@@toollife101 Thanks Randall! Nice to see you sir. Have a blessed week.
@rcsellery15 сағат бұрын
Good stuff! Visuals in the end grain were on point 🙌
@Tool_Addicted_Carpenter15 сағат бұрын
@@rcsellery Thanks!
@RedSnakeGT50016 сағат бұрын
Cool idea! Watching you trying to unscrew that nut with channel locks was kinda painful tho.
@Tool_Addicted_Carpenter16 сағат бұрын
@@RedSnakeGT500 Ya lol looking through a phone camera while trying to do things is a bit of a pain sometimes.
@jujuvtxКүн бұрын
It's prettier too
@Tool_Addicted_CarpenterКүн бұрын
Apologies for the audio, not sure what's up with that.
@user-pc3io5ji1oКүн бұрын
Those are beautiful honesty
@Tool_Addicted_CarpenterКүн бұрын
@@user-pc3io5ji1o Thank you!
@WordThoughtКүн бұрын
great idea looks clean!
@Tool_Addicted_CarpenterКүн бұрын
@@WordThought Thanks!
@sargeinamericaКүн бұрын
Thank you I forgot how to do this, it’s been a long time since I have done it.
@rod1147Күн бұрын
Quick and simple explanation! 😌
@timh71562 күн бұрын
Nice explanation! I do that when repairing exterior trim that has wood rot. Sometimes it makes sense not to replace the whole piece. It looks better and keeps water out of the joint on a vertical piece.
@lorenrickey54813 күн бұрын
Franklin has the best stud sensor on the market in my opinion
@Tool_Addicted_Carpenter2 күн бұрын
@@lorenrickey5481 Ya I'm a big fan of these. Lasted years before this issue and will hopefully last years more. It owes me nothing.
@Purdue_Pharma4 күн бұрын
Everyone with a background in cabinetry just squirmed when they saw how the chisel was used
@Tool_Addicted_Carpenter4 күн бұрын
@@Purdue_Pharma Why? I have 5 of these identical 5/8" chisels for general use. I also have a few sets of varying quality for certain applications. I assume everyone has beaters.
@chriscolameco68505 күн бұрын
I have the exact same ones they’re great. The cheapest knockoff Kraig pocket screw clamp on Amazon works great too
@justinsteele19566 күн бұрын
Neat idea but super leaky from an infiltration standpoint
@Tool_Addicted_Carpenter6 күн бұрын
@@justinsteele1956 It's insulated all the way down.
@Tyler-s7s6 күн бұрын
Nice rig. Love seeing how other guys get it done.
@Tool_Addicted_Carpenter6 күн бұрын
@@Tyler-s7s Thanks. I've been running 2x outfeeds for ~5 years now. Can use whatever is on site, any length/width that works for the task, and they're extremely versatile. Then they're blocking or firewood.
@GreenAppelPie6 күн бұрын
I woulda left them black, great idea though
@Tool_Addicted_Carpenter6 күн бұрын
@@GreenAppelPie Thanks. These faces were also to hide the screws and drywall cutouts though.
@ljetter98496 күн бұрын
“Take off this bolt”👀 furthest thing from that haha
@Tool_Addicted_Carpenter6 күн бұрын
@@ljetter9849 Engagement farming lol. Hook, line, and sinker.
@grimsavage97826 күн бұрын
You're a good buddy, guy!
@derrekgillespie4136 күн бұрын
Very nice finish. Love it
@Mxrtin217 күн бұрын
Nice
@Jeff45597 күн бұрын
Turned out great!
@Tool_Addicted_Carpenter7 күн бұрын
@@Jeff4559 Thanks!
@LightBulbAlley7 күн бұрын
What kind of insert is that?
@Tool_Addicted_Carpenter7 күн бұрын
@@LightBulbAlley Husky 7" 3-pocket clip on with the clip cut off and a Chicago screw in the middle of the top of the bigger pocket to separate knife and bar.
@Merkurio847 күн бұрын
Thanks man, exactly the comparison I was looking for, simple and straightforward to the point, appreciate it.
