7 Most CONTROVERSIAL CUTTING Techniques in Carpentry + Woodworking! (Safe or Not Safe?!)

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  • čas přidán 3. 05. 2024
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    7 Most CONTROVERSIAL CUTTING Techniques in Carpentry + Woodworking! (Safe or Not Safe?!)
    There are often a lot of differences between what gets taught about power tool usage on CZcams channels...and what actually gets practiced out in the construction field.
    This video from The Honest Carpenter explains seven of the most controversial cutting techniques in carpentry and woodworking--things that some pros do, but many DIYers are told not to do.
    The various cutting techniques for circular saw, miter saw, and table saw are examined for exactly what makes them dangerous, and also what also makes them safe at times, or solves some other problem.
    REMEMBER: You should follow manufacturer guidelines and typical safety procedures every time you use your power tools. This is just an informational video. ANY WORK YOU TAKE ON IS AT YOUR OWN RISK. WE DO NOT ASSUME ANY RESPONSIBILITY FOR YOUR SAFETY.
    Thank you!
    The Honest Carpenter
  • Jak na to + styl

Komentáře • 641

  • @Townie001
    @Townie001 Před 4 měsíci +100

    You are not a carpenter until you have completed a journeyman course and worked in the field for at least 8 years. I started in 1968 and retired in 2010; worked residential and commercial as a journeyman union carpenter. The only accident I had was a strained back. I love to listen to these so-called honest carpenters that sound like junior high shop teachers with little or no actual field experience.

    • @TheHonestCarpenter
      @TheHonestCarpenter  Před 4 měsíci +336

      Boss, I get you. But I started working construction at the age of 13 way back in 1995. We didn’t have apprenticeships in NC back then, and still don’t. I’m sure you’re highly experienced, but you’re not the only one in the world who knows how to use a circular saw. Being salty and mad on the internet doesn’t really help anybody-it’s just something you do to make yourself feel superior. 😂 Construction needs less of that, I assure you.

    • @Townie001
      @Townie001 Před 4 měsíci

      @TheHonestCarpenter Boy, you are truly full of yourself. Do you mean to tell me anyone in North Carolina can just call them selves a carpenter. If you consider my comment, salty or angry, you definitely don't have any real time in the field as a tradesman of any kind.❗️👎

    • @kennywoods7232
      @kennywoods7232 Před 4 měsíci +15

      @@TheHonestCarpenter Townie has a point, you're saying that you have all this experience and trying to teach these newbies this stuff, but you really are lacking the most important lessons, not being stupid about it, and having respect for the process. You're trying to teach someone to drive a car without imparting that that car can kill, maim, or destroy. That is not only dishonest, but inherently irresponsible. There are many practices that anyone can shoot a vid about and say "This will kill you if you do!!!", but is commonplace in the trades. Why is it commonplace? Because when you teach someone how to operate those machines you explain all of it, not just go for the thirst traps. And you also chose to insult Townie, yes he insulted you first, but he had a valid point. And before you think I'm attacking you, I like a lot of your videos, I disliked this one for obvious reasons, and I dislike all of the other doom-saying thirst trapping half thought out "instructional" videos out there.

    • @darrylemmerson3344
      @darrylemmerson3344 Před 4 měsíci

      You all three sound like 10 years old in school yard & jeez enough already & to each his or her own WOW argue to make a point and good luck

    • @Mrblueridgeman
      @Mrblueridgeman Před 4 měsíci +139

      @@kennywoods7232 that a power tool like a saw can hurt you is pretty obvious and doesn’t need to be belabored. I don’t think this video was intended for master carpenters with 40 yrs of experience. It’s an interesting vid for people like me who occasionally pick up some tools to do a project. There’s an old saying that “an amateur breaks the rules and doesn’t know it (dangerous). A professional may knowingly break a rule, but understands the risk and make adjustments.” You guys need to relax a little.

  • @probuilder961
    @probuilder961 Před 5 měsíci +211

    Testimony: 34 years ago when I was 21, I took the guard off my 10" Miter saw to cut 4 1/4" baseboard. The saw was on the floor, & once when I got up after a cut, my hand swung into the blade as the brake just engaged. Cut between my right thumb & wrist, cut the radial nerve & hit the bone. 22 stitches to close it up. I was lucky, lost no permanent function. I put the guard back on.

    • @richardghost5701
      @richardghost5701 Před 4 měsíci +13

      Thanks for sharing! Glad it didn’t do any permanent damage chap! 😮

    • @XXXston3wallXXX
      @XXXston3wallXXX Před 4 měsíci +4

      Thank you

    • @bl9531
      @bl9531 Před 4 měsíci +7

      A very experienced and otherwise intelligent carpenter I worked with also lost a couple of fingers to a mitre saw whose blade guard had been removed. Most of us are prone to rushing and an accident only takes the slightest instant of distraction.

    • @brandonhoffman4712
      @brandonhoffman4712 Před 2 měsíci +1

      More reasons not to work on the floor. My father does that crap readily. (Not the blade gaurd but floor cutting)
      It's horrible for workflow.
      Was your saw not a sliding compound? Our bosch 12" slices any molding I've thrown @ it and the gaurd is never an issue.

    • @probuilder961
      @probuilder961 Před 2 měsíci +1

      @brandonhoffman4712 It was 34 years ago, I'm pretty sure there were no sliding compound miter saws. If there was, I couldn't afford one. I'm 55 now and have refined my work habits.

