The project is impressive, but what's more amazing is you managed to find that many straight pieces of timber from B&Q! 😁
@bikerchrisukk10 ай бұрын
🤣🤣🤣
@WolfTrap100010 ай бұрын
Exactly what i thought!!!! 😂
@sergiusalex10 ай бұрын
ahahahhaha, yea, made one myself, had to go to 3 different shops to actually find enough straight timber 🤣
@andyblackpool10 ай бұрын
Without knots!
@KrysRevamps10 ай бұрын
for non construction projects, best time to get cheap wood is winter or spring, moisture in the air plus the cold keeps the wood wet which generally makes it straighter. it will warp once dry again though this takes a while giving you plenty of time to work with and put in proper fixings.
@daryllbrownjohn10 ай бұрын
You managed to find straight lengths from B&Q..?!?!?
@CiaranNewsome10 ай бұрын
Buy from a local timber yard not the likes of B&Q, in my opinion anyway. Support local!!
@tenparkdrive10 ай бұрын
😂😂😂
@jaychet10 ай бұрын
that would have made the best how to video ever! 😂
@aaronstill381010 ай бұрын
😂😂😂😂😂😂
@philtrueman855410 ай бұрын
😅 that's a first
@pauljai715110 ай бұрын
I did a slat wall recently, skipped the mdf, just used battens on the wall, paint all behind black, then jut pin them on. Stained them when they were up. Look great. Went to a local timber merchant for wood, as better quality and cheaper than big brands.
@cordoroy95156 ай бұрын
Is there USP not that the felt backing is good for lowering noise pollution?
@absbi00005 ай бұрын
The fabric method is way better for an apartment. 12 holes in the wall compared to… Lord knows how many! Better to consider saying bye bye to the deposit though.
@Ben-ef4gf4 ай бұрын
@@absbi0000 it’s not hard to fill holes
@bosk_dzelski2 ай бұрын
That is actually my plan. Paint the wall dark and install the slats directly. How did it turn up?
@niallmartin409810 ай бұрын
Sounds like a great idea and I've been meaning to have a go for a while. One thing i would say PLEASE setup and outfeed table for your table saw, even if it is something as simple as some boxes. If your rip cutting for and hour its worth the time investment for the safety.
@tomaspep719610 ай бұрын
yeah, and take off that gloves. And stop reaching over spinnig blade, thank You.
@simonblackmore398910 ай бұрын
Whenever I plan a new DIY project, I always check to see if you have completed a similar project, as I know you will provide lots of helpful tips and advice. Keep up the good work.
@andrewandlm10 ай бұрын
You are an absolute mind reader. I've literally just measured up and purchased the wood for this exact job the wife wants doing. Gonna grab a brew and watch the vid. Epic
@jrea42410 ай бұрын
Your point about buying tools with the money you saved is a great point that many miss! By your 2nd and 3rd DIY project those tools have paid for themselves.
@11214945 ай бұрын
And you might save even more finding a local maker space to join and learn at!
@shentsov84Ай бұрын
They pay from the first
@1x3dil10 ай бұрын
Hi Stuart. The CLS from B&Q still makes economic sense , especially as you say if you have the ability to cut it to size . Also if you spend a bit of time sorting through the pile , you can find some decent straight peace . As your wonderful statement wall demonstrates , even an average DIY centre can still provide the materials for most projects . And of course there open 7 days a week , and often well into the evening . Kind regards as always 👍
@trig10 ай бұрын
Love your videos, but don't lean over a running table saw to grab your stock. Your viewer's look up to you so you need to lead by example.
@tarquinjones200210 ай бұрын
Agreed. Thought exactly the same thing. . . . .
@dj0men66610 ай бұрын
And walked off leaving it running. 🫣 mines off soon as the cut is done.
@tarquinjones200210 ай бұрын
@@dj0men666 Yup. Do nothing until that blade has stopped.
@lukimtb8518 ай бұрын
Further, you should never wear gloves when working with a table saw or rotating machines in general...
@fudpukker7 ай бұрын
@@tarquinjones2002 Agreed, as a noob, I caught my finger in the blade just on the final revolution as it was running down. Luckily only a scratch. For me, this was a final warning. Respect...
