Antique Tools Store - Take A Dip Tools - Mr Sawdust Shop

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hello everybody welcome to another episode of bob's wood shop today i'm spending the day with my friends over at wally kunkel's school of professional woodworking it's known as mr sawdust mr sawdust was wally's father so here's the outside of the building within the school there's a another gentleman named bob gary and bob is a ex-shop teacher and he also has a store where he sells vintage tools which is the main topic of today's video so sit back and relax and enjoy the show hey bob welcome to wally concourse school of professional woodworking here in hackerstown new jersey i'd like to have you come on into my tour room i've been looking forward to this thank you very much it's a heck of a door what's the deal with this door this is an old jail cell door that wally get some horse train to get but it goes back probably from the late 1800s you know i'm not good he'll walk me in there so okay gotta make sure we behave here all right so before we get started on the tools why don't you tell me a little bit about bob gary well i'm a navy veteran and a 30 year shop teacher in randolph new jersey retired of 2010 and i had always worked on tools that's one of my specialties is antique tools and so i decided when i retired this would become a business that i do is the restoration and selling of antique tools okay and you'll see all kinds of hand tools here that go back to the 1800s some of them like the metal planes are more in the 1900s all right holy moly and all of these i've restored so that they are ready to use the metal planes have been gone overtaken completely apart the wood planes those i left pretty much in the shape that i find them just a little bit of cleaning for the wooden planes there are some pieces here that are more collectible like the big japanese saws and the augers and some of the broad axes and stuff so those collectible tools here are very good user tools hand saws back saws that are sharpened up chisels the sharp brand used condition it's quite a collection where you got it on here this is one of the things it's enjoyable to find all the tools to restore them you know finding a tool like this one up here is a stanley 55 with four boxes of cutters one of the most complex planes ever made yeah we'll come back to that for sure i just want to give the audience a quick overview of the store and you sell directly out of here but also on ebay and different auctions and woodworking yeah there's a lot of different venues that we have this the store is one of them because it's in the school mr solita school of woodworking but also on ebay is take a dip and i do woodworking shows and always attend martin dolly's nashua show [Music] okay and take a dip is it called take a dip why because i live on lake ho pak on and whenever i was coming home from work my son was always saying what am i going to do and i'll say i'm going to take a dip so it became a kind of running joke that when i whenever i was doing anything down in the shop that i'm taking a dip all right so that's a quick overview of the shop let's look at some of the specialty things that you have in here let's start with these plow planes up here the plow planes are a plane for just making a groove it's a single use tool that has a blade on the bottom and this blade usually comes in about seven different widths this one for example has the threaded fence rods on it that can be adjusted earlier ones might have had a wedge locking in it where it might have had thumb screws on top and the fence can be adjusted from fire far from the edge of the piece of wood you want to cut a groove in what's unique with my plow planes is that i search high and low for blades for these and it all depends on what plane you're using that the blades can be matched up to it because sometimes these blades won't work properly for a different plow plane because of the thickness and the way the grooves are made in the bottom so they do match up you can't just use any blade in any plow plane so there's a big market for guys who just want to show these and display them but these are also everyday users they can be they were made back in the middle 1800s as everyday users for as a plow plane and for people who like doing hand tool woodworking these are great options going back that far before you can get into the metallic plow planes that stanley made like the stanley 45 late later on in the later 1800s okay so you have a stanley 45 over here right i do have a stanley 45 that's here okay and here's one and the same idea isn't this one of the most complex planes ever built this one's pretty complex as far as um it has diff it has different uses it's a plow plane it's a it's also a beading plane and it can be used for a tongue and groove and so they call it a combination plane right because of all the cutters that you can because all the cutters there are another plane that's called a stanley 55 that is definitely the most complex plane ever made this one has four boxes of cutters what they're trying to do here if you kind of pan over this area is that all these wooden planes that you see up here these side bead planes and these hollows and rounds these different kinds of molding planes stanley was trying to help the woodworker not have to bring all of these different wooden planes to a job then you bring this one plane and four different boxes of cutters let's rotate that around because this is really an engineering marvel with what this is because it's adjustable on where you're going to put the plow or the or the piece of mold and you see all the components are on this plane right now that it would have been manufactured with but in use you wouldn't have all these components on the plane as you're using them you wouldn't have both the left and the right fence on at the same time and so right now it looks more complex than it would have been when you were actually using that plane then there's that cutter right would go right down in the bottom there depending on which one you're you're using yeah really fascinating you know then they try