Filmed with a GoPro hero seven black, video editing done with LumaFusion app on an iPad Pro.
Пікірлер: 12
@dave-in-nj93933 жыл бұрын
nice work. having the whole table and sled was a great idea. dust collection is always hard. for the front, you can get a door sweep with bristles and a magnets to hold it in place on the long front. to crack the code, look at CNC routers. you make a box with the bristles, dollar store brooms... then the hose moves with the router. overall the measure if if you got it done. looks like for that bit, you have it mastered.
@BigNicky773 жыл бұрын
UPDATE: I this use the belt sander fresh off the sled. I bought a festool rotex 150 and I am in love with the rotex mode for sanding through the grits.
@heyyoubuddy67494 жыл бұрын
Wow buddy that’s so cool! I love the look of elm it has nice figure and grain. Years ago my grandpa made cookie tables out of a huge walnut tree we had to take down out back. The cookies where six inches thick and 4 feet around. He used a steel band around the cookies to help it to not crack as they dried it was very nice he had them for 20 plus year. We ate a lot of lunches on those tables. Thanks for sharing. Question how do ya like you Hudson sawmill. I want to buy a sawmill now that I’m retiring. I will be in pioneer ca.
@BigNicky774 жыл бұрын
Thank you for the reply, I might try that steel band technique with some of the larger pieces. I really like the Hudson warrior mill, specifically that the rails are low to the ground. Some of the other entry-level vendors use larger channel, so it would be harder to get the logs onto the mill, unless you have a loader. Most of my large elm trees are around 3000 pounds, so the small farm tractors won’t lift them. I have some other videos showing how I put large trees on with my trailer. If you are ever in the Reno area, you can come over and check it out.
@Wiwih793 жыл бұрын
Sweet Video. I need to make such a lil table for our living room for the couch. I would be very afraid of large cracks that come when the wood dries out. How do you prevent them? Wouldn’t it be better to lot the cookie dry out before refining it? Or is it/are they actually not big enough to actually crack that badly?
@BigNicky773 жыл бұрын
You definitely want it to dry out before you finish it. I rushed this one and now I am re-doing it one year later.
@Wiwih793 жыл бұрын
@@BigNicky77 ah That sucks! I cut off some slides from a large piece of fire wood, but they all cracked very badly, when they dried. So I actually have no idea how to dry such big chunks without the cracks.
@vallesan4 жыл бұрын
Awesome 👍 video thank you for share ...I have 2 big raw cookies of parota 4 feet diameter
@BigNicky774 жыл бұрын
Thank you for the comment. Good luck with your cookies!!
@vallesan4 жыл бұрын
@@BigNicky77 thank you . Be safe
@christianness8983 Жыл бұрын
As dumb as this may sound, but the reason you were probably having an issue with the Bosch geared ro sander grabbing, was you were most likely holding it wrong. Hear me out; you have to make sure it acts as a pad, not a wheel, so what you do is you hold the front like you would a normal palm sander, and then you cradle the back just so you get the sander to float rather than grab and spin. If you do this, I can guarantee you'll throw away your belt sander, because then it'll be way more comfortable and won't leave the gouge marks that belt sanders leave.
@BigNicky77 Жыл бұрын
Funny you mention that, I actually bought a festool Rotex 150 And 90 about a year ago. You are right, it all comes down to how you manage the sander. I really like the rotary sanders