this video was aweful, through my experience of engineering, you must be the worst engineer i have seen. GET A LIFE! and just quit you job! YOU SUCK!!!
Thanks! I'm having a problem though, I'm trying to join two bits of plywood and every time I put the screw in, the other bit of wood moves away so it's not a tight join. I've drilled a pilot hole, still happens. Any ideas?
@joe588 Drill the hole in the first piece of plywood large enough that the screww can turn freely in it - without grabbing the wood. You only want the threads to grab the second piece of wood. It is the threads catching in the first piece that is causing the pieces to separate. Hope this helps...
@joe588 listen carefully because im not going to repeat this..... you need to get some crazy glue then insert it into your nose, then it shoud work ;)
Nothing wrong with using a countersink drill bit, but I use a handheld countersink instead to accomplish the same thing. The sharp multiple cutting flukes require only a few turns to achieve a good countersink and I don't need to replace the drill bit with a countersink bit in the process.
Excellent video, nicely narrated and demonstrated, thanks again!
silencesummer 1 week ago
EXCELLENT DEMONSTRATION
PUSSY100ish 3 weeks ago
Awesome...thank you.
narceron 4 weeks ago
Thanks ^_^
Eight3hirty 1 month ago
Thank you! Very well explained and demonstrated. Will look for more of your videos.
Pterocarpous 4 months ago
Informative video, thanks.
OlRoguelO 4 months ago
@IAMAVERYGOODENGINEER he is going to fill the hole. he did it on purpose, were you not paying attention?
kcimos 1 year ago
@IAMAVERYGOODENGINEER sounds like a plan, wuut?
Zaniaa2010 1 year ago 2
@IAMAVERYGOODENGINEER what!? santa isnt real, all those years i though he was real.
Zaniaa2010 1 year ago 2
this video was aweful, through my experience of engineering, you must be the worst engineer i have seen. GET A LIFE! and just quit you job! YOU SUCK!!!
Zaniaa2010 1 year ago
Thanks! I'm having a problem though, I'm trying to join two bits of plywood and every time I put the screw in, the other bit of wood moves away so it's not a tight join. I've drilled a pilot hole, still happens. Any ideas?
joe588 1 year ago
@joe588 Drill the hole in the first piece of plywood large enough that the screww can turn freely in it - without grabbing the wood. You only want the threads to grab the second piece of wood. It is the threads catching in the first piece that is causing the pieces to separate. Hope this helps...
kwikshowmehow2 1 year ago 2
brilliant! thank you for sharing this great tip!
Pterocarpous 4 months ago
@joe588 listen carefully because im not going to repeat this..... you need to get some crazy glue then insert it into your nose, then it shoud work ;)
Zaniaa2010 1 year ago
Nothing wrong with using a countersink drill bit, but I use a handheld countersink instead to accomplish the same thing. The sharp multiple cutting flukes require only a few turns to achieve a good countersink and I don't need to replace the drill bit with a countersink bit in the process.
stewartx5 1 year ago
Thanks, this is EXACTLY what I was looking for, just what I needed to know!!
DailyBrusher 2 years ago
thnx for sharing this
djibrl89 2 years ago