STOP Buying Festool!

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  • čas přidán 5. 05. 2023
  • There are some tools that are necessary, and there are others that simply make life easier. I'm here to show you a few workarounds for common machines so you can stop buying Festool (unless you really want to--then go for it).
    As an aside note, I am actually a big fan of Festool. So do with that information what you will.
    Thanks for watching! If you enjoyed this video please consider supporting my channel by subscribing and hitting that notification bell. It really helps small channels like mine.
    --------
    Items I keep on hand in the shop:
    Glue:
    Titebond I Wood Glue: amzn.to/3zRXHGv
    Titebond III Wood Glue: amzn.to/3MVnG6j
    Titebond Quick and Thick: amzn.to/42HGuMC
    Power Tools and Accessories:
    Table Saw Blade - Woodworkers II: amzn.to/42bIOLa
    My favorite trim router: amzn.to/3LbCbTF
    DeWalt Trim Router fence: amzn.to/43cYwr2
    My Festool Router Setup: amzn.to/3ZPIQal
    Extra Fence: amzn.to/3KHi9jI
    1/2" dia Router bit: amzn.to/3UkRFYI
    A Better Alternative (Spiral Up Cut): amzn.to/3mcPsSp
    Sharpening:
    Ohishi Waterstones: amzn.to/3TkoZhP
    1,000/8,000 Combo (great budget option): amzn.to/3Lqj7Sh
    Angle Setting Jig Plans: www.lie-nielsen.com/pages/dow...
    Inexpensive Honing Guide: amzn.to/3Jo2Uub
    Lie-Nieslen Honing Guide: www.lie-nielsen.com/nodes/423... guide
    Sandpaper for Flattening: amzn.to/3Jor73F
    My Finish Mix:
    Minwax Polyurethane: amzn.to/3kPgpuO
    Liberon Finishing Oil: amzn.to/3kXkIEf
    Danish Oil (alternative): amzn.to/3Njlabs
    Liberon Beeswax: amzn.to/3Jm2yFN
    Turpentine: amzn.to/3SWFznB
    Mineral Spirits (alternative): amzn.to/3oKU83h
    For 5% off any TotalBoat product, visit www.totalboat.com/encurtis
    You can stay up to date with my work here:
    / encurtis​
    / encurtis
    encurtis.com/
  • Jak na to + styl

Komentáře • 821

  • @SeanRefsnider
    @SeanRefsnider Před rokem +136

    “Stop complaining; start hammering” 🔥🔥🔥🔥

    • @alastairmackay4589
      @alastairmackay4589 Před rokem +2

      100%. Im not here for woodwork ethics lectures!

    • @WorkingTimbersCo
      @WorkingTimbersCo Před rokem +2

      Get on that t-shirt design Erik! 😁

    • @grucha3452
      @grucha3452 Před 10 měsíci +3

      U dont need hammer … use forehead. Btw u can do excelent work with powertools for quarter of festool price.

  • @danielrisberg2112
    @danielrisberg2112 Před rokem +242

    I'm a hobbyist that loves woodworking. After a couple of years I have started to buy a few Festool products and I love them. Professionals buy them to be effective, I buy them because I like the feeling of using really good tools. I do woodworking for pleasure and I don't want to ruin that with cheap tools. I love your videos by the way!

    • @markusscholter4097
      @markusscholter4097 Před rokem +12

      Ha I love that. That's also my reason to buy them in the future. I apply that principle at everything. For example a Styrian Harmonica. The better the instrument, the better the sound. Less air is needed too to play a sound. Etc. All in all an awesome experience to play music. If it's sounding crappy, I'd loose interest in something I realy realy love. My granddad said "Buy cheap stuff, you buy it again and again. Buy high quality and you'll buy it once in a lifetime!"
      I also love well made and manufactured things. I prefer to buy few great products that serve multiple purposes and live a minimalist life, than having like 1,000 different things for everything, that I don't use anyway, because I don't enjoy them. Enjoy creating and woodworking 🤟

    • @stevennachlas9596
      @stevennachlas9596 Před rokem +5

      Complete ditto here!

    • @DrEvilMiniMi374
      @DrEvilMiniMi374 Před 11 měsíci +2

      Touche 👍

    • @gingsSon
      @gingsSon Před 11 měsíci +10

      100% same here. You put it perfectly. This is a hobby for pleasure, and if it’s within my means, why not. Slowly building my Festool collection.

    • @joshuabray37
      @joshuabray37 Před 10 měsíci +4

      Yep, same here in all points. I also like knowing I have the most precise tools. I know that if my project wasn’t perfect, it wasn’t because I skimped on the tools. They are expensive, but it’s a “buy once, cry once”.

  • @CraigularjJoeWoodworks
    @CraigularjJoeWoodworks Před rokem +39

    I get it, on every level, that a circular saw can act as a track saw… however once u use a real track saw there is no way that you go back.