  • @centurion2185
    @centurion2185 Před 4 měsíci +90

    I’m a retired orthopedic surgeon who also taught high school shop including wood shop prior to starting medical school.
    They are basically , in many ways, the same job.
    A very important technique which is never discussed but is a potentially deadly error .
    I learned this while exiting the Emergency door while leaving the hospital one morning.
    I encountered a man entering the ER who had just managed to drive himself to the ER after having a table saw accident.
    I shall attempt to reconstruct the accident in words as I can’t draw pictures.
    He had a 5 foot length approximately 1 foot wide board with one straight edge.
    The other edge was angle along the entire length of the board edge opposite the straight edge.
    He wanted to cut the board so as to have a resultant board with two parallel straight edges but retains the maximum remains width of the board.
    He measured this width setting by conveniently laying the narrowest width of the tapered board by adjusting the fence with the straight edge of the board against the fence and moving the fence until just the narrowest point of the board just fit adjacent to the innermost side of the saw blade.
    The mistake was that he flipped the board end over end so as to get a square starting entrance into the wider end of the board.
    As he cut, the end of the waste side of the board became narrower and narrower until it had a knifelike or, in this case , spear like edge pointing straight back at him.
    He had no guard except for riving knife and as the heavier end of the waste piece was now over the unsupported out feed side of the table the waste stock caught over the top of the blade driving it into his neck.
    I later learned , from the vascular surgeon who took him to surgery , that it had miraculously lodged in between the carotid artery and vein without actually severing either of them.
    The patient supported the length of the piece with his left hand as he somehow got into his own vehicle and drove him into the hospital.
    That is where I encountered him and learned the story after I asked him how he got this “splinter” 😏?
    I escorted him into the ER and got a diagonal pliers from maintenance and trimmed it to a more manageable 4 inches. That’s when I could see it pulsating with every beat of his heart . I stayed with him until the vascular surgeon arrived.
    The lesson I would hope you would convey in a future video is that when cutting a tapered board to have two parallel edges , THAT THE NARROW END OF THE BOARD ENTER THE SAW BLADE FIRST THEREBY ALLOWING THE OPERATOR TO GET STRUCK WITH THE MORE BLUNT END OF THE WASTE STOCK SHOULD IT LAUNCH REARWARD TOWARD THE OPERATOR !
    Note that if starting with the wider width first as the waste stock narrows, even with anti kick back dogs in place, the sliver may be too thin for the dog teeth to grasp the spear. It may just enter your abdomen instead of your neck.
    Again please spread this advice as I gave adhered to this lesson for forty years.

    • @philipwhichard8197
      @philipwhichard8197 Před 4 měsíci +16

      EXCELLENT DESCRIPTION! I can almost 'see' it. Scary.

    • @starfishsystems
      @starfishsystems Před 4 měsíci +9

      There's another reason for cutting in this orientation, and that's to hold the waste piece as firmly as possible until the cut is completed. This results in a more controlled cut and less chance of kickback.

    • @grimface
      @grimface Před 4 měsíci +2

      The table saw is the scariest saw I've got. I got it used, and the guard was already missing. Thankfully, I'm paranoid with safety and PPE, and I never stop paying attention while using it, and I have rules I never break with it, such as leaning over it, even a little bit, unless it's not running.
      The other kind if scary one is the sawzall. What I don't like is that my forward hand can't wrap my fingers all the way around, and it is always on my mind that I'm going to lose my grip, which might be why I haven't yet *knocks on wood*.
      The circular saw is dangerous too, but at least I can get a solid grip on it. I would never use my foot to lift a board to do a cut, because I can always use something else to hold up the board for me.

    • @wulf67
      @wulf67 Před 4 měsíci +4

      Or…just don’t ever hang out in the firing line behind the offcut. I don’t want to get hit with EITHER the sharp end or the blunt end of that spear kicking back at 120 miles an hour. Instead of planning which end of the offcut you want to be impaled on, it might be better, easier, and wiser to tell folks to never stand there in the first place, just like you don’t look down the barrel of a loaded gun or put your head in a crocodile’s mouth. You don’t have to be a brain surgeon to figure that out. I would be surprised if the lesson that man came away from that accident with was to make sure he got hit with the dull end of the kick-back stick next time! How about don’t get hit at all?

    • @Version135
      @Version135 Před 4 měsíci +4

      Good job describing and thank God for that shot placement! I'll remember this. Thank you.

  • @Mrblueridgeman
    @Mrblueridgeman Před 4 měsíci +32

    For as long as I can remember my Dad had a Sears table saw, old school: heavy steel body, belt driven with external motor. I never saw a blade guard on it….so as a kid, I figured that was normal. As an adult I bought my own table saw and thought blade guards were a “more recent” safety feature. Fast forward many years and after Dad passed, my brother and I were going through all of his tools and, at the very back of a drawer of this
    huge tool chest (he built it) was the blade guard to his saw! Apparently never used. That’s my Dad. BTW he died at a ripe old age with all his fingers. That saw was a keeper; my brother has it….and the blade guard😀

  • @wilburrrrr742
    @wilburrrrr742 Před 5 měsíci +43

    As a 20+ yr wood hobbyist and a 45 yr professional commercial electrical foreman, I applaud your safety focus.
    I've seen people injured on jobsites and it's life-altering. I'm happy to say that none of my men ever left the job in an ambulance because I was such an anal S.O.B. about it. Especially because people tend to think that they know how it's gonna go, but don't consider what could possibly happen.
    The parallel is the same. You don't know what you don't know.
    If you're a hobbyist, and especially new at it, then you don't know. Time is not an issue for you. Keeping your limbs and digits should be.
    Be safe out there, gentlemen. Most of us work alone. There might not be anyone to hear your cries over the tool noise. 😮

    • @TheHonestCarpenter
      @TheHonestCarpenter  Před 5 měsíci +8

      Well put, Rick! 🙏

    • @jodilea144
      @jodilea144 Před 5 měsíci +7

      So true! The one or two times I’ve been tempted to try a risky cut, all I have to do is remind myself that I live way out in the country and work by myself at least 80% of the time!
      Edit: autocorrect mistake🙄

    • @angellas.1314
      @angellas.1314 Před 5 měsíci +2

      Omg. This sounds really scary.

    • @wilburrrrr742
      @wilburrrrr742 Před 5 měsíci +4

      Way to go, making me feel like a jerk now!
      I was originally going to edit my comment to say "ladies and gentlemen", but then I thought "nah, it'll be alright". I see more and more gals are getting into this hobby as is obvious by the replies.
      My apologies 😕

    • @jodilea144
      @jodilea144 Před 5 měsíci +6

      @@wilburrrrr742 ha! I didn’t take offense at all! I’m not that girl! 😁

  • @kevinc1956
    @kevinc1956 Před 5 měsíci +39

    While working on a bridge construction crew about 40 years ago a young laborer (new hire) tried to do a “knee cut”on a 2x4. He cut his thigh pretty badly when the worm drive saw he was using kicked back. He had previously seen older workers doing knee cuts (I never did). I wound up driving him to the hospital, which was about 30 miles away, quite a few stitches and multiple layers. There was not a lot of emphasis put on job site safety back then, and not just in the carpentry end of construction. I now credit my several years of construction work as a major contributor to my poor hearing now.

    • @jerrellbevers6071
      @jerrellbevers6071 Před 4 měsíci +9

      This is one thing I do preach to younger carpenters all the time. Don't let old timers try to shame you into being deaf or blind...put on your glasses and your ear plugs.
      But don't ask me where the harness is because ain't nobody got time for that or even knows how to put it on. Welcome to hard dollar in Texas baby!

