andersonec
Established Member
A quick dovetail box and I mean quick!!!!!!!!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=14RSFkOmncs
Watch out Ian Hawthorne.
Andy
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=14RSFkOmncs
Watch out Ian Hawthorne.
Andy
Lons":26avqqrp said:Facinating - Thanks for sharing that, I was glued to it openmouthed
I couldn't do that in a million years - but then I wouldn't want to. A close look at him cutting the horizontals with the coping saw shows more undulations than the Himalayas so what's the point in speed at the cost of quality, except for the excercise to show it can be done?
I think a video showing how to cut a joint properly is much more valuable, especially to newcomers.
cheers
Bob
I bet you could if you just put the time in. The main thing is repetition - once you have the basic technique then the more you do it the better it gets until you hit the optimum compromise between speed and qualityLons":2h3ifk6m said:....
I couldn't do that in a million years -...
If you wanted a better finish you'd cut the shoulder lines first with a knife, and then chisel back to the line. Otherwise you'd do it just the sameA close look at him cutting the horizontals with the coping saw shows more undulations than the Himalayas so what's the point in speed at the cost of quality, except for the excercise to show it can be done?
That is how to do it properly. A beginner might need to do more marking up, but free-handing is the way to go eventually.I think a video showing how to cut a joint properly is much more valuable, especially to newcomers.
cheers
Bob
I bet you could if you just put the time in. The main thing is repetition - once you have the basic technique then the more you do it the better it gets until you hit the optimum compromise between speed and quality
If you wanted a better finish you'd cut the shoulder lines first with a knife, and then chisel back to the line. Otherwise you'd do it just the same
That is how to do it properly. A beginner might need to do more marking up, but free-handing is the way to go eventually.
No you have entirely missed my point. Not stirring the pot! As if I would. :roll:Lons":2g5lgv3n said:Jacob
You've entirely missed my point ......
:lol:Mike Wingate":3ijop3du said:..... A level group who are doing a box with finger/comb joints. They are taking hours and hours with their box. I demo'd a box with comb joints on the Incra jig router table setup earlier to them, that took 4 minutes and really put them off ......
Jacob":2x5rrrvl said:No you have entirely missed my point. Not stirring the pot! As if I would. :roll:Lons":2x5rrrvl said:Jacob
You've entirely missed my point ......
You are wrong - what he shows is the essentials of how to make dovetails properly. Yes it is possible to refine them - mainly by cutting a shoulder line and chiselling back to it, but he does a good demo of the basic technique.
PS There's nothing he 's doing which you shouldn't do, no wrong information, but yes there are more things you could do if you want a better joint, which you may or may not, depending on what you are making.
He doesn't show the universal single kerf DT which is actually slightly easier than his demo. Nor does he show a blind DT as found on most drawers. But he does a good, basic, perfectly correct demo of a simple DT technique.
Jacob":2ugymcxu said:You are making the basic mistake of equating "quick" with "rough".
I think it's an interesting video.
It's part of the answer to the question "How did furniture makers of the 19th century manage to build items by hand quickly enough to be able to sell them at a price that the market would stand?" To make things quickly, without machinery, you need to work quickly and efficiently. So, in this demo, he does not bother with any marking lines that he does not need to look at, and does not further refine cuts which are good enough for their intended purpose. He produces a finished box which looks equal to the sort of furniture that was bought by ordinary people for a long time. It's not the finest work - they could not have afforded that.
One of the positive things about the discussions on this board is that they cover a wide range of angles - people making different grades of work, by hand and by machine, for sale or for the love of it. There is never just one right answer. What works for me as a hobby would be hopeless if I wanted to make a living at it. The techniques needed to make a rabbit hutch would be no good for a writing desk.
Where I would disagree with him is on the use of these techniques for drawers - where the need to cut lap dovetails favours sawing tails first, which are then worth gang-sawing for a further time saving, with quick chiselling on thin stock rather than all that coping saw work.
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