@SL1PSTAR21 күн бұрын
Great video! It reminds me of the saying, 'If I buy a car and learn to drive, I can save money on taxi fares.' While building a slat wall is impressive, the investment in tools and skills might not make it a realistic way to save money for everyone. Plus, the affiliate links are interesting! Thanks for sharing!
@PerformanceSC10 ай бұрын
Superb video again Stuart. One thing I’ve noticed is that you always visit a large DIY shed (I know this is proper DIY). But I worked for 24 years within builders merchants and they are miles more competitive for larger purchases and a lot have mill facilities and we would charge a small amount for cuts and planing and so for an extra £50-£100 you may get this ripped and planed on their machines. Also you should save even more money on timber and materials from them as you can gain a cash account, haggle prices and get these set to terms giving you consistency. In the big sheds you just have to pay full list. As well your brand and channel will have positive pulling power and I’d be all over giving you a discount to gain the positive publicity and ‘supplied by’ tag. Hope this helps and let me know if I can be of further assistance. Thanks Andy
@johnadams197610 ай бұрын
I've tried independent merchants several times around me, but they were always way way more expensive :-(
@PerformanceSC10 ай бұрын
@@johnadams1976 shop round and haggle with them and mention you procure materials regularly and want to be loyal to one supplier. Get quotes from each and take them in, we always would beat a printed quote from a competitor and it’s not long before you can get a deal and cash accounts used to get free delivery and like I say machining from the mill was normally cheap. The diy sheds have no ability to haggle (other than overpriced trade cards) and you cannot get free delivery and get 1-2 cuts included.
@jamesfarrer508710 ай бұрын
These days builder merchants only seem to want to deal with people who will have regular orders through (fair enough!). Plus a lot of them won’t let you pick timber and want to pick it for you, can’t order and collect same day etc etc. at least with the big sheds you can go when you want and get what you want
@jacko79110 ай бұрын
I think the problem is that most people don't want to haggle prices. Even as a builder I avoid merchants unless absolutely necessary because it's tiresome going in and being quoted prices that are 50% higher than the DIY stores then having to haggle it down to eventually get it to 5% less. There are a few decent places that I'll go back to but 90% are just used to tradesmen picking stuff up on their company's account or charging materials direct to a client, so they massively overcharge everything and hope they get away with it
@PerformanceSC10 ай бұрын
@@jacko791 I get that but not all places are that much higher to start with, especially against full list price DIY sheds and like I say you can then set these prices to terms with a cash account and gain free delivery, so once setup it’s easier and should be cheaper. Also in this case regarding Stuart he has large pulling power with his brand and channel so most will want to favourably look after him for the positive publicity- but even so if someone is buying materials weekly/monthly then it’s at least worth checking a merchants prices against a DIY store. Some benefits like killing and delivery will assist with time saved 👍
@islanderstalents8342Ай бұрын
Looks very nice mate.I did the same project in my lounge,but didn’t use mdf.Instead I’ve painted the wall black ,then nailed the wood straight on the black wall .I basically did left and right wall and middle I’ve put Marble effects pvc sheets and my tv goes on the pvc .Results were great .
@Mstred10 ай бұрын
Looks awesome. I do wonder why you didn't paint the MDF black, as I believe the felt will be difficult to keep clean. Thanks for your videos. I really enjoy them and usually learn something every time.
@johnadams197610 ай бұрын
I don't get this either. It's going to be impossible to clean when the dust gets to it.
@martynoxley374510 ай бұрын
He could have made good use of his spray gun to paint the mdf.
@gerryheynes508210 ай бұрын
Is it something to do with sound insulation or acoustics?
@peterreime314610 ай бұрын
@@gerryheynes5082 not really as the reason you use fabric is so the sound can travel through it and then get absorbed in the space behind. Mounting onto MDF negates this almost completely.
@person820310 ай бұрын
fabric will soften sound a little but won’t do much surrounded by wood. The panels in b&q or elsewhere are a thick material that will absorb sound much better
@EmsillCazm10 ай бұрын
Hi Stewart, you called the timber that you were using CLS, CLS stands for 'Canadian Lumber Standard', as it was originally manufactured in Canada and used for building sturdy timber-framed houses there before it became a popular option in the UK. The timber that you are using is referred to as PAR, (Planed All Round) it’s just if any of your KZbin viewers go into a merchants asking for CLS. They would be shown something totally different to what you are using.