    • @markgarland9000
      @markgarland9000 Před 4 měsíci +6

      ​@@jerrellbevers6071I want to yell at these guys who won't use eye and ear protection!
      Starting out as a remodeler in the mid '70s, and for it least a decade beyond, I didn't use ear protection. Now I deal with a significant amount of ear ringing. Tinnitus! It's no fun.
      I tell the young guys if they want to be able to hear the laughter of their children, and then grandchildren, to wear those earplugs! I keep fresh ones on hand at all times.

    • @markgarland9000
      @markgarland9000 Před 4 měsíci +3

      I've used the "knee cut" on a few occasions. Afterwards I realize how incredibly stupid it was! I know I used up my odds of going uninjured after getting through it.

    • @kevinc1956
      @kevinc1956 Před 4 měsíci +2

      @@jerrellbevers6071 Harness? Oh yeah, that’s probably in the tool trailer with the board stretcher…. 😁

    • @imwithstupid086
      @imwithstupid086 Před 3 měsíci +2

      @@markgarland9000 Yelling won't do any good. They won't hear you anyway.

  • @NewYorker8312
    @NewYorker8312 Před 5 měsíci +28

    I have to tell you what I like about your channel. It is related to my favorite saying. It goes, the smart man learns from his own mistakes, the wise man learns from others mistakes, and the fool learns from nobody’s mistakes. We are able to get wisdom from your mistakes or actually from your wisdom in seeing other peoples mistakes. By watching your channel, we can avoid a lot of grief and learn how to do things in the correct safe way. Thank you.😊

  • @HyperactiveNeuron
    @HyperactiveNeuron Před 5 měsíci +19

    Keep em coming!
    My first thought with power tools in general is "is this a good idea?" I have great respect for any power tool, saws especially because i almost cut off my thumb when I was a kid "helping" my dad. It was decades ago and it was a hand saw but I still vividly remember the pain, the steel scratching my bone, the blood, the tears... Trust me... You do not want to know. I'm 49 and to this day, when I prep to make a cut, the first thing I do is look to make sure my right thumb is safe because i almost cut it off. Play it safe kids... Don't "play" with saws. They're not toys. They're made to remove things and it will hurt really bad and you will regret it for the rest of your life. Play stupid games, win stupid prizes.

  • @jimgordon3206
    @jimgordon3206 Před 4 měsíci +8

    I’ve been a carpenter since 1976. I’m retired now. I still have all my fingers and toes. I’ve never had an accident with a power tool. I’ve done all those things while working. If you use the opposite foot than the hand you’re holding the saw with there in no problem with using your foot to hold a board off the floor. That stance is stable and you’re not standing in a awkward position. Your foot is also much further from the blade. I’ve done it with 1x4 up to large pieces of plywood.

  • @markb.1259
    @markb.1259 Před 4 měsíci +21

    Ethan, you are one of VERY FEW content makers that actually give safety talks and mean it!! THANK YOU!!!

  • @sambulate
    @sambulate Před 4 měsíci +5

    Earning my OSHA 30 card was one of the best things that could have happened to me, even at 49 years old. Our class sat for an entire semester, learning about all the ways you can die, and all the ways your life can change doing tradeswork--no matter how old you are or how much experience you have. Most folks were bored, but that class changed the way I look at everything. I already knew this life is precious, but it really drove home just how much.
    By the way, I'm a North Carolinian, too. If they'd had apprenticeships here, I might have gotten into the field long ago. As it is, you chance learning from people who believe that these techniques are safe. I would have liked to have gotten into this work, but I also feel as if I dodged a bullet.
    Thanks for the excellent content!

  • @frosted1030
    @frosted1030 Před 4 měsíci +3

    Thank you thank you thank you!
    I am a beginner, working on very small jobs around the house and you have given me the confidence to tackle some basic jobs.
    Today I patched a hole in the floor by cutting a board with a low end circular saw that I measured from the blade and guided with a level, measuring with a speed square, and using a drill block to keep my pilot holes straight. There are many more projects around the home that require more skill. I purchased a kreg 520 pro pocket hole jig to get started. This house needs a whole lot of work, thank you for the inspiration and skill sharing!

  • @thedirtprincess3293
    @thedirtprincess3293 Před 5 měsíci +9

    Well done. I agree that ignoring the topics or saying, "just never do it" us unhelpful. Real discussion is important.

  • @Clownmeati8
    @Clownmeati8 Před 5 měsíci +13

    I was on a job site where a guy had his blade guard blocked open. He was making a cut up on the roof holding a 2x4 in his hand and bracing against his leg. im not sure if he wasnt paying attention but the saw ran through and hit the front of his leg at the ankle cutting almost the depth of the blade. Not only that but with the force he was using to push through the wood he hit his leg again before he could react. The second hit got through his bone and his foot was barely attached by a small piece of skin. Not only was he badly injured but now he also had to be rescued from the roof. His life changed forever that day. Im 55 now and ive seen three other very serious life altering accidents at work and probably hundreds of "pretty bad" ones. It only takes that one time and theres no going back, no oops, and no do overs... please take safety seriously. When you take risks you put the people you love and who need and depend on you to be whole at risk too. Not to mention even just the pretty bad ones end up with hospital and doctors and follow ups and medications. Often a surgery or two or more. Out of work for days weeks months.. Physical therapy, appointments, care and assistance from your loved ones family or friends. Even if the docs can fix you up like new its not worth it.

    • @angellas.1314
      @angellas.1314 Před 5 měsíci +3

      😢😢😮😮😮😮 omg. 😱 the few seconds saved is not worth it.

  • @hardrock1826
    @hardrock1826 Před 5 měsíci +6

    I have done a lot of Flip Rips because I don't have the room in my small, crowded shop. When doing the rip, I take it past the halfway point. And when I stop, before flipping my work over to complete the cut. I always shut the saw OFF.
    I always use push sticks on my Cabinet Saw. And I always try to stand slightly to the side when pushing work through the blade. I don't use my hands to push the work through the blade ever. If I am using full 4' X 8' sheets and cutting them down to a working size for projects. I always use my Worm Saw to cut the sheets down to size before using the Cabinet Saw for the finish steps of my work. It's easier to do the work making the final cuts on the project wood and it's a lot safer.
    Oh my, I have seen so many use their foot to cut two by fours or bigger construction lumber. Just making a cut like that, I use one of my work tables. I have 4 Black and Decker tables that I can clamp the wood piece in place. There is no substitute for safety.

