woodbloke":3vexntp2 said:The few times that I've bothered with RC haven't impressed me at all and this is one of them. As always, it's nice soft, squashy white pine that he's using (for both bits I notice) but although the pins were well cut, they were poorly proportioned as the slope looked far greater than 1:6, which is what he ought to have set them out at...setting the apex of the pin at zero also looks wrong (at least in my eyes). The end of the tails were also far too close to the front of the joint...proper convention sets out the end of the socket board in quarters. On his, it looks like there's about 3mm which is far too little.
What is clever is that he did it less than 7 minutes...but why?.. apart from showing us that he's a bit of a smart ar&e.
I'd like to see him do something like this properly using rock maple sides, correct 1:8 slopes on the pins that don't diminish to nothing (2mm is about right for adequate strength, which his won't have) and a decent bit of mahogany for the front.
If you're impressed by the speed, crack on :wink:...if you're not, look elsewhere for best practice - Rob
SBJ":oytm29jw said:woodbloke":oytm29jw said:The few times that I've bothered with RC haven't impressed me at all and this is one of them. As always, it's nice soft, squashy white pine that he's using (for both bits I notice) but although the pins were well cut, they were poorly proportioned as the slope looked far greater than 1:6, which is what he ought to have set them out at...setting the apex of the pin at zero also looks wrong (at least in my eyes). The end of the tails were also far too close to the front of the joint...proper convention sets out the end of the socket board in quarters. On his, it looks like there's about 3mm which is far too little.
What is clever is that he did it less than 7 minutes...but why?.. apart from showing us that he's a bit of a smart ar&e.
I'd like to see him do something like this properly using rock maple sides, correct 1:8 slopes on the pins that don't diminish to nothing (2mm is about right for adequate strength, which his won't have) and a decent bit of mahogany for the front.
If you're impressed by the speed, crack on :wink:...if you're not, look elsewhere for best practice - Rob
:lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: You've got to be joking, right?
Alf":2pgqgc8c said:but at best that's just a party piece.
David C":39l40wpk said:Yes,
for the opposite end of the spectrum, my chisel use dvd goes significantly slower..........
David Charlesworth
http://www.davidcharlesworth.co.uk
Chems":2gd77ncj said:Saw this the other day and I thought that the wood must be butter!
David C":2eelcny2 said:Yes,
for the opposite end of the spectrum, my chisel use dvd goes significantly slower..........
David Charlesworth
http://www.davidcharlesworth.co.uk
Agreed Alf, it's a party piece, a bit fun. The problem is that people see this clip and think it's the right way to go about the business when clearly it's not. If RC slowed down a bit and did some serious stuff (maybe he does :duno: ) then what he does would be a bit more believable. As it is, this is just clever tosh which doesn't take a lot of unravelling.Alf":plx1wz22 said:I love Rob Cosman madly*, but at best that's just a party piece. At worst I worry it could give neophyte's unrealistic expectations and put them off for life when they can't meet them. Not really one of RC's best uses of saw and video camera.
*Just resist, okay?
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