@pettofficial.10 ай бұрын
He is using what B&Q sell as smooth planed round edge CLS timber. No need to copy and paste your Google result when you looked up what it CLS means.
@EmsillCazm9 ай бұрын
@@pettofficial. I’ve been in the building trade for 30 years, and every time I buy these two types of timber, I ask for either PAR or CLS, each time I will get a different product, Stuart makes his videos to give people help and advice, and that’s exactly what I was trying to do, you have obviously searched the same thing that I did, so it would have given you the same information that CLS is its own product and PAR is something different, so wind, your F#%K’n neck in and go and troll someone else …….. PS, Next before you post a comment make sure you know what you’re talking about 👍
@tenminutespast2 ай бұрын
@@EmsillCazm Good on yer mate 👍
@HB2624410 ай бұрын
Great video! I build one these last year, just because I was outraged by the cost of these acoustic panels. My only problem now is that by using construction lumber aka pine the slats have turned a bit yellow. Any tips on staining or oils that could prevent this in the future? Keep making these video’s! I love how you use the tools all of us can afford.
@neddyboy0110 ай бұрын
There are 2 major issues. Wearing gloves while using a table saw is extremely dangerous, you should also have some outfeed support when ripping the pine.
@mattursell111010 ай бұрын
I've done this on a wall in my house. I painted the wall/area with black paint. Then i used roof battens for the slats cut to size, i have enough cut off to do another wall in my house also!
@browniemitch810 ай бұрын
What was your size and cost
@be4ze110 ай бұрын
Awesome video thank you. I'm planning to do something similar. I feel like you could have skipped planning and gone straight to sanding though!
@rod_at_adelaide5766Ай бұрын
Great job and you saved a few quid too! I would have been tempted to just paint the backing MDF in a flat black as it wouldn't be such a dust magnet.
@sharadkumar83657 ай бұрын
of so many videos on the subject, this is by far the best one i have seen. it explains everything well, it shows how its done, and you dont own a whole workshop and an armoury of high end massive cutting gear or tools which most people wont own. hence its practical and not showing off lol. thank you , much appreciate it. :)
@ProperDIY7 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@CB-DW10 ай бұрын
Looks great but certainly won’t help with sound absorption. But a great job if money saving is the number one requirement. I bought pre-made walnut acoustic slat panels for the lounge as I needed to improve the acoustics for the hifi & they look great and worked wonders on the room acoustics
@sally4436Ай бұрын
I loved this video...well articulated. I was left wanting to see the completed project, when the wall really must pop!
@warpspeed987710 ай бұрын
You should do the planning walking along the slats in one continuous motion. Two nails or screws outside the ends of the slat hold it stable while you do it.
@grotekleum10 ай бұрын
I was wondering why this wasn't done.
@stephennorris792410 ай бұрын
Planning? or planing
@maxv7710 ай бұрын
Looks good but think id go for a painted back board. Material one will love the dust over time
@RogerHolden10 ай бұрын
Glad you like it and I appreciate the workmanship, I but I think it looks horrible.
@lafluerpeter910 ай бұрын
I thought the same, not for me.
@Just_a_comment885 ай бұрын
😂😂😂😂
@absbi00005 ай бұрын
One of the best Slat Wall guides on KZbin. A lot of thoughtful decisions made in your build. Thank you for sharing!
@marais7501210 ай бұрын
I liked the "approval from the client" bit
@plummetplum9 ай бұрын
Oh i see 😂😂 that threw me initially.
@videomandan2610 ай бұрын
I did this for my garden fence about 4 years ago still looks okay
@ClaireLeung-pj2ri5 ай бұрын
Wow, the finish look is totally professional. It’s all in the details which I never would have thought and picked up a few tips on the way. Thanks.
@melhammel765110 ай бұрын
Great job Stuart, always like watching your videos. My only question would be, the knots in the wood and any leakage of sap from them, or does the varnish you applied stop that.
@moe502310 ай бұрын
Thanks for this, I was thinking of buying ready made panels. I'll look at making my own now 👍
@1971wizzard10 ай бұрын
Thanks Stuart for another slick, well presented and thoroughly enjoyable episode. You really are a great maker. Your construction theory and advice are second to none…. I just think you are fantastic at this and more power to you buddy!!!