  • @donalsakran1971
    @donalsakran1971 Před 5 měsíci +6

    In big commercial projects all of these (or most) of these methods are the norm.
    Eg if I was the cut man on a reshoring crew and I was pulling my speed square on every 4x4 or 4x6 post I’d be slowing down the whole operation: Flipping the post while keeping the saw stable is the way to go. Would I recommend that to a DYIer? Nope.
    It’s all about ur experience level. I have made literally thousands of these cuts as part of my job. Nothing special just time on task.
    Being a pro vs a DYIer is different.
    U see gymnasts doing a complicated routine, u don’t go yeah I can do that. But for some reason ppl think they can do what the pros do with no consequences and without putting the time in.
    Thanks for the vid 🙏

  • @sawdustadikt979
    @sawdustadikt979 Před 5 měsíci +20

    I’ve been doing this long enough that I was taught how to do a “boot cut” in trade school, I still do them. That being said I think you make a lot of good points here for folks new to this. Taking responsibility for your actions, thinking things through all the way, every day, not blaming things because you took a risk or were not paying attention and lost a couple fingers goes a long way. There is a lot of idiot proofing out there that I personally skip, and if it goes wrong I’ll own it like everything else. I also see a lot of straight up Darwin Award stuff as well. Some tradesmen are riding one long wave of good luck and they mistake it for skill.

    • @peterwhitcomb8315
      @peterwhitcomb8315 Před měsícem +1

      A Community College instructor for carpentry/forestry showed us his medical slides of his cut foot (from the early 80's) after doing the "Boot Cut." Steel Toes is only thing that saved his toes/foot as the blade lodged into the steel. His other lesson from that slide was to never use a dull/damaged blade (which is why the blade seized and he then "muscled" it into his foot and not the wood). He's probably retired by now but he definitely saw a lot, like you.

  • @whomadethatsaltysoup
    @whomadethatsaltysoup Před 5 měsíci +28

    Top safety tips. Thanks for taking the time to share them with the community. I'd say the most important tip to staying in one piece when using power tools has to be taking your time and not rushing. Of course, you make the point that when we are working on site, and up against it, there is always a tendency to take short cuts. That might be an option for experienced professionals, but not for the hobby woodworker, who - often as not - will be working alone in a garage workshop.
    The foot support, for me anyway, seemed the most ill advised, although none of the dodgy practices mentioned seem at all necessary.

    • @rickrudd
      @rickrudd Před 5 měsíci

      Also, it goes without saying, but when do we cut the miter/notch/etc etc on the wrong side? When we rush.
      90% of my mistakes? Late in the day. Trying to finish something off before I quit.

  • @seanhiscock
    @seanhiscock Před 5 měsíci +3

    Another good video Ethan. Doing a lot of my work alone, I have used some of these but not others. Knowing I am alone, I tend to review the safety in my head & take my time. I never use my foot or leg as a stand or prop-up for cutting any lumber. I have tried flip cutting but only on a flimsy piece of panel because it flexed so much even with a support stand.

  • @RYwoodview
    @RYwoodview Před 5 měsíci +3

    Thank you, Ethan. That is an excellent discussion. I've seen some of these techniques, and might come up with the ones I haven't seen. Now I understand the safety tradeoffs of each and won't try them blindly.

  • @supermodestmouse
    @supermodestmouse Před 5 měsíci +10

    i'm still really new to woodworking and power tools. but i have a huge respect for that power as well. I've been going with the mindset of being intentional and not forcing something if it isn't going through. I really appreciate the tips and techniques in how to safely use these tools, esp when injury can happen so quickly and suddenly.

    • @Philly-lq6zr
      @Philly-lq6zr Před měsícem

      Battery tools better , no cords , stops quicker , ,has torque, does the job , little quieter not as dangerous but still need use right skills , , , get brushes, for commercial use , I still prefer to use hand tools , still can cut just be smart 😊

  • @johnford7847
    @johnford7847 Před 5 měsíci +4

    As a complete amateur, I found this very informative and hopefully, I'll be more critical of some of the things I see done on CZcams. Thank you.

  • @funlarry4145
    @funlarry4145 Před 4 měsíci +4

    Great Video. It does not matter your skill level/experience. Refreshing/learning some safety is never a bad idea. Great instructions for beginner DIYers.

  • @JackKirbyFan
    @JackKirbyFan Před 5 měsíci +15

    As I get older, man those safety tips become far more critical to my survival :) Very important tips Nate.
    Recently I got into making wooden spoons from scrap. The scary parts are using a router table to round the handle and using a flush-trim bit to create multiple copies. Spoons are not large objects and tackling it, even with 20 years+ of experience on a router - I'm still extremely cautious because it just takes one careless move with your fingers and then its' fingers - 1.
    Dave...

    • @PeterLawton
      @PeterLawton Před 5 měsíci +1

      *Ethan

    • @ranger178
      @ranger178 Před 4 měsíci +1

      i returned a small router i bought because it was a death trap you could just easily stick finger on spinning tool while holding it in one hand no guard to cover sides of cutting tool

    • @JackKirbyFan
      @JackKirbyFan Před 4 měsíci +2

      @@ranger178 IMHO, routers in general are the most dangerous tools a woodworker can use. Granted, grinders are extremely dangerous but I rarely use one. Routers, I can't make any furniture without that terrifying tool.

    • @ranger178
      @ranger178 Před 4 měsíci

      grinders I use a lot with cut off wheels and wire brushes and such i don't use the crazy chainsaw attachment on them I can bump grinder disks and just get a small abrasion.
      but routers will just chop away anything that touches them before you can't react fast enough my brother was doing a pantograph letters and numbers with one and somebody distracted him, and he sliced a grove right across his finger through everything.@@JackKirbyFan

  • @profcah
    @profcah Před 5 měsíci +1

    Great video. Good explanations of things that i shouldn’t do but sometimes do. Now that I’m older I don’t try them anymore. Thanks Ethan

  • @fisherman1353
    @fisherman1353 Před 4 měsíci +5

    Something that isn’t mentioned many times is when cutting lumber be careful of the piece breaking of while cutting,very important to check for cracks in the wood,I’ve seen projectiles flying off the table saw when cutting as the wood breaks and the part left between the blade and fence becomes a bullet

  • @johnduffy6546
    @johnduffy6546 Před 5 měsíci +2

    Thank you for a great video. I am fairly "green" with table saws but, I have seen the instant damage they can do when bad judgement comes into play.

