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How to Cut A Dado Stopped and Through.

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Wood By Wright How To

Wood By Wright How To

Күн бұрын

Live Saturday
Plans for Pannel Gauge for Sep 8th: www.woodbywrig...
tonight we are making dados. we will be looking at how to cut a stopped dado and several ways to make a dado through.
Tools are all around if you know where to look. tonight we will look at where I found all my tools and a few ideas on where you can look for them too.
The Best In the west tool show: pntc.website/b...
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Wood By Wright Store: www.woodbywrig...
Tools I recommend: www.woodbywrig...
Antique tool sources: www.handtoolfinder.com
00:00:00 James Wright: What are we going to do today?
23:00 Hauptmann6: ​Do you have any of the Stanley dado planes?
27:00 Jerome Ulrich: I seem to have e a harder time working softwood (pine) than hardwood with chisels. Why is that and any advice?
40:00 Andy Puttbach: I bought a spokeshave from Tay tools. I have tried it once or twice but it chatters badly. Not sure what is wrong. I did try to put an edge on it before I used it.
47:00 Philip Edmondson: How hard is it to find the knicker set screws?
48:00 Sheehan Creative: Unrelated to the topic at hand, but in a video from a few weeks back, you shared the Klingspor sandpaper box tip - thank you! This leads to 2 questions: 1) do you have any other great deals tips like that? And 2) is there anywhere you recommend getting holly wood?
50:00 Ken Carlile: James, do you have a preferred thickness for carcass saws? I feel like my vintage one is overly thick.

Пікірлер: 16
@ateliergray
@ateliergray Жыл бұрын
This feels like cable access in the best way.
@Peter-od7op
@Peter-od7op Жыл бұрын
Its nice to watch a couple that like each other.
@tatehogan5685
@tatehogan5685 Жыл бұрын
I love how James showed great restraint/intelligence in the beginning when she made that comment about her weepy eye and turning into her mother! Great video as always, I wish I could catch you live though.
@timothymallon
@timothymallon Жыл бұрын
6:15 I have found with spur screws, its always easier to screw counter clockwise (anti clockwise across the pond) until you feel the thread set on the hole, before screwing forward. Especially important for screws that only have a couple threads to begin with. This way, when you feel that slight drop or click into place when screwing in reverse, screwing clockwise will be accurate. Just a tip to anyone working with spurs. James actually does it as well in this video, right about here.
@lawrencedeleurere4427
@lawrencedeleurere4427 Жыл бұрын
Someone asked in chat about the 192. Stanley made 6 different "rabbet planes" The 180, 181, 182, 190, 191, 192. The 180 series didn't have a spur, the 190 series did. The difference between 190, 191 and 192 was just in the width. 190 was widest, 192 narrowest. None of them had a fence and were designed to run against a board to get your straight line. The 78 was the high end model. They described it as a filletster plane since it had a fence and also had the ability to move the blade into a bull nose position. Truthfully, it was all you needed, I can't think of anything that a 192 can do that a 78 can't. My guess is that they were designed for the budget crowd (The 78 was 1.65 while the 190 series was only 1.25 and the 180 series was only 1.10 in 1914) or those taking their tools with them to the job site who didn't want the added weight and space of a 78, nor the hassle of keeping its accessories with it. 192s are light and will do the job. As Hauptmann said, Stanley made a lot of tools that were redundant in order to separate the consumer from their money. It's still working 100 years later, so they did a good job of it. :)
@daniel_bohrer
@daniel_bohrer Жыл бұрын
For stopped or even double-stopped grooves and dados I like these japanese azebiki saws, or western veneer saws, which are a little curved so you can start them in the middle of a board. I also often use them with a board for guidance, like you did with the plough plane.
@jonathonmiller6320
@jonathonmiller6320 Жыл бұрын
This is the only joint you need for a bookshelf! One of my favorites.
@What_Other_Hobbies
@What_Other_Hobbies Жыл бұрын
Can also be sliding dovetail, and you don’t need to worry about the sides wrapping at all.
@seanmertens3049
@seanmertens3049 Жыл бұрын
Try Just Plane Fun parts division I bought a spur and screw for my Stanley No 45 a few months ago. Great guy to deal with and price.
@MichaelOlsen-Engineer
@MichaelOlsen-Engineer Жыл бұрын
"Bang Bang" is fine as long as your not working on a car. On a car it would be a "chitty chitty" job!
@MichaelOlsen-Engineer
@MichaelOlsen-Engineer Жыл бұрын
James, for stopped Dado and Grooves, I prefer to cut the "stop" to depth as a mortise and then cut the path. Yes I do cut the mortise a bit narrow (roughly 1/32 on left and right). For me this makes cutting the main pathway more relaxed and allows for ease of pairing the last bit to a smooth/flat bottom. For hand cutting the pathway, I keep a piece of scrap with a 30 degree bevel, and use this as my "straight edge" so that I can cut my "knife wall" with just a couple passes of my marking knife. I just find it faster and less tedious an using my chisels.
@Peter-od7op
@Peter-od7op Жыл бұрын
Great vdo i suck with wood but trying.
@lawrencedeleurere4427
@lawrencedeleurere4427 Жыл бұрын
If you're cutting dadoes with any frequency, bite the bullet and buy some 39s (The dado planes, a 46 works well too.) The skew really helps with dadoes. The problem is like you said that you have to have all the sizes. You can always adjust the width with a side rabbet plane (a 98 or 99) to dial it in exactly if you want to fit the dado to the board.
@fuge74
@fuge74 Жыл бұрын
man is doing some six sigma work here.
@What_Other_Hobbies
@What_Other_Hobbies Жыл бұрын
Groove: I don’t wanna leave you. Rabbet: You have to go or I won’t exist. Dado: Stop! Stop dado: Where? I can’t see. Stop groove: I guess I’ll never see you again. Channel: Come here, all my kids.
@carpenterstacey
@carpenterstacey Жыл бұрын
2:18 "a square is also a rectangle but a rectangle in not a square!"
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