@jparky197210 ай бұрын
Perfect. Thank you. Is the plane absolutely necessary?
@BusinessButlers10 ай бұрын
Another great video Stuart and an interesting method for doing something which, as you say, is very popular these days. I only have a small query and it is my balance OCD at work, why didn't you begin the first panel on the left hand side exactly on the outside corner of that wall (near the door) and then create a small corner filler piece on the inner corner on the right hand side please? The absence of panelling (1 or 2 slats) on the left hand side is sending my OCD into overdrive. Other than that it looks fab and a great project start to 2024. Keep up the good work !
@jamik085025 күн бұрын
Nice project and yes, making them by yourself is the cheaper way. I built by myself a teracce deck, pergola, shed and now I am working on a wood wall for TV. This way I saved 4-5k €.
@GonzaHero6 ай бұрын
Brilliant! Your experience clearly showed in your strategy and approach. I learned a lot in 7 mins (2x speed lol). Thank you.
@kieronratcliffe95587 ай бұрын
I'm doing the very same thing luckily I'm a joiner and understand not everyone has the tools I have. There are places that will cut down the timber you need And to put them together you can use a fast setting glue(mitre fast) when you have them where you want them you can turn it over and screw them from the back......I recommend if you are painting them just rip down MDF and put them all together. To get the sizes check some at bnq and right bit down
@Roots_to_Revenue9 ай бұрын
I'm in the process of making a wood slat wall for my studio, I bought acoustic rubber from ebay as a backing and went to a local hardware store and bought a couple of sheets of MDF and the hardware store cut it into lengths for me and we mounted onto wood. Having the rubber behind it really helps with the purpose of having it to start with and that's how it helps break up the sound, something I think your missing here
@neilphillips91637 ай бұрын
unless his purpose is aesthetics...
@stephenkane5499 ай бұрын
Great video mate, all I need now is a big shed to do the work and plenty of patience.
@dshingle610 ай бұрын
How on earth did you keep that black fabric clean after all of that cutting, planing and sanding?
@PurpleCowboyTVКүн бұрын
I made the similar kind with just oak plywood. Even cheaper and no knots. Best part was that I could choose the width of the gaps, because I used acoustic back panels (got good deal for 50 panels), which means that the gap should be around the size of the panels so that the acoustic panels can actually do their work and the sound waves don't just reflect of the panels. All in all it cost me around 15€ per 2400x600mm acoustic wood panel. I'm installing 20 in my studio and 30 I'm gonna sell. If I sell all 30 of them, I'll pay off the ones I installed in my studio and actually make a profit on top of it.
@thisisretropete10 ай бұрын
Nice video! I bought a dewalt table saw for a project as I knew in the long run it will last me forever… wife wasn’t so convinced and asked me many times to sell it. I won’t. It also built our kitchen countertops with ease than have a cheap one that could brake. 😅
@__Timo__10 ай бұрын
My first thought was: How to mount on the wall? First guess was: drill a hole through the timber, screw onto the wall and plug it with one of those wood plugs. Further into the video: How would he mount the timer without a visible nail?-> Nail from the back and carefully hit the timber? Nice solution. Keep it simple! Thanks for sharing.
@K10jak10 ай бұрын
13:50 I’m so glad you’ve said that, because I’ve been ‘doing the work myself’ and been buying the tools and then I’ve got them for future jobs I don’t know I want to do yet lol. So I’ve got some good kit and saved money too! I was wondering if I was mad, because I don’t know what future jobs I’ll be doing but it seemed like a good idea. 😂 Ps. Thanks for your vids! They helped me do some loft lighting recently!
@MrSivkar10 ай бұрын
just did similar but with stained oak and black MDF backing in our country they go at 120€ a pice 60cmx270cm.
@pandraus10 ай бұрын
your cinematography is getting better and better. 14:23 shows it :) the project is also super interesting: easy-ish, profitable and trendy
@DiHandley10 ай бұрын
I’ve got to hand it to you Stuart, that is a spectacular result. I imagine that it would also be good at reducing sound levels in the room. 10/10
@streaky8110 ай бұрын
That's hilarious - I said in a comment last year that you keep making videos when I'm thinking about doing something, I was literally looking at doing this like 2 weeks ago. Aside from the table saw I'd say maybe rent a thickness planer, the lunch box type, for a day - get your slats in order first then spend a day doing that; the quality of the job is going to be massively higher, for what, an extra 50 quid? I'd say minor complaint, watch the quality of wood you're using because that's a lot of knots for something that is ultimately decorative - might be worth spending a little more, getting nicer wood, and you'll still likely save a packet for a better product. I bet that type of wall covering is actually quite insulating, between the bulk of the material and the boundary layer effect caused by the air stagnating around it because of the profile.