@JohnJohn-nh2rl12 күн бұрын
so wish is your to Go saw!
@Tool_Addicted_Carpenter11 күн бұрын
@@JohnJohn-nh2rl I carry the 7 1/4" and 6 1/2" brushless XR DeWalts. The 7 1/4" is on its last legs though, so I'm reaching for the Metabo more often these days. Both are good saws.
@TwiceAsNiceBeats12 күн бұрын
Mark Wahlberg? That you?
@jbman41312 күн бұрын
My real first squadron, someone in the maintenance department made some business cards. Said something like: P-3 maintenance, anytime, anyplace (world wide). If we can't fix it, it ain't broke. Working in the gulf and around Africa. We proved it to be true. My pilots one (example) exceeded air speed with APU doors open. On preflt. My FltEng Tom ... ( I think), Dave Kirby FltOrd and I using IFT tool box. After we had 3 & 4 turning and burning. We removed APU intake door, beat exhaust door closed. We made an airfoil out of OrdTape installed intake door departed "Mog." for "D.G." held the all the way back to the rock. Thanks for sharing.
@Tool_Addicted_Carpenter12 күн бұрын
@@jbman413 A little bit of that is gibberish to me but great story nonetheless!
@NeanderthalDogma12 күн бұрын
Nice
@rcsellery13 күн бұрын
That's how you know you're doing stellar work!!
@Tool_Addicted_Carpenter13 күн бұрын
@@rcsellery Treat every house like my own!
@johnhurtado890713 күн бұрын
Craig jig the best
@Tool_Addicted_Carpenter13 күн бұрын
@@johnhurtado8907 Maybe Kreg is better, but I can almost guarantee they're the exact same.
@camerongallagher954412 күн бұрын
Best doesn’t always mean longest lasting or most durable, the best tool for the job is the one you can afford.
@chriscolameco68505 күн бұрын
@@Tool_Addicted_CarpenterNope, until you get to their commercial stuff like the foreman, kreg is just Chinese crap and overhead. The knockoffs are just as good and come from the same factory
@Tool_Addicted_Carpenter13 күн бұрын
Dragonite brand purchased on Amazon.
@chriscolameco685013 күн бұрын
Not sure if it works on air hoses, but I was doing a masonry job recently and my water hose sprung a leak, was able to field patch it with a 1/2" pex barb fitting and two small hose clamps.
@Tool_Addicted_Carpenter13 күн бұрын
@@chriscolameco6850 It's definitely fixable but I had to buy one. Working an hour and a half from my house but only 15 minutes to home depot.
@chriscolameco685013 күн бұрын
@@Tool_Addicted_Carpenter Oh yeah I happened to have all that stuff in my truck it was faster to fix than to buy a new one. If it's faster to buy and whatever it is costs under like $150 I usually to just buy a new one. I have doubles and triples of so many tools because, "fuck it buying this thing now will get this whole thing done faster it pays for itself"
@JacopoSkydweller14 күн бұрын
I want to lay wood floor on a concrete slab, hard concrete. How could I do that with no wooden subfloor?
@Tool_Addicted_Carpenter14 күн бұрын
@@JacopoSkydweller I've ran into that twice and both times I actually put a subfloor. I put a moisture barrier, PL premium, and Ramset 3/4" ply down with a 6" OC pattern. Expensive and time consuming. No matter what, you'll need a moisture barrier. I would call local flooring distributors/installers and get their opinions/experience on what they would do or have done. There is probably flooring specifically designed for that. If it's a basement I would look into DRIcore subfloor.
@curtisferrier98229 күн бұрын
Full spread glue right to the concrete
@xxnoshowxx14 күн бұрын
Damnit. I feel like we been working for 10 years together laying floor like a mf. Thank you for the tips.
@Tool_Addicted_Carpenter14 күн бұрын
@@xxnoshowxx No problem!
