Woodworking Tricks You'll Actually Use // How Did I Not Know These Things

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this video is sponsored by policy genius hey in this video i'm gonna invite you to see how much of a i am was still am anyways when i first started out woodworking i knew absolutely nothing i cannot stress how little i knew i was starting completely on my own teaching myself as i went because of that there was a lot of helpful tips and tricks that i didn't learn until much later on so i thought it might be a good idea to go back and share with you some of those tricks that i've learned along the way that i wish i would have known at the very beginning you might already know these you might be watching and thinking how the heck did that guy not know about that that's common sense well it wasn't common sense to me so there's a chance it might help at least somebody out there so watch the video enjoy and comment down below there's no way i can fit everything that i learned along the way in this one video so if there's something you want touched on let me know and i'll try and do a video on it let's talk about the jointer i hear this all the time people are like i have a jointer but it's really old and the fence isn't square at all so it doesn't even work to join boards wrong you're just not running the boards through the jointer right let me show you what i mean i've purposely made this fence horribly out of square so i can show you how you can perfectly join boards even with a completely unsquare fence so out of square fence perfectly joined boards here we go this is what you're going to want to do all right for demonstration purposes i'll be using these two pieces of white oak now before you ever run them through the jointer what you're going to want to do is take all your pieces lay them out for your tabletop or whatever you're making and you're going to mark them you're going to mark a b a b sorry my handwriting's horrible but you get the picture and you're going to go all the way across an a side a b side an a side a b side so they're all marked just like that handy dandy next first you're going to take your board and you're going to run it through with the a side down facing out like this until you get a nice straight edge it might not be square but it's straight then you're going to take your board and you're going to go like this so now the b side is on the bottom and facing towards the fence then you're gonna run that through and that's gonna solve your problem don't believe me watch this [Music] okay so here's our board fresh off the jointer as you can see these edges are crazy unsquare but by running it through the way we did what we've done is we've cut one angle on this side and then we cut the opposite of that angle on the other side so if you run all your boards through in that pattern with the a b like i showed you and you get another one it is completely unsquare even though it's unsquare it'll still be perfectly flush up against your board because your jointer may be completely out of whack but by running the boards through in that pattern you're still going to get a nice perfect joint so my jointer is perfectly square i know it is because i check it all the time but i still do it this way just to make sure and i always get perfect joints because that's how i roll well it's really because of that trick i just showed you so hope that helps another thing you want to watch out for when you're joining two boards together and i talk about this all the time in my videos so if you didn't pick up on it there you should pay attention better is alternating your growth pattern from board to board as you can see in this one it's kind of going to curve around follow the natural rings of the tree this way and this one curves up instead of down following the natural rings of the tree up this one's going down so you want to alternate those growth patterns every other board so you got frown and you got smile and you got frown and you got smile back and forth across all your boards now the reason you want to do this is because the board is naturally going to cup in the direction of those rings so if all your boards are looped up like a bunch of frowns then your tabletop is naturally going to go over time or the opposite it's going to go down over time but by alternating those growth patterns one might cup up the other might cup down up down up down and it's going to even out your tabletop and keep it nice and level over you know the years of constant use pretty cool huh last but not least let's talk about actually gluing boards together okay now you've probably noticed in a lot of my videos whenever i join boards together for a big table top or something i'm not putting any biscuits or dominoes in there the reason being is that it is a complete myth that biscuits or dominoes help with the actual strength of the table a glued joint a well glued joint is going to be stronger than the board itself meaning if you try and break your tabletop there's a far greater chance that the table is going to break along one of the boards than it will along that seam now why do people use biscuits and dominoes then well either they're misinformed or what biscuits and dominoes do do it's a doo-doo what they do is they help with alignment meaning they help you get the boards nice and flushed together by locking them in place now the reason i don't use them is because i spent a lot of time milling my lumber so that it's not hard to align those boards another thing you got to watch out for is clamping pressure so many people put the clamps on and they tighten them as hard as they frickin can like they're trying to squeeze orange juice out of a rock you don't need to do that if your boards are milled properly just a little bit of clamping force is going to hook those boards together the problem is you start tightening the clamp on there on one side super tight it's going to start to lift up the edges of your table and it's going to dry in that position so you're going to start right off the bat with the table this is not flat you don't want that now if you