@Tom-le2px10 ай бұрын
This has given me an idea for roof of campervan, thank you. Any plans to do full length wall bookcase.
@DavidAddoteye3 ай бұрын
Nice work. the only issue I have is the background. This is an acoustic panel and the background is supposed to aid in absorbing sound. %There are non-accounstic plastic panels with a similar look that cost less than your budget. But I love your initiative cos I'm using the same strategy to build my acoustic panel.
@thedj591410 ай бұрын
Absolutely superb Stuart 👍 Doing this for a friend soon so spot on with the timing 😆
@marcus_b16 ай бұрын
I was just about to spend $1500 on the ready-made stuff. This may have just saved me a ton!!
@redx11x10 ай бұрын
I Bought slats, the ten packs from wickes. Almost all had imperfections, either not straight or the wood was too knotted or marked and did not look good. I got a better result buying an mdf sheet from B&Q and used their free cutting service to make first 15 cuts free. So much time saved in cutting and clean up. Plus the mdf is perfect as i painted the slats. The finish was far better. Your time is worth more.
@mikeyellow9 ай бұрын
What sizes did you asked to cut as I am planning to do same thing
@redx11x9 ай бұрын
@@mikeyellow cut them in 4cm (400mm) width. Get thick mdf, min 2cm (200mm) thick sheet. You need to join b&q free membership which gets you the 15cuts free. Do not waste your time with the video above. It will take far too long and cutting yourself will be so messy. The mdf looked so much better than the wooden slats,, unless your spending serious money and buying oak, or some real expensive hardwood. I did a project for a Nandos type restuarant and the oak wood was extremely expensive from a manufacturer that dries it in a certain way.
@mikeyellow9 ай бұрын
@@redx11x thank you so much yes I think mdf will be much easier.
@rod_at_adelaide5766Ай бұрын
@@redx11x Yep I agree, too many imperfections in pine especially with a DYI saw table. It was still a good video showing pro's and con's so not going to bag it.
@PixelatedPenfold10 ай бұрын
How good is the sound absorption with this? My 17-year-old son is constantly screaming and shouting when playing online games with his friends. Maybe I could build a box around him and the computer and give us all a break from the constant outcries! I could even seal it up completely and just leave a small slot at the bottom to push his food through. Hmm ... Definitely something to consider.
@plummetplum9 ай бұрын
No significant sound absorption. If he made the panels out of rockwool then that would help the acoustics in the room to a point. To stop sound going next door, double thickness plasterboard wall as thick as possible. Staggered non contact studs, rockwool and an air gap is the only way.
@sam_the_man10 ай бұрын
You did a great job of finding all those tools for under £600 given the current RRP of the table saw alone is £370 direct from Evolution!
@richardstamper563010 ай бұрын
Great work but it still seems to me like a load of bare wood nailed to a wall. I think spray painting the wood would have worked out better and rounding off the edges for a smoother look.
@tobias52248 ай бұрын
All of the savings are paid in time, hardware, space (storage, working) and you actually have a different product. Optics are similar, but I guess the acoustic characteristics differs quite a lot. With that said, looks great!
@AP9999910 ай бұрын
Good video but am I the only one freaking out when you reached over a fully extended spinning blade to grab the wood @ 3m 35s😯.
@glenwick9286 ай бұрын
ME TOO. Kind of put me off the way he was not only wearing gloves around the table saw, but also lack of any sort of outfeed made this entire process seem needlessly dangerous
@driftydoristv6 ай бұрын
Grow up
@crackmando622 ай бұрын
😂
@kermitefrog645 ай бұрын
Nice project! I am admiring this from across the pond in the Golden State. One thing I wonder is this a possible heat sink? I wonder how something similar count be done on the outside wall.