to really make it special they the earlier ones had really nice designs in the metal they use rosewood really nice specialty wood and nickel plated make it shine back in the day so these planes that stanley made so definitely in competition with the the old style woodworking planes that might have been made out of rosewood or boxwood all right so instead of having like a whole whole row of these you just use the 55 or is it the four yeah you can use a 45 or 55 55 is more complex than a 45 i would say you want a good user plane then the 45 is where you start because it's not as complex so the 45 can be mastered in a couple of weekends right you know of using this here and trying it out so really that's the first mechanical router don't need a whole bunch of router bits don't need electricity tell me a little bit about the history of these transition planes well early on the planes were all wood okay so these planes made out of wood go back to the 1600s so you'll have a block plane like that so factories would make them and carpenters would make their own also yeah carpenters would make their owns it wasn't until the uh the middle 1700s early 1700s they had professions making these molding planes in these wooden planes right but later on when bailly patented the design of this mechanism with the frog and the adjuster and the chip breaker and all of this design and they started coming out with the metal plane like this right a lot of the woodworkers still like the feel of the old wooden bottom when you have the wood bottom working on wood and so what stanley did and other plane makers also did is they had a wooden bottom but they included the adjustable part that barely patented where now you have an easy adjustment for the depth because keep in mind on these old planes you had to use a little hammer to adjust the depth of your cut right and side to side movement where these planes all had that mechanical part it was much more reliable as far as getting the perfect adjustment you needed but i thought i read one time that they they purposely did the metal and wood combination to get guys over the hump of loving wood use a plane like this that this is a like a four and a half stanley size and it's uh what they call a raisin style in the back where your center of gravity is lower for the handle the condition is fabulous when you look at the bottom okay that's beechwood perfectly smooth and flat no cracks a nice crisp mouth on it and you have all the adjustments here that the metal plane would have when you take this to a piece of wood it's lighter than all steel and it just sails across the wood it's a whole different feel than having a metal plane and so woodworkers definitely have preference sometimes over a wooden bottom plane over a metal body plane and so it's not just to get that over that hump and transition there's a preference in the way it felt when you were using it and there definitely is something about that do you have one of the bedrock planes i don't have any bedrocks here no okay i i sell a lot of those on ebay when i find them they're very hard to find because in reality most woodworkers didn't see the need for the extra expense for a bedrock right the the normal bailly plane this is the bailly plane it would after 1900 when bailey passed away to commemorate him they put his name on the plane was the professional model stanley plane as opposed to they did have other planes stanley made like the stanley handyman which was more of a homeowner's version right the quality on the bailey was a little bit better as far as the machining and the fit of it most woodworkers didn't find the needed expense to go buy a bedrock right because the building did everything that they needed to do was it was there a mr bedrock like there was a mr bailey no there wasn't what the whole idea that bedrock is they're saying is how firmly the frog is attached to the base and that was the whole idea and what stanley did in a lot of his marketing sergeant came out with a new design for their frog that made it to the base right away stanley had to come out with another way of doing theirs also and so it was marketing ploy and a lot of the the things that you'll find on these planes whether it's the lateral adjuster or whether it's the little kidney shape in here a lot of it really was for marketing to make it sound like it was new and innovative but in reality you can get a stanley handyman if it's really sharp you're going to get pretty much the same result you're going to get good results out of it the key is the sharpening yes and this is the tuning up yes tuning up the frog turning up the blade the chip breaker right the the the uh the throat you know i go through for my planes about ten different steps on on a smoothing plate here's a type 11 here that's from world war one vintage one of the first things i'll do is i'll flatten the bottom on a smoothing plane so the bottom is all hand flat that is on sandpaper on a machine surface and i just go back and forth when i retract the blade everything is left on the plane then what do you do then i'm going to flatten the frog i can still see machinist marks on there when it came from the factory but some of those are taken out when i flatten that out again on them with sandpaper on a machined surface the bottom of the fog is flattened and the machined areas that are on the base of the plane are also flattened so the frog has some attention paid to it i'm working on flattening out this surface which is actually the the blade bottom that fits onto the frog the blade itself as you can see on some of these that surface is all flattened out how do you sharpen these by machine or by hand this one's these are done by machine yeah okay i'm using i'm using a rotary sanding machine oh yeah very very fine grit like the veritas one yes yeah i get it yeah okay and that way you can get those perfectly flat and then the chip breaker is also paid attention to so that the bottom matches the blade but also the front right here is smoothed out so that the chips can fly over it so everything is gone over about ten different steps i clean it all up the wood is all