have clamps that just have to be tightened super tight or they won't work or whatever one thing that i will do is i'll lay all my boards out on a flat surface like my workbench and then i will clamp the edge of the two outside boards to the workbench so that as i put the clamps on there if i over tighten those outer edges can't lift up the whole thing is going to stay perfectly flat now a lot of people are like well doesn't that glue the table top to your workbench maybe to your workbench but not to mine because i did the entire top of my workbench in a formica laminate and the glue just pops right off so yes it sticks for a second but i'm just like and then it it's off so for micah on the top of workbench there's another good tip because glue doesn't want to stick to it and if there's glue residue on it i scrape it off with a putty knife if you need a good workbench i have plans available for mine on my website i will link them in the video description below shameless plug all right enough about joining let's talk about cutting wood because you cut a lot of wood as a woodworker now the first thing i want to talk about is the jigsaw now the jigsaw is something that i've probably been using since the beginning of my career because it was cheap and affordable and it's very handy you can get in a lot of tight places you can cut the interior of things let's talk about that for a second whenever i'd see people cutting the interior of something like cutting a circle out for a sink to drop in something like that i'd always see them drill a hole to get the jigsaw started then they stick the blade in the hole cut out their circle voila you're done but did you know you can plunge cut with a jigsaw because i didn't when i first started out and when i learned about it saved me a lot of time because i didn't have to run and get the flipping drill i just use the jigsaw boom and you're done so this is what you're gonna do let's say you have a circle that you need to cut out just like that now like i said lots of people will drill a hole stick the jigsaw in and then cut out the circle but there's no need now you can't just plunge cut like this obviously the jigsaw is going to go all over the place but if you take the jigsaw and you tilt it like this turn it on and slowly bring it down you're actually going to cut right into the piece and you don't need a drill let me show [Music] you now yes i do still need some practice on my jigsaw skills but as you can see plunge cutting with the jigsaw works great this is quarter inch but i've gone up to one inch mdf no problem hardwood yep been there done that you want a nice sharp blade and you just want to slowly tilt it as you go in and then you don't have to get out of drill how about that my next tip is on staying motivated while you're in the wood shop a lot of people say jason how do you work so fast how do you get so much stuff done well here is my secret anytime i come into the wood shop to build a piece of furniture i lie to myself i tell myself you're not building a piece of furniture you're actually building a bomb shelter your bomb shelter and if you don't build it fast enough you're going to die in a fiery explosion it helps me work a lot faster because if i don't get it done i'm going to die our next helpful tip is brought to you by the sponsor for this video policy genius if you have a family you need life home and auto insurance it's as simple as that so why is buying it so complicated policy genius asks themselves the same question then they started a company and literally reinvented the process from start to finish policy genius compares the top life insurance companies on the market to find you the right coverage at the absolute best price but they're easy to use sites you can save up to 40 just by comparing quotes and because policy genius is an independent broker you can be assured that they are fighting for you the customer not the insurance company as the second largest term life insurance broker in the u.s policy genius helps you shop over 40 insurers to find your best fit i thought i already had great prices on insurance until i got on their website and was surprised to see how much money i could actually be saving visit policygenius.com forward slash bourbon moth to shop the market and start saving today policy genius also offers home and auto insurance and has saved their home and auto insurance customers an average of one thousand one hundred and twenty seven dollars per year so they're pretty awesome go check them out with the link right there now back to the shop tips and tricks let's talk about hand saws for a second shall we now i don't use a lot of hand saws because i don't do a lot of hand tool work because i want to make money and i don't want to waste my time but when i do use hand saws i love these japanese pole saws they're super easy to use they're not very expensive i'll include some links to these in the video description below they're pull saws which means that they cut on the pulling motion the one problem is that sometimes when you go to start your cut and you're pulling it can be hard to get them started because you're starting on all those teeth and you can mar up the piece that you're cutting into or sometimes it can bounce off of the line that you're trying to cut on so i was trying to come up with a good solution to make this easier and i found something that works pretty good i don't even know if this is a real thing i just kind of made it up one day but it works great so i thought i'd show you here's what you do all right now what i'm about to do probably goes against everything that goes along with hand tools but like i said i don't know a lot about hand tools so i'm just flying off the seat of my pants here so what i do when i get these japanese pole saws with the new blade is i go over to the grinder i turn it on and i grind off about an inch of the teeth at the very bottom of the saw like this it only takes a second because it's super thin blade but what you're left with i don't know if you can see that is you have all the teeth and then you get this nice little flat portion right