@craiglamb368910 ай бұрын
Great video, great result. I had thought about doing the same thing but wasn't sure about the timber bowing? I'm glad someone has done it for me to see. Do you have a follow-up video a few weeks after?
@mctaggm3 ай бұрын
Out of the box suggestion, cut get a cheaper plunge/track saw cutting strips of mdf you wrap with material and sound absorbing material, then pin to decorative ply which you’ve sanded and painted making sure the gaps are wider 👀
@davidosullivan343210 ай бұрын
you should get yourself a old Stanley no 5 hand plane (sharpen it,) few swipes on each your done mate. no snipe no sanding no dust . try it once and you'll never go back .nice build
@stephencave18710 ай бұрын
Great job Stuart. Very nice indeed. Very well thought out and planned as we've come to expect from you. 👌🏻
@tomohall25107 ай бұрын
Great video will definitely do something like this might just use 12mm MDF and cut down to 40mm strips get about 30 lengths per sheet and pin them to 9mm MDF
@rodmills407110 ай бұрын
The alternative is a jig to locate the slats flat on the bench ,then offer up the mdf board and fix off flat on bench as you did.. nice job. 🤔😂😎🇦🇺👌
@shelleyjennings73837 ай бұрын
Looks great. Instead of using fabric could the mdf be painted?
@pinkplonker877610 ай бұрын
You have more patience than me, I would be using plywood and a track saw.
@vooveks5 ай бұрын
And it would look a lot better, providing the ply had a good face on it. That knotty pine looks bad.
@nicomonkeyboy10 ай бұрын
Nice one, I wonder whether trimming nice ply would work out cost effective? I'm *personally* not keen on the knots. Saves on milling/sanding etc though edge banding may make it impractical. Not sure I'd hate the ply layers that much...
@bexaminer17 ай бұрын
I happen to see a wall similar to the one you made when I was out last week at a restaurant. They used if for an accent wall so it was just the one wall. I'm going to do a wall in my house like that. What I think I'll do differently than you did though is just paint the wall the color I want first. Then I'll put the boards up. I suppose it will be the same affect that you have.
@simonmiddleton497710 ай бұрын
Wow! That was a lot of work! Looks great. Did you get your nail gun for Christmas? Hopefully one of the manufacturers will get you to review one 😊👍
@MatSmithLondon10 ай бұрын
I liked your secret tip for what to do if you don't have a table saw which you left until near the end.... buy a table saw :) Seriously though, I was already thinking that it's a good investment even just for a project like this. I've always thought about doing my own slat wall, I was toying with the idea of going to Lawsons to buy roofing battens which are already near the right size. With a bit of work they can be made to look nice. And if you select them carefully, in my case go to Lawsons and spend a while looking at them, definitely NOT from Builder Depot or a cheaper place, then they might even be straight. BUT - I think your idea is better. CLS wood is just better for the job. Only thing I'd do differently is the stain, because I prefer a darker wood look like a walnut or something. I'm even tempted to do this project with a special wood like sapele - far more expensive but incomparable price to buying something like that as a "system". Builder Depot does sell this hardwood decking which is Balau I think, a very lovely colour and a stable wood for this job I reckon (although I'm not a wood expert... just my experience using it so far)... although not so easy to work with!
@be96erj7 күн бұрын
Could this method be used for outdoor cladding? If not, perhaps you could do a video on that?!
@crazykittenvideos85510 ай бұрын
This looks the start of an enormous shadow board for all your tools!! Just fit the hangers and draw around the tools! Great idea for the bedroom! Well done!
@Mike-ot6lbАй бұрын
This is perfect, just what I'm looking at doing. Just wondering, should I be concerned about fire retardant materials? Would covering the whole of my stairs wall create a fire risk???? Just wondering
@frederikruis27414 күн бұрын
I've got the same concern. Is it a lot of big matches mounted on burnable material?
@nigelbrooks675610 ай бұрын
Well done on the project , another method would be to use a veneered board for the face slats ok you would see the mdf edges but in reality would look fine and be more stable than using pine which can be very unstable
@shadowminister409010 ай бұрын
I'd thought about a similar project in our hallway, although its fairly narrow and anything thicker than a coat of paint might be a problem. I was a bit surprised you used fabric. I thought you would have just painted it black.
@funnyfarm555510 ай бұрын
From the USA. I like your project. I think I would skip using the planer and just use the random orbital sander. To add a little class to the project you could use a !/8" Round over bit (no corner splinters this way).
