 I'm adding some three-quarter inch dug holes to a temporary workbench top. This top is just sitting on top of my samurai carpenter saw stallions. Those are my saw horses that are too nice to be called saw horses so I call them saw stallions but anyway I've just got those underneath here and then I've got a piece of plywood actually two layers on top of here and it's really anchored down to my saw horses and it's a temporary workbench but now I want to add some three-quarter inch dug holes. As I was trying to use this 90 degree device for drilling I was having a little trouble because of the small base of stabilizing my drill. It's not overly critical in this situation. It struck me that I could take my base off of my router. This was a concept that Jesse, the samurai, came up with for stabilizing your router and that has been a godsend and I'll link you to both my video on building this as well as his video. All I did was simply mark out where I needed some attachment holes for this device, this 90 degree drilling device. The drill is separate from this little device. I'll put a link to this down below in the description so I just attached it to this that gave me the ability to put some clamps on there and stabilize things really really well. All right so here I go I'm going to give this a test and see if I can get a nice 90 degree hole. I know I got tear out down below that's obviously going to happen on plywood when you plunge through like that but that's all right that's the underside and I'm not worried about tear out in this case. That was my experiment let's see how we did here. I'm clamped this puppy massive tear out upright that worked pretty cool