there at the bottom that is key to starting your clean cut let me show you okay now as you can see i've grinded off this one inch section here teeth used to go all the way down here so anywhere you started this cut you had to start on the teeth which like i said can bounce around a little bit can mar things up it's just not super easy but by grinding off that one inch section it gives me a smooth rest that i can start my cut on so i start at the tip like that and then just pull down fast and i dive right in there without all that bouncing around why they don't just add that onto the pole saw i don't know maybe there's a saw out there that already has this if there is leave me a link in the comments but if your saw doesn't have that on there just grind off the teeth and it'll make starting cuts so much easier hey let's talk about the miter saw now when i first got a miter saw i'd never used one before i just ordered it online because i read this blog and it said you need a miter saw and a problem i was having was getting a lot of binding on my blade getting the blade pinched when i was trying to cut down long pieces of stock because normally the stock would have a bow in it and as i would cut the piece the bow would start to sink and it would pinch the blade and i read a few things couldn't really find anything that helped me out but then my friend matt over at mwa woodworking showed me how he cuts his stock down to avoid that and i've never had that problem again and this is what he does so what you're going to do is instead of just trying to make one cut all the way through here so the blade gets pinched as that board drops because it's bowed or whatever we're going to cut in the front of the board here just a little bit we're going to move we're going to cut the back of the board there and once those are both cut through there's going to be a little section left in the middle now what happens here is that little section left in the middle usually isn't enough to just bind your blade it reduces the surface area that can pinch onto your blade so by doing it that way you don't get any of that blade binding let me show you now you might have heard the change in the pitch of the saw on that final cut where it actually wanted to grab onto the blade because it was pinching a little bit but because i removed the front and the back portion of the board first that little tab i was cutting through wasn't enough material to actually grab onto my blade so if you cut your bigger boards this way you're not going to get any of that blade binding it literally has removed that problem from my whole problems list completely so good to know hey let's talk about routers for a second okay when i first started woodworking i knew nothing about routers true story i knew that people used routers i literally did not know how they worked they scared me and so finally i was like i want to be a good woodworker so i bought a router and then i had to learn how to use it now my first question when it came to routers is how do you know what direction to push the router because that matters when it comes to the direction the blade's spinning and all that but it got confusing whether you're doing the outside of a table or the inside of the table or inside of a little cutout and i was like i don't know how do you always know which way to push the router well my friend sedge over at festool showed me a really awesome trick that i used still today and it works great and that was just to take your right hand with your thumb you put your thumb against the piece the edge that you're going to route on in whichever direction your finger is pointing that is the way that you're always going to push the router now that seems ridiculously simple but outside it works inside it works upside down it works right side up it works doesn't matter whichever way your finger is pointing with your right hand when your thumb is against that edge that's the direction you're going to push your router as he says i hope that helps all right second thing with routers that i was always fiddling around with especially with a plunge router is how to determine the depth i wanted to plunge now what i used to do is i flip it upside down like this i push the plunge down and with a tape measure i'd measure the distance from the router plate to the top of the blade to determine my depth this works but it's not super accurate so then i was like oh i'm going to take it up a notch and i got some of these fancy setup blocks in all different sizes then i'd take the setup block set it on there and i'd make sure that the blade was perfectly flush with the setup block seems like a great solution right well it's not the best way to do it then some genius showed me that what you can do is flip your router the right side up like this push it all the way down until it makes contact with the surface that it's on so it's perfectly flat against there then you got this little stop gauge right here right got the stop and that comes down and it hits a pin well you raise that stop up you take your setup block whatever size you want stick it in there and wedge it in between your stop and that little pin lock it down take out your setup block and you know because you have this is a quarter inch a quarter inch gap between that stop and that pin that when you actually plunge it into your piece it's going to go exactly a quarter of an inch you've got to fuss around by flipping it upside down and all that jazz now you might be saying to yourself well i don't have any fancy setup blocks and frankly i've looked online and they're ridiculously expensive some of them are like 150 bucks for a nice set of these well i've got a cheap affordable solution for under 15 and you can do the exact same thing i know watch this okay here is a fancy set of setup blocks these are from woodpecker's tools unfortunately these are one of their one time tools and so i don't even think you can get these anymore but there's a bunch of other ones out there these are aluminum and they're really nice they're always going to be perfect don't have to worry about it but i think they were