  • @Tito1984
    @Tito1984 Před 3 měsíci +2

    Great video. I learned a few things that I guess I should have known before. I have remodeled homes for decades. Framing is a very small percentage of the work I do. I really like the table saw gravity technique. Looking forward to trying it out sometime. Ha ha.
    I can't imagine not flip ripping.
    I'm older now and seldom cut off the foot method. Aluminum benches are pretty cheep now and scatter my project sites. However, when I used to do it I used the far foot (for a righty, the left) to hold the board, for better balance stability and distance from the cut. Importantly I would put a tilt on the board which is easy to do with your leg and foot. This allows the the saw to more easily glide down the cut. I have felt this gravity method makes it much easier to control the heavy saw even compared to cutting from a bench.
    I am impressed with your you tube and wish I had your knowledge presentation skills. Thank you.

  • @yha8730
    @yha8730 Před 4 dny

    Thanks for the very informative video. Its really helping beginners like me. I see loads if “Don’t come to teach me” comments but I can assure you that you are doing an excellent job. Keep it up buddy.

  • @larryh7760
    @larryh7760 Před 5 měsíci +20

    I'm building a new house, and the framers were just scary with the things they do. I've seen cutting using feet and knees to support the board. Watching them hold a board with one hand and cut with the other while balancing themselves on rafters was quite a trick as well. Nice guys, and they seemed very skilled, but they were difficult to watch as a retired quality and safety guy.

    • @johnriley8713
      @johnriley8713 Před 5 měsíci +5

      I see that and cringe...yeah, they may not be operating safely, but they're almost certainly not getting an accurate cut, either.

    • @stiiizyking9732
      @stiiizyking9732 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Always cut on foot

    • @mhzprayer
      @mhzprayer Před 4 měsíci +5

      Yeah that's the thing about safety practices right...they never really matter a lot of the time, especially if you have some practice under your belt. Until suddenly they do.

  • @jefff6167
    @jefff6167 Před 5 měsíci +2

    Thanks for having the guts to create and post this video. Crucial information. 👍🇺🇸

  • @nathanb3606
    @nathanb3606 Před 4 měsíci +1

    It's nice to see that I wasn't the only greenhorn on the job site that thought the older guys were a bit nuts for doing the "boot cut" and several other techiniques shown on this video. That being said, I learned how to do the "boot cut" and all the others because most of the time (read 100% of the time) we didn't have a cushy garage/workshop to work from. I do think that it's great that these videos do bring up a firestorm of comments from the old hands on down. IMHO, if you aren't thinking of how to do every cut safely to the best of your ability you're not being a good carpenter as your quality of work only increases with that thought process.

  • @user-rz3ro9lu6o
    @user-rz3ro9lu6o Před 27 dny

    Thanks for the great video. You convinced me that I really need to replace my old slider miter saw (yay!!). Of its many defects, is the need to disable the blade guard when doing bevel cuts, particularly on baseboards. The blade guard works fine with straight or miter cuts, but tilt it over to do bevel cuts and the blade guard just binds and causes bad cuts. So, I have always waited for the blade to stop before raising the blade to hopefully help with safety, AND to stop the blade from wandering on the way up out of the cut. Thanks again.

  • @T.E.P..
    @T.E.P.. Před 3 měsíci

    Thanks again for making your channel ..... it's been a HUGE delight and educational being subbed all these years

  • @Phil_Goodman
    @Phil_Goodman Před 4 měsíci +2

    These safety videos are so valuable. Love them.

  • @jan-hinnerkwilkens6597
    @jan-hinnerkwilkens6597 Před 4 měsíci

    Thanks from Germany. Your tips are internationally controversal but even more appreciated.

  • @jerrycash5606
    @jerrycash5606 Před měsícem

    Awesome. Thanks for the new tricks. I started in 1980, some of those are new to me.

  • @kendehaas668
    @kendehaas668 Před 5 měsíci +1

    Thank you for the good safety tips. I have violated a few, but not many ( & don't want to try the others). Usually, the safer methods provide a better product at the end of the day.

  • @markmcgoveran6811
    @markmcgoveran6811 Před 4 měsíci

    I love you for posting this instead of telling everybody never do it you just give an explanation of how it can go wrong. I have one rule never run the saw. So I do have to get something done so I'm going to break the rule a little bit but never run the saw one time is okay if you were going to run a saw set it all the way up and take it all the way down. If there's anything questionable you're about to do don't do it. If you have to do something questionable for productivity stay right on top of it understand the forces involved. Do it if you have to but find the safest way you can.

  • @hal0hal0mc
    @hal0hal0mc Před 4 měsíci +4

    Always ask yourself where your fingers are before the cut so you don't have to ask where they are after the cut.
    I think flip ripping is the only one I've done when it was long rips so i could end my cut halfway. As long as you are very certain you have good fence alignment, i prefer it to a single pass because my hands are ultimately further from the blade.
    With the table saw i always try to stablize my hand on something like the outside edge of the table or sticking my thumb in the miter slot so i don't make reckless movements in the blade path.

  • @MrDhandley
    @MrDhandley Před 5 měsíci

    Excellent video. Very informative. Something else you might consider doing in the future is rotary impact very hammer drill. Not the one that you use for putting screws. The two types that can drill into masonry.

  • @qapla
    @qapla Před 5 měsíci +3

    Great safety tips and reminders. I've known many guys who cut on their foot. All it takes is slipping once to be left with a prosthetic. One tip I would offer is that, when cutting 2x's, use the speed square! It is way too easy to drift off the line and have the saw bind ... sending it back at you while still spinning.

    • @shanemedlin9400
      @shanemedlin9400 Před 2 měsíci

      @qapla I've been cutting on my foot for thirty-five years, and every other pro carpenter who knows his trade does the same. All pro framers that I've ever met do it that way. I've even been known to work barefoot, and with a chain saw, too. I've never seen any of the guys cut themselves with a skilsaw.
      I guess I'm just old school.