@tadkaguy236010 ай бұрын
Looks really good. A question though…would the sunlight fade the material do you think ?
@shahhassan28510 ай бұрын
Thanks man, I was looking for this and you’ve explain it extremely perfectly. Bless you
@jennifermedia62888 ай бұрын
It’s getting nice pieces of pine without the bad knots that’s also tricky
@rootof3vil10 ай бұрын
Isnt it easier to paint wall black and nail or glue timber to the wall?
@ounce89479 ай бұрын
Can you maybe create a video for beginners on the tools needed for woodworking if they want to start a side hustle?
@chrise20210 ай бұрын
Did similar work recently unless you're trying to achieve a real-wood effect. The imperfections in the wood would pop-up significantly. That is the major drawback between a panel vs soft wood.
@peterreime314610 ай бұрын
nice project, although the point of the acoustic slats is that you have a void behind them that is normally filled with acoustic mineralwool to act as sound "sponge", so the MDF board would negate this effect. Alternatively you could do what @pauljai7151 mentioned in his comment and use battens instead, then you can get the sound deadening effect of the wall as well.
@MylesGascoyne10 ай бұрын
The difference in price is down to the quality of the finished job. CLS is full of knots which will pop out and you don;'t get in the more expensive product. You also don't see nail heads. You get what you pay for. The B&Q acoustic panels are rubbish but there are better products out there. If you are going to do it DIY then go to a proper local timber yard (support local business) and get a higher grade of finished timber. You'll have a much better finished job IMO.
@dagda82510 ай бұрын
A jointing jig for your table saw would work for the planing portion of your project. Just be sure the side that rests on the table is square. I'm interested to know how you managed the tendency for big box lumber to move wildly.
@duncanmacleod728310 ай бұрын
Looks fab Stuart, but I'd be a little concerned about the slats and knots shrinking unevenly with the further possibility of the knots weeping - especially if you have central heating.
@bogsdolics10 ай бұрын
Hi Stuart another great video, I love the look but worry it would be a dust collector[I don't like cleaning at the best of times], keep up the good work, G.
@stephenmcgeown10 ай бұрын
I'm so impressed by this project that I think I'll put something similar into one of the kids rooms! BTW, the cost of MDF over there seems so much cheaper than the US. I bought a 2x4 sheet of 1/2" MDF today for $25 :-(
@Pablito24663 ай бұрын
with time the fabric will get a lot of dust I can guarantee! how will you remove it???
@shaunsmith69010 ай бұрын
A great job there Stuart looks well impressive .Keep the video,s coming matey.
@greeney765 ай бұрын
I seen these down B&Q and they look crap, much better done this way. Now my mother will probably make these now iv shared this and shes 68 and has the same table saw as you . Thanks for the video subbed for this top workmanship
@dj0men66610 ай бұрын
These look even better with some led strips in. Really look smart. Nice project but if you were factoring labour in at say 250 per day you are about breaking even. Depends what your time and goals are.
@brianrobson95264 ай бұрын
Paying over the knocker for timber at B&Q. Could’ve saved loads more dosh at a decent timber merchants
@CherDele10 ай бұрын
WaW, ❤ it. I'd love to accomplish something like this but half the size. I'm just not confident around a spinning blade! Can I hire you?!!
@Dibbo19793 ай бұрын
Would using 2 x 1 battern just be as good? Great video
@shaun30-3-mg9zs10 ай бұрын
Hi Stuart, I like it a good build project, cheaper to make and better quality than shop bought As always a great video, Take care
@2logj6 ай бұрын
Amazing.Yes investing in tools saves lots of money. Also ,you forget to add labour for a carpenter for a day. Add £200 per day. The total cost saving will be more than £700.
@roxoriginal73210 ай бұрын
You would be better off making a jig for that planer and turn it into a mini bench top jointer with a fence it’s much easier to push the wood through and quicker as the jig can be clamped down or just screwed onto your work bench .its a lot of work for the average d.i.yer to go through with all that cutting planning n sanding epically when most dont have a table saw.ive not got to the end of your vid yet so it will be interesting to hear what your solution will be ,but yeah ive seen a few of your vids now ,keep up the good work always nice to see well explained tutorials 👍👍