well over 150 dollars and let's say you don't want to spend that much money let's say you're on a budget well if you go down to home depot or lowe's or any big box store and you go in the back by the trim there's the dowel section they have all the round dowels and you can get them in different sizes well right next to the round dials they also have square stock also milled down to precise dimensions they got one inch they got three quarters they got five eights they got half inch they got three eights they got one quarter they go all the way up to like three inches i think anyways you buy a bunch of these and you cut them smaller and you have yourself a very affordable set of setup blocks for all these it was like 1287. now they're wood they're not metal so after a while they're going to get dinged up and banged and they're not going to be as accurate but i have enough here i can make about six sets of these things and so when one wears out i just cut a few more i have a whole new set you can also get them in hardwood these are just pine but they make them an oak too if you want to get a little fancier and spend like 25 but it's a great solution to have set up blocks around i use them all the flipping time and you don't have to break the bank what do you think of that i also tested these against my woodpeckers ones and they are literally exactly the same size all right the last thing i'm going to talk about when it comes to routers is speed most routers you buy nowadays are what they call variable speed routers which means they got a little adjustment on them this one's right here where you can change the speed of the router slower to faster now being a newbie not knowing anything about routers i had no clue when i was and wasn't supposed to decrease and increase the speed of a router so i did some research early on to figure out what i'm supposed to do and this is what i came up with the short answer when you're using a bigger bit you want to slow down the speed when you're using a smaller bit you want a faster speed but you might be saying like i was why i want to know why don't worry i'm going to tell you step in to the classroom all right now router speed is determined on a measurement system called rpm which stands for rotations per minute and that refers to how many times it is making the shank of your router bit spin around in one minute so just to use some nice even numbers let's say you have your router set on 20 000 rpms that means that the shank is going to make a full rotation 20 000 times in one minute now here's where the different sizes come in if you use a small bit like this on 20 000 rpms it's going to spin around 20 000 times if you use a big bit like this on 20 000 rpms it's gonna spin around 20 000 times however this big bit on the circumference outside edge of the bit is going to be moving much faster at 20 000 rpms than the small bit let me show you why imagine this is your small router bit and this is your big router bit now for this to spin around completely 20 000 times in one minute it's got to travel a certain amount of speed because if you stretch this out into a straight line it's the time it takes to go from point a to point b in one minute now this is a shorter distance with a smaller router bit but if you have a big router bit like this with a bigger circumference around the perimeter and you stretch that out into a straight line it's a much longer line so to go from point a to point b it's got to be traveling faster in order to get 20 000 rotations in in that one minute so the bigger the bit you get the faster it's going to be spinning they're both going to be going 20 000 rpms but this one's going to be going like 100 miles an hour where at the outside edge of this the rim speed it's going to be going like 200 miles an hour and when you're using a giant bit like this you don't want it going 200 miles an hour that's just flipping crazy so when you're using a bigger bit you want to slow down that rpm so it's traveling at a slower rate of speed compared to a little bit litter no little bit you want it to be at a faster rpm so it maintains a faster speed the goal is to get all your bits traveling roughly at the same speed by adjusting that rpm depending on the size of your bit i never knew i could talk about routers all day because there's a zillion things that i didn't know about routers that i learned but let's move on to something else shall we sometimes i'm in the shop and i really want to drink something but maybe i have an appointment later with a client and i don't want to get my beard and mustache all messy so i found a solution to get around this and still be able to stay hydrated what i do is i take a tape measure make it roughly nine inches long i'm putting a rock right there and then your horror clean all right that was literally the tiniest fraction of things that i've had to learn over the years most of them the hard way so if that was helpful please comment in the video description down below let me know and i'll do more videos like this also if there's something specific that you want to know about let me know in the comments and don't forget to subscribe hit that little bell so you're notified of when i do another video like this all right let's go let's let's let's go i don't feel like that was the best outro video i've ever done
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Channel: Bourbon Moth Woodworking
Views: 397,997
Rating: 4.8935308 out of 5
Keywords: woodworking tips, woodworking hacks, woodworking tips and tricks, woodworking tricks, woodworking tips and techniques, woodworking hack, woodworking tips and tricks for beginners, how to, tips and tricks, workshop hacks, woodworking tip, diy woodworking, life hacks, easy woodworking, workshop tips, woodworking techniques, woodworking projects, woodworking plans, workshop tips and tricks, woodworking tips for beginners, money saving hacks for woodworking, jointer hacks, hack
Id: C9scpxNqb40
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 27min 13sec (1633 seconds)
Published: Wed Oct 07 2020
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