  • @Trapper_Creek_2024
    @Trapper_Creek_2024 Před 5 měsíci +5

    Don’t EVER make a cut on a table saw without using the fence or the miter gauge! I’ve seen guys try to rip a 10” wide strip from a full sheet of plywood _freehand_ because the table is too narrow to handle the width of the sheet. All kinds of chaos can happen in this scenario - just don’t do it!!
    I saw a guy with a circular saw try to balance a sheet of plywood on his knee so he could cut a corner off to make the ply fit the opening he was working on. Yep. He did it. Earned himself a really fast trip to the ER with a quickly-fashioned tourniquet above his knee. He just missed the bones and ligaments by millimeters.
    I saw another guy standing at the top of a ladder running a circular saw *above his head* 😱😳 trying to cut the ends of a pergola off. He earned an intensely fast trip to the ER with a cop sitting across his midsection trying to hold his leg together and another cop jamming his fingers into the guy’s femoral artery, pressing it against the femur to slow the bleeding. He darn near lost his life that day, and then a week later he darn near lost his leg from the hip joint down because the wound became so infected from the sawdust and the gunk from the saw blade. That blade went clear in past the arbor, the blade still spinning, it slid just past the guy’s femur … he was still pulling the trigger when he fell off the ladder. A co-worker was walking past the drop cord and saw it jerking and moving around as the guy was falling off the ladder - he didn’t know what was going on but he grabbed the cord and yanked it out of the outlet that was 10’ feet away because he knew it wasn’t good. The guy wasn’t so lucky with keeping his job - the company owner took him off the payroll that day but didn’t tell him he was fired until everyone knew he was going to survive with his leg intact. It took him over a year to relearn how to walk.
    You just can’t ever be too careful around power tools!

    • @michaelthayer824
      @michaelthayer824 Před 3 dny

      someone who uses a table saw to cut a 10" strip from a piece of plywood (fence or no fence) rather than using a handheld circular saw is making life harder for themselves and probably the kind of person prone to an accident. I make table saw cuts without the fence every single day I'm at work. It's the only way to make diagonal cuts. Totally normal and safe practice.

    • @Trapper_Creek_2024
      @Trapper_Creek_2024 Před dnem

      @@michaelthayer824
      Ok, the 10” slice was an example meant to gather attention as in “what not to do with a piece of power equipment”. As far as using a table saw in an unsafe manner, that’s your prerogative. However, I sure wouldn’t be telling anybody to use a table saw in the manner which you describe. That just sounds like a law suit coming your way. Just saying.
      Be careful and enjoy your day!

  • @tacticalskiffs8134
    @tacticalskiffs8134 Před 4 měsíci +2

    With flip ripping your hands may never come within a foot of the blade. I think that pretty much offsets all the issues you mention that others have raised. The bump in the middle often doesn't mater, and mostly just happens in situations where if you ran it through from one side you would have a wobble in the cut somewhere, it just isn't visible.

  • @Skymanfoob
    @Skymanfoob Před 5 měsíci +1

    Thanks for showing that post rolling thing...That's a good idea.

  • @kevinhilton8683
    @kevinhilton8683 Před 5 měsíci +4

    I'm definitely a beginner..I actually wasn't aware that back cutting on long pieces was considered a no no. I honestly did this method because I noticed with the long pieces..the far end would tend to stray away from the fence no matter the technique I used..even with feather board. After about 3 feet or so I would walk around to side of table saw and grab board on fence side of blade and pull it toward fence and pull it through. I'm not sure if this is backpulling or side pulling. I'm honestly not sure a better way to keep long piece tight against fence

  • @louislandi938
    @louislandi938 Před 5 měsíci +2

    Excellent instruction. I would just shake my head at anyone that challenged you. You’re doing your best to keep the DIY workers safe. I appreciate your time and enthusiasm.

  • @pandabike3826
    @pandabike3826 Před 2 měsíci

    I really appreciate these kinds of videos. Knowledge is king.

  • @joshuacrosby8176
    @joshuacrosby8176 Před měsícem

    Thanks for showing me these helpful tricks to make my tasks easier and quicker n

  • @stepk02
    @stepk02 Před 2 měsíci

    He is the best. You always learn from his videos. Thanks buddy.

  • @jimurrata6785
    @jimurrata6785 Před 4 měsíci

    As a carpenter back in the '80's who was often the one called on to cut stair stringers and rafters i had the "OSHA disproved" mod of a setscrew in my blade shroud that i could hook the guard lever over to hold it open.
    Of course back then i also had a Makita 5007 NBA (W/ electric brake and gold shroud) so it would stop right away instead of coasting to a stop.

  • @b5maddog
    @b5maddog Před 5 měsíci

    Great advice as always. Thank you 🏥

  • @hootinouts
    @hootinouts Před 4 měsíci

    Good presentation on exposing the risks. I share a technique that I have used that will really make you gasp. I have used my Makita circular saw to grind down tree stumps and with the blade guard not pinned just incase of a kickback.

  • @davegravel3740
    @davegravel3740 Před 5 měsíci +1

    One thing to mention about older tablesaws like mine. It has a blade guard and splitter but no riving knife. Simply have to remove it for non through cuts. Shark Guard does make an aftermarket splitter but there is no way of adding a riving knife that moves with the blade.

  • @arkie87
    @arkie87 Před 4 měsíci

    Thank you for posting this video. I think it is important to explain what might go wrong. I'm sure there are plenty of people who did the boot cut, not realizing that their shoe laces might get caught. Even if they continue boot cutting, at least now they will check their laces.
    Just telling people not to do something won't work. Explaining why might change minds.

  • @budm9982
    @budm9982 Před 5 měsíci +1

    Nicely done! No BS here, just factual, real-world stuff.

  • @MihailoStojkovic
    @MihailoStojkovic Před 5 měsíci

    I have a technique for cutting posts that makes roll cutting look safe and sound. I clam the post on waist hight, pull the blade guard up then plunge cut front facing side, follow to top side and then the tricky part, follow to the far side while standing atop the post and reaching around. It's so brilliant that I can't put it to words.

  • @bobgreene2892
    @bobgreene2892 Před 4 měsíci

    Clear explanations, clear demonstrations. We subscribed.

  • @RutherfordRyan1
    @RutherfordRyan1 Před 4 měsíci

    Always a worthwhile video , any time safety is focus

  • @johnriley8713
    @johnriley8713 Před 5 měsíci +4

    Great through-provoking video. I think it comes down to what you want from your cuts: speed, accuracy, and safety. And the riskier cuts simply MUST get more of your attention on safety, even if you're experienced doing it.
    Then sometimes the extra care and strain of that long unsupported ripcut isn't worth it....and it's better to devise an outfeed solution.

  • @sbraudrick
    @sbraudrick Před 5 měsíci +2

    Thanks for the content, solid as always. I've seen professional finish carpenters on here use circ / miter saws for tasks best served by a jigsaw and scratched my head... like I know they're not starved for tools and what they did was super-sketchy... be smart people!

