Great video, a lot of people will appreciate, your how to assemble video
@MORGANSMaintenance Жыл бұрын
👍… I figure if nothing else it was good practice for filming and editing 😂
@papaz6047 Жыл бұрын
lol@@MORGANSMaintenance
@brianhall9019 Жыл бұрын
Congrats on 10K🎉🎉🎉 looking forward to a review of this in the future.
@MORGANSMaintenance Жыл бұрын
Thanks my friend… I hope to get to do it this week. Have to find some time to use it, I’m on drywall duty currently 😂
@brianhall9019 Жыл бұрын
@@MORGANSMaintenance well, I’m sure that will cut drywall…maybe overkill. 😂😂😂
@MORGANSMaintenance Жыл бұрын
@@brianhall9019 😂
@Stefan_Kawalec Жыл бұрын
Yep, first stage of being a famous youtuber - unboxing fancy items :) Jokes aside. The saw is crazy cheap.
@MORGANSMaintenance Жыл бұрын
Yeah it’s draw would be for someone who does a mix of materials (Mostly Metal) I guess and not primarily wood. It has a slower RPM and special blades. I think a lot of people use their miter saws as Chop Saws/ Miter Saws. I used to see them in Stores and know several people that have those. Never seen any of their other tools before. I for sure don’t need another Miter Saw 😂 It was practice for filming and editing it nothing else 😂
@Stefan_Kawalec Жыл бұрын
@@MORGANSMaintenance I'm still watching and I must say if I were to assemble this, there would be a plethora of F-bombs. I used Evolution metal chop saws. They do the job, but it takes a lot of tweaking to make them precise enough. Overall not their tools are not bad, but if they were 10-15 percent more expensive they could improve some quality. I always keep those saw blade plastic covers. When I store the blades I use it as a divider, it prevents blades from rubbing against each other thus stops dulling.
@MORGANSMaintenance Жыл бұрын
@@Stefan_Kawalec that’s why they have editing 😂 The instructions were not great. More so the pictures. If they would have shown a little wider view it would have made the world of difference.
@Stefan_Kawalec Жыл бұрын
@@MORGANSMaintenance In primary school we had a thing called practical technical classes. We were taught there how to drill, use multimeter, cook, some simple woodworking etc. And we were also shown how to make and read technical drawings. Most of our textbooks were from the 70s and 80s with very clear and easy to understand drawn instructions. I also had tons of Lego with their beautiful instructional drawings. I'm amazed how bad and indecipherable instructions are nowadays.
@MORGANSMaintenance Жыл бұрын
@@Stefan_Kawalec agree. I guess they make sense to the person that writes them… just nobody else. They have cut all those kind of things out of schools these days… which is why in about 25 years I’m not sure what will happen here. Artificial Intelligence better be getting pretty good at the trades 😂