reconditioned and i'll use a lot of times paste wax on it to protect it from moisture so you don't get any flash rusting on it right in a plane like this one here is 95 dollars as compared to one that maybe lee nilsson might be 300 and some dollars but it's been tuned up and it'll work just as good as elie nielson in my opinion how about some of these other specialty planes like that the circular plane the circular plane is one that many many woodworkers have never seen and the idea of a circular plane is that you can adjust this and it has a flexible sole to it so now i'm going to be able to cut a concave curve now who was using these i was thinking like i worked when i retired from teaching i worked on chris craft boats and we use these a lot on the crisscrass and the garwood boats but also if you think about some of the window trim on the old colonial houses were curved right so they would have used it for that as well and so people the old carpenters that did trim work and also furniture makers you know if you think of a walking chair yeah okay the bottoms of the rocker other rocker would have used these how about cooper's coopers cooper's had their own wooden planes that they used okay so they didn't use these as much they had their own specialty planes other planes that would be used the old scrub planes you can see that big mouth in there that's used for doing very rough work when you get a piece of wood that might be a five quarter rough sawn and you want to get it down to one inch you'll get a scrub plane like that of course the before the metal ones were the wooden ones for the same purpose of course one of the specialties that all woodworkers need are your block planes that's probably the most common right this is the most common ones this is maybe a four and a five well this this is a low angle so what you can notice here is that the angle of the blade on this one is much lower than the angle on the right so this is your your common angle right here but these are one of my favorite block planes because there's three adjustments on it one is that you have a throat adjustment right here and by moving this little lever in the front i can open and close the mouth so if i want to take fine shavings maybe from the top of the wood i'll close the mouth up if i want to chamfer a piece of wood i can open up to take a thicker shaving and i can lock that in it also has your lateral adjuster for moving the blade side to side to square that up so it has the lateral and then it has the post vertical depth adjuster yeah and when a block plane has all three of those that makes it a very very versatile plane to use not that you need a low angle this one can do most of the work that a low angle block plane can do how about some of these big planes the sevens and the eights these are joiner planes and they have a lot of use for table tops flattening the table tops out maybe jointing a piece of wood when you want to put two planks of wood together and to joint them you can use them for that this is a number seven uh i do don't have a number eight i have one here and i sold it the number eight is almost too big for most people to use it's very heavy if you're not a hand plane user it's gonna get uncomfortable and it's going to tire you out where the seven is one that you can definitely hold you can use it and you're not going to fatigue when you're using it that's why i like at number seven over number eight particularly for people who aren't using planes every day right and these are are hard to find in good condition because they were a lot of times put under very heavy work and so a lot of times you'll find these with chips in the mouth you might find a crack in the side obviously because you are so heavy and so big they got knocked off the tables a lot all right let's talk about your uh sauce a little bit your salsa your salt sale here sure first you have your hand sauce and so a hand saw like this the all these saws are all restored and sharpened by hand this is number 12 goes back to sometime around 1900 to 1917 it has a nice edge right in here and this one has applewood handle with vinyl carvings in it it's a cross cut and one of the things about all my saws that when you sight down the saw you'll see that it's perfectly straight and all the teeth are all in alignment some of the saws such as this one was the top of the line this is a victory saw a d15 this one was made around 1925 to 1930. has a rosewood handle has an etching here of the eagle carrying a crack liberty belt can be kind of hard to get that but there is that eagle in there you can see that you see the flags in the background there's the eagle carrying yeah you can you can make it out thing is it's a very high polish to the blade some of the saws are cross-cut some of them are red if i look over here i can see oh another rosewood one and different lengths the average length on the saw is 26 inches but this is a beautiful saw with the applewood handle made by richardson as a 22 inch lamp and not only for smaller people like like children teenagers or women to use assault like this but even people who don't use salt every day a fine tooth saw like this that's shorter gives you more control it feels like an extension of your hand and so that's what's nice this one here is a 12-point saw the average cross-cut saw is eight point eight points per inch this is 12 points per inch used for flying cabinetry work okay it's going to leave a very fine cut how about this giant one on the floor here this back saw this soft is one of the biggest back saws that i've seen it's a distant saw and it goes with a large miter box up here that's also it's a stanley miter box it's all all complete and original going to about probably 1920s and we had one of these in my high school shop class i i did as well and they work great much safer than using a chop saw particularly for smaller wood and for the accuracy right and this all goes up it fits right up into that miter box and again it's all sharpened up and ready to go in perfect condition hard to find these back saws that match up to the miter boxes let's go on to the braces these are these are