    • @disqusrubbish5467
      @disqusrubbish5467 Před 5 měsíci

      Sometimes you see people on YT and you know they've never done it for a living.

  • @davidshettlesworth1442
    @davidshettlesworth1442 Před 5 měsíci

    Thanks for a great video. All words of good wisdom. Carry On Sir!

  • @Festus171
    @Festus171 Před 4 měsíci

    Good points. Well explained. Excellent information.

  • @earlyriser8998
    @earlyriser8998 Před 5 měsíci +1

    lots of good ideas for me to try out on my next project !!! Of the 7 I have only ever done the table saw pull through. But my table saw does not have a clumsy guard nor riveing knife. My knife did not move with the blade. And I hate the awkwardness of cutting while bending over my foot or a small block.

  • @catfishmudflap
    @catfishmudflap Před 5 měsíci +1

    Great video and explanation. Stay safe!

  • @user-jz7ve2gj1s
    @user-jz7ve2gj1s Před měsícem

    the lack of a guard on table saws terrify me - seen those stop sensors but in Europe we must have them I believe . I guess not confident enough as a DIYer with table saws - great vid and info

  • @CrimeVid
    @CrimeVid Před 5 měsíci +1

    I still have all my digits, but admit to doing any of the silly things you can think of at one time or another !
    My favourite of these is the wired trigger upside down in the B&D workmate with a jammed open blade cover, circular saw trick. Essential for emergency rips !!
    My favourite injury ? A friend of mine managed to drill his own kneecap !!

  • @maddog6542
    @maddog6542 Před měsícem

    Thanks for the 7 new cutting tips I can try!

  • @karl-arnal
    @karl-arnal Před 2 měsíci

    done them all, not the last one but good idea, will try!

  • @AB-nu5we
    @AB-nu5we Před 5 měsíci +2

    Table saw blade guard: Microjig Gripper. Great explanations of those problematic cutting methods.

  • @user-em6ie2be7x
    @user-em6ie2be7x Před 5 měsíci +21

    No matter what kind of Cutting Jobs Big or Small I have to do, I always take safety first. Wear Gloves & Goggles, use a sawhorse or cutting table, clamp the wood, & always make sure my Circular Saw is unplugged until I need it. 👷🏿‍♂️

    • @davegravel3740
      @davegravel3740 Před 5 měsíci +17

      I wouldn't wear gloves for the same reason you never wear loose clothing. If the blade catches it, it can pull your hand in before you'd feel anything.

    • @jprz3837
      @jprz3837 Před 5 měsíci +8

      Take safety seriously but you shouldn’t wear gloves while using saws. Thousands of accidents happen during the year where gloves get caught by the blade but to each their own. Stay safe out there.

    • @verytrue818
      @verytrue818 Před 5 měsíci

      ​@@jprz3837👋: "YES, 'TO EACH OF US, THEIR OWN'!👌👏👍🙏💯🫡"

    • @veganpotterthevegan
      @veganpotterthevegan Před 5 měsíci

      Gloves only for dealing with electricity

    • @bwojak3226
      @bwojak3226 Před 5 měsíci

      Yeah and you would go broke in a week

  • @BigBarn92
    @BigBarn92 Před 4 měsíci

    Thanks for all of the time saving tips!

    • @stanprunty4141
      @stanprunty4141 Před 4 měsíci

      If you don’t go to work you will never get hurt

  • @cgschow1971
    @cgschow1971 Před 2 měsíci

    Doing this stuff now for nearly 35 years. No saw injuries to date. Some comments,
    When I started in construction, the framers removed the guards from the circular saws. I got in the habit of laying it on it's side. Still do today, even though the guard is present.
    Don't believe in tablesaw guards. I believe it's safer if I can visibly see where the blade is in relation to my fingers. A guard hides that. The R-knife is still attached. My fence is adjusted so there's slightly more room, a 64th, on the fall off side of the blade. Never had a kickback.
    I've cut lots of 16" super shelf on a 10" Dewalt. I have a custom stand that supports the entire piece. I lift up and make the front cut first, then set it down and finish the cut. No issues. I have seen people do it the other way with a normal non supporting saw stand. once they lift and finish the cut, the piece falls off and they try and catch it with their knee or other hand.

  • @garymiller5937
    @garymiller5937 Před 5 měsíci

    Thanks for the great warnings and whys Ethan! 😊😊

  • @stevepest4143
    @stevepest4143 Před 5 měsíci +5

    Flip ripping should only be done after blade turned off on my crew.

  • @paulpoco22
    @paulpoco22 Před měsícem

    Have a 20 year old Ryobi portable table saw. I find the 2 things with the teeth that stop kick backs actually stop the piece from going thru sometimes.

  • @kristofbarta2964
    @kristofbarta2964 Před 5 měsíci +4

    I usually do flip ripping as I find it actually safer. Especially on longer pieces for stability and narrow rips where I wouldn’t want to use even a push stick between the fence. It also allows twice as long cuts.

    • @user-uu2rf8ev7z
      @user-uu2rf8ev7z Před 4 měsíci +3

      I turn the saw off while flipping the board.

  • @user-em6ie2be7x
    @user-em6ie2be7x Před 5 měsíci +4

    Really appreciate your discussion on tips that I heard about but thought only seasoned Pros really used. 👷🏿‍♂️

    • @TheHonestCarpenter
      @TheHonestCarpenter  Před 5 měsíci +1

      Thanks W! I know that newcomers are tempted by a lot of these…I like them to be informed 😄

  • @ScottFidler
    @ScottFidler Před 5 měsíci

    I want to thank you for tip #2. Gonna have to try that

  • @clemboy6936
    @clemboy6936 Před 4 měsíci

    great show, much appreciated

  • @Sekihusband
    @Sekihusband Před měsícem

    Very good, useful video. Thank you!

  • @1Tibs1
    @1Tibs1 Před 3 měsíci

    Thanks, learned something new.

  • @ThePracticalPeasant
    @ThePracticalPeasant Před 2 měsíci

    Y'all missed a bunch: plunge cutting (hold the guard right back and rock the saw into the middle of the sheet to cut floor registers, window openings, etc); sheathing full sheets and trimming the excess in-situ (run the saw up the outside corner of a house or along a roof overhang to trim a full sheet to size); but my favourite is gang-ripping/cutting:
    If you need multiples (studs), stack 'em up and chop them together; circ or mitre saw, works either way. Bonus points for staring with four and trimming down through the pile from a mark only on the top one, especially if done over your knee. Ripping furring strips goes the same way, stack a few sheets of ply and rip them all at once with a circ saw. Bonus points if you just rip them straight off the top of the fresh lift, the partially cut sheet a few layers down provides the guide to continue through the pile. Though if you're making furring strips and really want to up the game, you flip one of those little job-saws upside down and push that down the pile, you get two extra sheets per cut due to the bigger blade...
    Yes, guys do in fact flip those baby table saws over and push them over a stack of material...