@Dudeguymansir14 күн бұрын
I miss my matebo saw. I hope it’s getting some good use at least
@chriscolameco685015 күн бұрын
My first couple years remodeling I used blade left and blade right skil saws and a speed square for all my trim work. And miter shears for small stuff. The skil 10” slider is a great value. Shadow line, dual bevel, depth stop. You can get it on sale for $190 a couple times a year. I was told 10”r’s are more accurate for trim but it sounds like one of those things that was true a generation ago and it no longer applies
@Tool_Addicted_Carpenter14 күн бұрын
@@chriscolameco6850 I would say it still applies. I'm just not a huge fan of 12" blade deflection. 10s definitely a safer bet IMO.
@scottsterner409115 күн бұрын
I run my own finish carpentry business, and man, as nice as my 12” dewalt compound miter saw is, I only bring it along when I absolutely NEED it, otherwise my 10” hitachi is just so much lighter and easier to pack out. I love that little saw, it’s probably over a decade old by now and it’s still routinely making me money
@Tool_Addicted_Carpenter15 күн бұрын
@@scottsterner4091 Solid little saw. This is the new Metabo cordless and I'm a huge fan. I've had that Hitachi you're talking about for 13-14 years as well. I actually cut the top off of it and mounted a table so it's a combination saw. You can find it way back in my videos or probably just search "Homemade Hitachi combination saw" and it should pop up.
@Diodontgivadayum15 күн бұрын
Thanks for all the tips ... still hiring you to do it 😂
@joeljay847115 күн бұрын
Finally. Someone who is worth what they do.
@Tool_Addicted_Carpenter15 күн бұрын
@@joeljay8471 Thanks!
@reidrickman985615 күн бұрын
Never seen the wedge trick before we always use those ratchet things that push off the baseboard to tighten the board
@Tool_Addicted_Carpenter15 күн бұрын
@@reidrickman9856 I only do flooring occasionally so I just whip up a few wedges. Works well. Anything else you guys would do differently on the last rows? Just curious for the future.
@roachwerks304315 күн бұрын
KZbin woodworkers = Milwaukee and festool EVERYTHING Working pros = hitachi chop saw
@ToolswithSoAlz16 күн бұрын
Good to know
@Tool_Addicted_Carpenter16 күн бұрын
@@ToolswithSoAlz Thank you sir. Before I knew this, I ran a lot of combination and general purpose blades. I've noticed a difference in the quality of cuts since focusing on this feature for ~5 years now.
@andy613118 күн бұрын
Man get yourself the Makita drywall saw. Every remodeler needs one. 200 bucks but hook her up to a vacuum and it’s dust free and perfect depth Not sure if it would be good for plaster though. we dont have that out here
@Tool_Addicted_Carpenter18 күн бұрын
@@andy6131 I've definitely eyeballed that thing many times but it looks hard to keep straight and I know it doesn't get tight to corners so I've been standoffish.
@andy613118 күн бұрын
@@Tool_Addicted_Carpenter the latter is true- need to still use the multi for tight corners But very easy to keep straight. Bought mine initially for patching up after a full repipe. Plumbers made a million crooked holes in the house, the drywall saw made quick work of squaring them up perfectly for the new patches to fit. Paid for itself on that job alone, still use it every week
@Tool_Addicted_Carpenter18 күн бұрын
@@andy6131 I'll keep it in mind but I love my Multi-Tool lol
@andy613118 күн бұрын
@@Tool_Addicted_Carpenter 😂 hey if it’s working good enough, save the clutter
@andy613118 күн бұрын
Thats wicked dude. One piece track? Where did you source hardware?
@Tool_Addicted_Carpenter18 күн бұрын
@@andy6131 Thank you sir. It's two 6' tracks and it's called "Rustica low clearance". My buddies client tracked them down and I would not hesitate to use them in the future. I wasn't a huge fan of the door stops themselves because they were just a small cylinder with a set screw and it's a very heavy door. The anti-jump hardware was a little bulky too. Kind of the opposite of what both should be. I'd still use it again, but I'd pursue other brands option for those two minor pieces of hardware. I have no problem mixing and matching.