catching my eye okay because it seems like they went through the industrial revolution also and they went from like wood to metal these are usually called sheffield braces made in sheffield england were very famous for this design some of them were plated with brass on them a little more rare to find it has a button chuck on the end that i pushed a button there's a little lever in there that releases that i can lock a bit in where some of them probably an american one this was actually one that was used by a cooper oh no probably a chairmaker looking at it that's it's a spoon bit so most likely used by a cheer maker the coopers would have had a much bigger head but that's that's all wood in great condition again beechwood they use beechwood a lot for the wood for their tools for their planes and their braces here in the united states all right and then at what point in time did they go over to the to the metal version i would say right around the civil war here in the u.s because of the industry that was developed during the civil war they started using metal for their plane much sturdier it did go back a little bit earlier in scotland and glasgow and even in england and some of the areas with their carriage makers braces because the wood was not strong enough and the metal was a much stronger brace even the penny braces that came from england but really in america is where they developed this with a ratcheting mechanism and all of this one here this is a stanley 923 probably one of the better ones that were made as well as the miller falls one starting from the top you can look at it it has rosewood and rosewood grip to it you spin that head it just goes there's ball bearings in there and so that head is riding on ball bearing there's a little oiling spout right there for it okay it has a nice ratcheting mechanism in here now these things still manufactured they well then not to this quality usually they're cheaper made in china okay you're gonna have a hard time finding this they don't understand it doesn't make them anymore no they do but not this quality they might have a cheap plastic head to them they're just not going to be the quality you're seeing here okay right and one of the important parts on these were the jaws is that you have these spring jaws on the inside okay with the spring locks them in these are tool steel that's hardened steel they're not going to wear out okay so you make sure that you have good jaws in there and a ratcheting mechanism is very helpful and everything should close up nice and tight then when you look at the jaws here at the end you'll see they do close all the way right okay some of them are very small you know when you look at one like this you can see that has a much bigger sweep for drilling larger holes as compared to a smaller one like that where this one's for doing smaller work is that for also like teenagers and high school kids no no no this is this is particularly made for doing smaller work okay okay i would say that in reality you would if you don't have the strength you want a bigger sweep because you have more leverage yeah okay but yeah your average size is right around eight inches okay okay that's your average size for for your braces let's move on to the chisels you got a heck of a lot of chisels here okay and these are is a box of mortising chisels you can tell the mortising chisels you can see is that the width in here these can be pounded you drill holes you pound these into the corners you can pry with these and you're not going to bend because that's the whole idea of mortising chisels you have bevel edge chisels okay now is to help with dovetailing these do help with dovetailing to get into the corners it's for your font your finer work and most of these chisels i've gotten here are either sheffield because sheffield steel was primo back in the 1800s or early 1900s or your early new england makers like jennings and james swann and witherby the stanley ones their sergeant very good new england makers some of the chisels are larger in size we're doing big framing work i'll sell these to people that are doing timber framing or boat building big slicks like this that's definitely timber framing stuff not to be hit but you're putting up against your shoulder or into your hip when you're driving it and you're pairing with this like you would with a pairing chisel just taking a little bit off at a time all right let's go back to that fancy spokeshave you were telling me about the folding spoke shave these a regular draw knife when you throw the regular draw knife into your tool box you're going to chip the edge but when you reach into it you're going to cut yourself with an exposed edge like that so a lot of times they would fit a piece of wood across there to protect that edge well what the manufacturers did is they came out with folding handles to protect the edges and so very clever this way it folds out into locked in there's a groove right in the handle that fits right over the blade and protects the blade and stops you from getting cut ingenious you can bring this out at different angles and lock it in so now that's that's nice and sturdy that's a very good sturdy one and most of your drawer knife makers i would say by the 1900s 1910 they came out with variations of the folding drawn ice because they were very popular for the woodworkers at the time i call that a spokeshaver it's a draw knife is a draw knife do you have spokeshaves also yes my sponge shoes over here these are all types there's some brand new ones that stanley or just got back to making again and you have some of the the antique ones by various makers including stanley you had the miller falls what they call the cigar ones for doing curvature work and these are this one here when you tighten up this um nut in the top there's springs in here that adjust your throat so that that can get either coarser or finer cuts out of that some of the spoke shaves are just made for doing chamfering work so you have the little curved cutters and left and right side for doing chamfering there's a wide variety of metal spoke shaves but what i really like as well are the