I hire people to do carpentry because I AM NOT A CARPENTER! I have a basic toolbox to do basic tasks around the house that are within my ability. Some of you guys are gonna end up in the emergency room.
@kodiakfred140 Better in the emergency room than a person that refuses to learn a new skill. Work safe, think safe and do your research. You'll be fine and you'll feel proud. A person's worth is dependent on two things: How he/she treats people and his/her ability to change his/her surroundings. Please try and understand this is not a personal insult, but encouragement. There is a major decline in American craftsmanship and independence and it's all based on "someone else should do this."
(continued from last post)...One important point to remember besides the fact that planers can't hold a board steady and create a perfectly flat face is this: If jointers were only meant for edges of boards, the biggest jointer would probably be about 4 or 5 inches. And they make them up to 16-20 inches. Why? Because you don't use a planer to flatten. You use a jointer to do that and then you let the planer knock off the high spots on the opposite face. That's how it's done.
(continued from last comment)...Also, a few comments below someone said this was an unsafe technique. That is also incorrect.
Obviously you don't want to have no blade guard on the machine, and you want to use a push block or push stick instead of your fingers. If you do this safely it's not dangerous and again, a planer will not create a flat face unless you find a way to stabilize the board as it goes through the planer. (continued for one more post)...
(continued from last comment)...On the other hand, with a jointer, there's no feed rollers pressing the warp out of the board or making it rock around as the blades cut it. You use your hands, and with those you can keep the board stable and not press down too much on it. Thus, the board will "float" over the knives, and a flat reference face will be created, which is then put down against the planer's table, and the knives on the planer knock off all the high spots. (continued in next comment).
To those who say that a jointer is just used for edges, that's dead wrong.
If you send a board that's warped in any way through a planer, it's gonna stay warped. The infeed rollers in the planer press the board flat against the table (essentially making the board look flat) and the blades take some material off. But as soon as the board is released from the planer's rollers, the board is no longer forced to be flat, and it springs back to being warped. (continued in next comment)...
Ppl please use a jointer ONLY for edges! If you want a straight edge on each side of your lumber use a planer!! This technique is VERY dangerous and only used if you do not have access to a planer. This guy doesnt even have a kickback guard!! Expert Village fails again!!!
You must be joking, how are your eyes? or you need to adjust YOUR settings, the brightness level is excellent, so is the tint, contrast, picture and detail. Great video quality Kevin, keep up the great tutorials.
There is no guard on the machine, he uses no push blocks at all, you can easily loose a couple of fingers that way. He wears no safety glasses. He's not telling people about how to use the machine safely.
This is a great how-to video. I have recently taken an interest in woodworking and furnituremaking and videos like these are invaluable. Thanks so much for posting it!
I hire people to do carpentry because I AM NOT A CARPENTER! I have a basic toolbox to do basic tasks around the house that are within my ability. Some of you guys are gonna end up in the emergency room.
kodiakfred140 11 months ago
@kodiakfred140 Better in the emergency room than a person that refuses to learn a new skill. Work safe, think safe and do your research. You'll be fine and you'll feel proud. A person's worth is dependent on two things: How he/she treats people and his/her ability to change his/her surroundings. Please try and understand this is not a personal insult, but encouragement. There is a major decline in American craftsmanship and independence and it's all based on "someone else should do this."
bedofrazorsqwerty 7 months ago
@bedofrazorsqwerty I think you just won comment of the year...
Konkaver 1 month ago
(continued from last post)...One important point to remember besides the fact that planers can't hold a board steady and create a perfectly flat face is this: If jointers were only meant for edges of boards, the biggest jointer would probably be about 4 or 5 inches. And they make them up to 16-20 inches. Why? Because you don't use a planer to flatten. You use a jointer to do that and then you let the planer knock off the high spots on the opposite face. That's how it's done.
GamingDrummer89 1 year ago
(continued from last comment)...Also, a few comments below someone said this was an unsafe technique. That is also incorrect.
Obviously you don't want to have no blade guard on the machine, and you want to use a push block or push stick instead of your fingers. If you do this safely it's not dangerous and again, a planer will not create a flat face unless you find a way to stabilize the board as it goes through the planer. (continued for one more post)...
GamingDrummer89 1 year ago
(continued from last comment)...On the other hand, with a jointer, there's no feed rollers pressing the warp out of the board or making it rock around as the blades cut it. You use your hands, and with those you can keep the board stable and not press down too much on it. Thus, the board will "float" over the knives, and a flat reference face will be created, which is then put down against the planer's table, and the knives on the planer knock off all the high spots. (continued in next comment).
GamingDrummer89 1 year ago
To those who say that a jointer is just used for edges, that's dead wrong.
If you send a board that's warped in any way through a planer, it's gonna stay warped. The infeed rollers in the planer press the board flat against the table (essentially making the board look flat) and the blades take some material off. But as soon as the board is released from the planer's rollers, the board is no longer forced to be flat, and it springs back to being warped. (continued in next comment)...
GamingDrummer89 1 year ago
this safety bla bla bla its geting on my nervs.
Parakiosu2 1 year ago
Somehow this guy still has thumbs!!
860240 1 year ago
Ppl please use a jointer ONLY for edges! If you want a straight edge on each side of your lumber use a planer!! This technique is VERY dangerous and only used if you do not have access to a planer. This guy doesnt even have a kickback guard!! Expert Village fails again!!!
x3seriesx 1 year ago
too dark can't see
willyboydd3311 1 year ago
Comment removed
larryjackson04 2 years ago
Kevin,
The video is too dark. Don`t you have some extra spot light? Anyhow, it is very interesting.
Regards,
Gregg
gregg0602 2 years ago
Fucking lame, expert village is fucking lame.
polarbear60 2 years ago
Comment removed
OPOCHKA 2 years ago
You must be joking, how are your eyes? or you need to adjust YOUR settings, the brightness level is excellent, so is the tint, contrast, picture and detail. Great video quality Kevin, keep up the great tutorials.
shon9514 2 years ago
They should go to expert village people on how to make videos :)
polarbear60 2 years ago
speaking of safety features............ where's the cutterhead guard, ya morons?
olafbigandglad 2 years ago
Kevin is refreshingly articulate, intuitive, and paced. Not too fast, not too slow.
dodobrian69 3 years ago
This dude is amazing at explaining stuff. Thanks Kevin!
fezan84 3 years ago
Just to let you know, he uses the machine incorrectly, he also used the tablesaw incorrectly also.
mathesontown 2 years ago
So you're going to keep it a secret? What good is it telling us that minimal amount of info....another critic without an explaination.
shon9514 2 years ago
There is no guard on the machine, he uses no push blocks at all, you can easily loose a couple of fingers that way. He wears no safety glasses. He's not telling people about how to use the machine safely.
mathesontown 2 years ago 2
@mathesontown - He is explaining how the machine works. He never turns on the machine. He never uses the machine
Personally I don't want my time wasted by the obligatory "Don't be a dumbass" warning. If you need your hand held, stay away from work of any kind.
DoctorMeh 1 year ago
This is a great how-to video. I have recently taken an interest in woodworking and furnituremaking and videos like these are invaluable. Thanks so much for posting it!
dfpace 3 years ago