@andy613118 күн бұрын
Whats your go to for a compact/light stand setup? Compact dewalt and those fixed material stands? Tired of using the tailgate for quick door trims
@Tool_Addicted_Carpenter18 күн бұрын
@@andy6131 Compact DeWalt with the built-in outriggers would be ideal. I just haven't sprung the $200 for one yet considering I have 2 of the bigger ones and 2 of the compact ones with no outriggers. I would definitely prefer not to carry the material supports though. Bora portamate isn't a bad option for $80. Have had one for my cordless DeWalt for almost a decade. Can do the same setup with the sandwiched plywood and 2x outfeeds.
@brickcity9mm89618 күн бұрын
We don't need no hooks
@ObservationofLimits18 күн бұрын
That's completely wrong. The face angle is for different materials. Soft materials like plastic you want a negative hook because you don't want it ripping. Wood you'd have a positive hook because the tooth needs to slice the fibers. We ran giant 20x30 cnc saws at a plastic and dielectric insulation manufacturing plant. Probably had over 150 varieties of saw blades depending on material, depth, etc.
@Tool_Addicted_Carpenter18 күн бұрын
@@ObservationofLimits I described two separate tooth hooks for two different saws in the simplest terms possible. To say it's 'completely wrong' is a massive embellishment. I don't doubt that you know more about blades than me, but don't ignore that it's actually dangerous to run positive tooth hooks on the miter saw and negative on a table saw in a basic jobsite setting without all the material holds and feather boards. I would not encourage someone to do so. On top of that, these blades are specified for these uses. "Fine finish for slide miters", "Heavy duty ripping blade". In my experience, these blades are perfect for what they're sold for. Maybe you should write a letter to the manufacturer about why they're wrong?
@Brian-bc8ds19 күн бұрын
When flying with tools, I don't give a second though to the Milwaukee boxes - they'll make it safe, secure, and still locked. I'm pretty sure I don't want to fly with tools in the Ridgid boxes. -------------------------------------------------- [Note: This comment is not focused on any particular "designated group" with regard to the KZbin "hate speech" policies. It simply reflects the author's opinion regarding a subject, which may or may not also pertain to an individual's actions demonstrated in the video. If any such individuals belong to any of the "designated groups", any commentary included is merely incidental to that grouping and such groups are not the focus of any comments. It's pathetic that this comment is necessary for the YouTube censors.]
@tellyourfriendsaboutme421919 күн бұрын
I kind of wrote off the 8 1/2 inch sliding saw in favor of a 12 inch sliding, I'm rethinking the 8 1/2 inch saw size now after seeing your setup. 12 really seems overkill for most of what i'd be doing with cutting down 8/4 thickness hardwoods?
@Tool_Addicted_Carpenter19 күн бұрын
@@tellyourfriendsaboutme4219 If I was cutting 8/4 hardwoods I'd lean towards a 15a saw. 10" or 12". The 8 1/2 are usually 9-12a. You'll want more torque than that. You can still run the same outfeed setup.
@tellyourfriendsaboutme421919 күн бұрын
@@Tool_Addicted_Carpenter thanks that's helpful, I was looking at the DWS779 as most of my use is chop cuts and simple 45 degree cuts. More of a homeowner/woodshop use case than trim carpenter but i'd like the capability to do some crown on a renovation
@Tool_Addicted_Carpenter19 күн бұрын
@@tellyourfriendsaboutme4219 You can cut crown on the flat with smaller saws. 31.6⁰ miter and 33.9⁰ bevel will give you a 45⁰ on most common spring angles. A lot of saws will have the detents for it. In my opinion, the 779 is the best saw for the money. Fairly often you can find it on sale with a free DeWalt miter stand for $400. It's a lot of saw but it sounds like you want to do a few different things so I'd hate to recommend a smaller saw and have you run into an application where it wasn't capable enough.
@tellyourfriendsaboutme421919 күн бұрын
@@Tool_Addicted_Carpenter I'll keep an eye out for the sale, great advice appreciate you