antique wooden ones and you get these old wooden spokeshaves that are tuned up and ready to work again so everything yourself is already sharp and ready to go these are and i i i've gone through these and i've taken the blades out i've sharpened them up put them back in i set them and get them back into working condition okay so it's got a good variety like as far as your t bevels probably the best made ones that have the adjustment on the bottom that pull it down and lock it in that's that's a very sturdy firm grip to it now yeah and it was nice about this is whatever i lock in at an angle up in here there's nothing in the way yeah you know what some of the other other styles and you can have that big yeah that big wing nut that's in here right okay that sometimes gets in the way yeah and so that's what's nice would have in this style harder to find these stanley number i think the number 18s you'll find ones like this a lot more often and they do work well but sometimes that big wing nut at the top could be it could be in the way but it does lock it in and work very well how about the egg beaters is there an interesting history on these there's a lot of different varieties of these but probably the best ones are the stanley ones and the miller falls but there are a lot of them and sometimes i put the side handles on i don't understand why you're never really going to you hold it and use that side handle that way as much but the main thing i'm looking on these is i like that it has the two gears here that's the idler gear it just helps to smooth things out it balances out the gears and so what you want to see is there's a smoothly spin or all the gear teeth in place right is this juncture right here of the wooden handle to the metal frame good and tight and that are the jaws in good shape when i close this up it should come to very very tight closure for even the smallest drill bits of say a sixteenth of an inch would be held tightly in there sometimes you'll find the old-fashioned ones like this where it opens up and you'll have bit storage in the inside whatever i have so you have a lot of different of your drill bits all handy whenever you're using your drill and again what are the push drills i mean there's push drills i'm looking for here they are as a shop teacher i kept these in my tool cabinet of about five different ones with different size drill bits in the end so all a student had to do is go over there and grab the size they need they never had to worry about adjusting it okay but some of these you could put any any kind of drill bit in there yeah because this one twists but the idea here is there's a spring in there and when i'm pressing down it's going to spin and drill a hole yeah so these were very very handy to have in the shop okay they were used with screwdrivers also right the not these these are particularly made for drills okay these type are very similar to that that's the one i'm thinking about yeah and these were used as as a drill yeah you can lock it in left and right yeah i'm trying to get it in reverse okay so this one here has that archimedes screw in there that you know i worked like i said on chris craft boats i couldn't imagine back in the 20s with the thousands of screws that went into a crisscraft this is what they had to use yeah wow yeah these are these are the old-fashioned screwdrivers that sometimes i like the little small ones they are very handy okay there's a good variety of stuff here saw sets if you're working on sharpening saws one of the things you're going to need is a tool to set the teeth every other tooth is bent you know so one every other tooth is bent one way i turn this all around and i bend it to the other way that gives you the clearance when you're doing your saw work particularly tricky is when you're working with a saw that has very small teeth you know these might be 15 teeth per inch and you'll need a very good sole set to bend those small little teeth and they have to be very accurate as far as how much bending you're doing so that they're all even down the line and that's where these these stanley ones come into play they were very well made with the morel was also a very good saw set so you'll need those the thing that i have always captured my eye is these uh rawhide hammers and it was primary user for that well the good thing with these here is they're like an old style dead blow hammer yeah they're not they're not going to mark the material right you know so when you're knocking it's all steel up in the top here a good cast iron so it has a lot of weight to it but when you're hitting the wood it's not going to mar the wood because of the softer material the raw height and then when that gets mushroomed and worn out you just replace the wall height so you can just loosen this nut up take it apart put the new wall hide back in there and tighten it up and they do come in different sizes okay so these are very handy handy mallets to have other tools people like are these hand crank grinders he said why would you want to use a hand crank grinder well a regular motorized grinder spins very fast and if you take your chisel and you're taking trying to get that sharpened up a little bit or taking a nick out of it it can overheat the metal and take the temper out of the steel right using a hand crank grinder it doesn't turn that fast and you're never going to have that issue and if you're on a job site you get this no electricity yeah no electricity you just put that on you just clamp down the back of the bumper yeah and so uh these these are very handy to have out in a shed or if you're even in a shop it takes a little bit of trick to kind of hold it with one hand and to turn the crank with the other but so you can see that it's it's it's smooth yeah you know it has a oiling spout in here with the oil of the gears inside there this is a luther which is one of the top makes on these you got a little brass hammers here for adjusting the planes right yeah that's what these are for these are for your molding planes yeah and that way when you're tapping onto the the cutters you're not going to peen them over different drill