  • @bblack340
    @bblack340 Před 5 měsíci +1

    Great video. I see so many on YT channels doing things that are absolutely absurd and I'm surprised they even have their hands still.

    • @TheHonestCarpenter
      @TheHonestCarpenter  Před 5 měsíci +2

      Thanks B! I try to only show safe methods on my channel, but just had to discuss some of these 🙂

  • @gregorsamsa1364
    @gregorsamsa1364 Před 4 měsíci

    Some of these, like cutting on my foot and roll cutting, were things i was taught decades ago as an apprentice. They're so ingrained at this point that i wonder if it might be less safe for me to try and remove them from my habits

  • @eldergeektromeo9868
    @eldergeektromeo9868 Před 5 měsíci +1

    Thanks Again, Ethan!

  • @sociopathmercenary
    @sociopathmercenary Před 5 měsíci +3

    When I was 16 years old, I became distracted while using a table saw. Fortunately, I had a good surgeon that was able to reattach the bouquet of fingers I carried into the ER and he did a good enough job that I make my living on a keyboard.
    Be safe out there

    • @TheHonestCarpenter
      @TheHonestCarpenter  Před 5 měsíci +1

      Uggghh…I’m sorry to hear about that! 😪

    • @sociopathmercenary
      @sociopathmercenary Před 5 měsíci

      @@TheHonestCarpenter It was 36 years ago... I'm over it.
      Took a long time to not flinch when I heard that circular saw sound.
      Some lessons in life have to be learned the hard way.

  • @jasonlongie1659
    @jasonlongie1659 Před 5 měsíci

    Thank you for this.

  • @joelmacdonald6994
    @joelmacdonald6994 Před 5 měsíci +1

    For the love of god, GUARDS!!! Im a machinist in a shop that employs welders. I walk down into welding, and they have guards AND 90° handles off the grinders. Drives me absolutely insane. The crap people do to save a few seconds drives me crazy. Nearly 20 years in the trade, and I don’t have a single hour of lost time due to injury.
    I made one mistake at home doing amateur work years ago, and while there was no damage; it hurt like hell. Stop taking stupid chances because you think you can do it.

  • @wiseoldfool
    @wiseoldfool Před 5 měsíci +4

    These controversial techniques don't save any time if your mate has to drive you to the hospital for repairs!

  • @jasonleskiw9942
    @jasonleskiw9942 Před 4 měsíci +3

    I’ve done all these on jobsites and consider them all safe - with the exception of removing the riving knife. No reason anyone needs to do that.
    I think there’s a “don’t try this at home” element. Doing something everyday creates a level of skill and “second-natureness” to it where it becomes significantly less dangerous. You just have to be aware of what could happen and know what to do.

    • @roraraptor
      @roraraptor Před 4 měsíci +2

      Even if you’re skilled and experienced enough to use riskier techniques and opt out of safety features, what happens if you lose control of your body for some reason?
      If you suddenly get ill, have a seizure, lose consciousness, etc. due to an unforeseen medical issue, what stops you from falling onto or into a running blade, or from dropping a circular saw with no guard, for example?
      What if something falls over and hits you, or a careless coworker bumps into you, or there’s some bad electrical work on site leading to you somehow getting shocked while operating one of these power tools?
      I always keep the worst case scenario in mind, and as a normally flawed and error-prone human being, I wouldn’t trust myself. 😅
      (Genuine question, by the way, not some kind of "gotcha" 😝)

  • @thomassciurba5323
    @thomassciurba5323 Před 5 měsíci +1

    I agree that the blade guard on a table saw is more trouble than it is worth. Too many jigs, sleds, dados etc. But you always have to be mindful to not to reach over a spinning blade to grab a cut piece. Best bet is use an outfield table or roller stand, push it all the way through with some type of push block shut the saw off then walk around the saw and grab the work. I also try to break down sheet goods with a circular saw and guide slightly oversized before final cutting on the table saw. Takes more time but the cuts are safer and in the end more accurate. The riving knife is another story. Unless you are not doing through cuts you need that thing in there almost all the time. Without it the saw can turn cut off pieces into wooden bullets. Finally don’t freehand and never use a miter gauge with your fence as a stop. The cutoff needs space to move away from the blade. That setup can jam the cutoff between the blade and fence and it also come flying back at you.

  • @ypaulbrown
    @ypaulbrown Před 5 měsíci

    always good information ....thanks so much.....Paul in Florida

  • @lyonsdavid
    @lyonsdavid Před 5 měsíci

    Your shop is so neat! I wish I had something even half that nice. 👨‍🏭⚒👍

  • @eddybobea6709
    @eddybobea6709 Před 3 měsíci

    Pretty neat, thank you.

  • @disqusrubbish5467
    @disqusrubbish5467 Před 5 měsíci +2

    14:34 isn't mentioned but do NOT do that. Used table saws for decades, know the rules, am safe, but was tired one day and had one more cut and did that. I moved enough when the piece came flying at me, that it only left a black and blue mark about 12" long that lasted for weeks.
    Good tips though. When I framed, sometimes you could end up in a spot where pinning the blade guard was actually slightly safer on a particular cut, but yeah, don't do that.

  • @climbslc2281
    @climbslc2281 Před 5 měsíci

    Thanks for teaching me Flip-ripping! 😀

  • @300404fulserr
    @300404fulserr Před 4 měsíci

    Very good stuff mainly for beginners although these tips serve everyone!

  • @trailingarm63
    @trailingarm63 Před 4 měsíci

    Good film, enjoyed it.

  • @alexmacdonald1998
    @alexmacdonald1998 Před 5 měsíci

    Agree completely with the removal of tablesaw guard. Its also prone to damage during transport. Tbh most of the other tablesaw techniques are prone to damage the material. This is ok for rough work, like sheathing or backing, but a bad idea for finish work.
    I find a jigsaw is a better idea if you gotta nip an inch due to mitre saw width limitations, but this could be personal preference.
    Any time i see guys doing a cut on the foot, they always also seem to be the same ones who use a circular saw for everything, have never even seen a power plane and generally seem to take pride in their disdain of safety rules.
    Great video as always