew very much about building wooden boats im afraid alot of projects wouldnt even get started. Being ignorant of what im getting myself into has helped me start more than a few projects.
Hammer der Typ! Der hat es echt drauf
Brilliant way of planking!
Great technique!! Thanks for sharing!
Very informative! glad I found your channel!
I wonder whether, instead of hollowing the planks to match the frames, it would be easier to facet the outboard faces of the frames once the lining out had been accomplished. In other words, instead of being a curve, the outer profile of each frame would be a succession of straight lines of equal length. I suppose you could use a belt sander, or clamp a short batten either side of the frame and use a router. You would need to take care to retain the angle at which the plank wraps around the frame, relative to the fore and aft centerline.
Thank you
Fantastic!!!
Great description and example. Does this technique replace any need for what I've heard called "splining"?
Good reason to use more but narrower planks. That way the curved hull is not that much of a problem. Same with not loosing plank thickness due to planing the inside.
Fantastic post!
This is a AMAZING video. I learned a LOT!! You make this look easy....but I know it is not. Thanks
What kind of wood are you using
Great work I love learning
I'm glad there are still people who have the money to afford to have work like this done! I can't imagine how much all this work costs on this little boat. Countless man-hours.
Of course there’s still people with money!
Measuring distance in the metric system really is much easier. There are no fractions and fewer decimal points are required. If we would just switch and stop converting from one system to the other, things would be so much better..
i know nothing about boat building but enjoyed the video a lot. the question i have is why not tongue and groove the boards? i know it must not be a good idea, but i don't know why.
cliff reaves tongue and grooves are set up to join at a set angle - typically side by side - and at the same angle over the length. If you look at a boat hull, the boards typically turn much tighter fore and aft compared to midship. Hence the tongue and groove would have to vary in angle along the length. As you can see in the video, the planks also taper further complicating the issue. Water in tongue and grooves would also lead to swelling and cracking of tbe grooves by the tongue.
Very cool!
Wow, I just learned a ton!!! Thanks...
Hi. Nice video. Can you tell me please. I want to buy new wood boat, but from my previous experience with old wood boats i know: all of them was leaking every spring time or after long seating.what about new boats, new boats also leaking ? Thanks.
Thanks for this very informative video
excellent
This guy is the Master Carpenter 😀
great thank you