bits these are called center bits it's a whole set yeah i don't think i've ever seen these this is a very interesting design you don't see them a lot but they work very very well for general general woodworking and furniture making and these are all sharpened up and ready to go okay how about the little plum blob plum blob i know many many guys that collect plum bobs just for their artistry right you know they're just very very beautiful using brass using steel some of them are nickel plated and so in the case here i set up a display that could be a shelf like in an office you know and just put on there i also have individual ones that that i sell but sometimes i also like making little displays up for the uh the collector these are something that i i really like are the old machinist boxes this one here is one that was was homemade i think right so you can see that just a really nice machinist box i got it with machinist tools in there you know it's just something that i keep small parts that are for sale some of the older patent hood you know the original stillson wrench you know the old rigid little pipe wrench there's some other cooler ones that are patented as well and different sharpening stones all the different tape measures i mean they didn't come out with tape measures until the 1920s these are some of the very first ones that they came out with these little pocket ones like this prior to that it was the folding it was folding folding rules what they had to use these are the old tape measures with leather case on it and what's in this one it's more small tools and this is actually a manufactured machinist chest with the felt on the inside so these are nice for putting small tools in but they're also very handy for if you click tools for putting like i collect pen knives and i have a whole collection of pen knives that i have in one of these machinist chests my wife has one she uses for jewelry so these are very handy little boxes to have whether it's for your small tools in your shop or whether it's for your smaller collectors it's so well organized i've never seen one of these it's a leg inside caliber right yes ladies legs you know some some machinist years ago just started playing around with the design and i see many of these that are that are homemade amazing what's this thing this it's just a scale for doing layout work you know it's metric it's it's a more modern one uh i i want to say maybe bridge city or various i think it's veritas was that british city that's a british city piece okay they make nice stuff yeah these are something you don't see that many times is it's a hatchet like a broad axe what i mean by that is when you look down is that this side is perfectly flat like a broad ax would be where this side is angled in and so there's the bevel edge right there but not on the other side and duct decoy carvers and other carvers like using these for shaving and so they're going to use this more of a shading tool okay and i remember seeing duck decoy workers using axes like this one i didn't keep that handle in there on purpose because i could be put in this way for right-handed work where you can take it and turn it around and so left here that one can use it because it is symmetrical like a regular broad ax i know there's a couple log cabins houses in this area but do you get much demand for broad axes and i do collectors but also users i um there are people that are doing timber framing you know and i think people come down from new york and from pennsylvania that our timber framer is looking for okay the big slicks like this or for the big axis you know they'll want to it acts like this for taking the round timbers and turning them into your your lungs for timber framing yeah guys that use these didn't have any trouble with insomnia no you're taking this here and you might turn i know god that was telling me that his dad made um railroad ties back in the in the 20s and the 30s during the depression he might make 20 railroad ties a day oh my gosh well you're work you're working 12 to 14 hours a day yeah yeah yeah that we had a really good night's sleep there wasn't any fat carpenters right this guy's got plenty of work out yeah the average might have been more like around 12 a day but it says down on a good day could do almost 18 or 20 then here's another thing that would uh give you a heck of a workout oh that big auger oh my gosh well look at the japanese saw over there what was that for that was for taking timbers and ripping them down the lid they would be up on big saw horses and they would stand up he would stand up on top of their lawn and work his way right down the log ripping the piece of wood that's a very old antique japanese rip saw so that's it and then there's different tools down here you know woodworkers need bench prices and he's that's a craftsman a very good one that's a colombian uh quick act team with a with the dogs in them so those are very very good workers always need is your clamps these are good jorgensen clamps they don't hand screw clamps these f f clamps again good jorgensen clamps some of these are just hard to find today that quality they're not making them in america because of the cost that it would be i mean these i'm selling these for 10 to 15 a piece that's 15 for the larger ones you can't you can't buy this kind of quality now right for 15 a piece i just stopped making it here in the u.s man you got somewhere down here go all along here or big clamps just the how sturdy these are you know you know this is just a really really good me in long island city in new york well bob you got one heck of a collection a very interesting business thanks so much for allowing me to come over and spend some time with you bye bob i appreciate it yeah all right let's wrap it up thank you you're welcome you
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Channel: Bob Amarant
Views: 16,924
Rating: 4.9434628 out of 5
Keywords: woodturning, woodworking, turning
Id: S2BtTMx49AM
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 42min 55sec (2575 seconds)
Published: Thu Nov 12 2020
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