    • @jbwise2002
      @jbwise2002 Před 3 měsíci +3

      Dust collection is far superior on a track saw

  • @bobcade1002
    @bobcade1002 Před rokem +109

    I was a cabinet and furniture maker for 56 years, and now just a hobbyist. If you make your living working with wood you will naturally gravitate to the most efficient methods you can afford because time is money and money spent on seemingly expensive tools is quickly amortized by your production rate. For hobbyists the same is true on a smaller scale. As for the “woodworking purists” that bad mouth the use of power tools, especially expensive ones, I’ve always said this; If the cabinet makers, furniture makers, pattern makers, and wheel wrights of the 16th, 17th, and 18th centuries would have had access to power tools, and in that vein Festool tools, they wouldn’t have thought twice about using them. Then as now time is money. There’s nothing wrong with using hand tools and hand planes to build a project, it’s very satisfying, but ….. it’s not as profitable as the alternatives if you are trying to earn a living. The best part of this is that there is plenty of room for the use of both old and new technology. For me that mix is what keeps me involved in the craft. Thanks for the insightful video.

    • @ENCurtis
      @ENCurtis  Před rokem +10

      Agreed 💯. Any old timey woodworker would absolutely embrace mechanized processes if they could. And to assume otherwise is silly. Cheers my man.

    • @jcviolinsandwoodworks
      @jcviolinsandwoodworks Před rokem +5

      I hear your point and acknowledge that many would have chosen this path as you say, but speaking as a violinmaker and woodworker, I’d argue that many would still choose hand tools and the slower method. In the luthier trade you can find instruments made by cnc, in factories, with or without power tools, etc. If I were to make violins with a cnc machine, there’s no way I could charge what top violinmakers charge, because the end product, even if it seems identical, just simply isn’t. And at the end of the day, some out there are making stuff that people will one day throw in the trash or neglect and not even think twice about it, such as factory made violins or old kitchen cabinets . Now if one took their time, put honest effort and good craftsmanship, and charged a pretty penny, where the customer knows exactly how long it took, and how much care one took to make it (violins for example), they would value it their entire lives, which is why there are still so many good violins still around today. Just a different perspective for those who might want to take the slower road. More production is not always more profitable, and more profits do not always mean more production. But great video and I appreciate hearing the other side if things, as a person who recently started using festool. They make great products, but I’d agree not all are necessary or even desirable over other methods.

    • @theofarmmanager267
      @theofarmmanager267 Před rokem +3

      Absolutely agree. I use the point about dovetails. They were invented because adhesives were relatively weak and short lived; so it was necessary to have a mechanical joint on elements such as drawer fronts. Now, we don’t need that mechanical assistance. I’m not saying that you shouldn’t cut dovetails if you like that aesthetic; just that they are not needed structurally. I ran a sideline business making furniture; not big, just 2.5 FT equivalents. We made mainly pieces inspired by the UK Arts and Crafts with some having a lot of Greene & Greene touches. We had only a small number of quite well-off clients who appreciated this style but couldn’t find exactly what they wanted as an original. I was showing one lady some sketches of a small table to go alongside her favourite armchair. It had, as requested, a single drawer and it was bowed in line with the remainder of the table. I showed a quick sketch of the interior and was asked what were those arrow features on the sides of the drawers; why had I had put them in when the rest of the unit was curves. I didn’t have a good answer except I thought they inferred my skill. So, they were removed and the drawer built just with hidden domino’s. Lesson learnt for me on design.

    • @AC_S007
      @AC_S007 Před 11 měsíci +3

      Agree. The funny thing is that they did use the latest technology of their time.

    • @theofarmmanager267
      @theofarmmanager267 Před 11 měsíci

      @@AC_S007 absolutely. Throughout the ages, people who want to work wood for a living have always used the most modern, affordable methods available at the time. The progression from stone axes to bronze to iron to steel; the progression from man power to water power and then engine power all demonstrate this. There is a lot to be said for hand finishing as I don’t think you can beat that final manual finessing but as for rough dimensioning, it’s machines all the time for me. If doing everything without power tools is what you like doing, then good for you - but I can’t see how it might make the end product more authentic or superior to others. Just my take.

  • @JakeBrown321
    @JakeBrown321 Před 2 měsíci +3

    Here’s my two penneth. I am a self employed joiner of 43 yrs! I have done the job the hard way- cutting mitres by hand, pushing a handsaw down the length of architraves and sanding timber by hand coming close to choking from the dust. Festool absolutely changed my career. Their dust extraction, their track saw, their domino, sanding, need I go on! They were the first people to think about my lungs. I’ve inhaled too much dust in my time but it stopped once I jumped on the Festool system. I have a smug grin on my face when I’m planing 4mm off the edge of a door in a lived in bedroom. The air is that of Switzerland. I absolutely salute Festool. They will ALWAYS get my vote and get my money! If you want to piss about improvising with bits of straight wood and dowels then crack on. I have, with all my years, found the best power tool manufacturers and the best way to do the job.

  • @geeksam
    @geeksam Před měsícem

    The line at about 12:36 "it doesn't really matter what tools you have in your shop" reminded me of a bumper sticker I saw 30 years ago advertising a fishing-related business in CA's Central Valley: "it's not how deep you cast your rod, it's how you wiggle your worm". Still makes me laugh; thought it might amuse someone else here too. :)

  • @imw4956
    @imw4956 Před 12 dny

    Absolutely spot on! Some people just need to work with what they can afford and take pride in getting around issues!

  • @AxGryndr
    @AxGryndr Před rokem +39

    A huge difference between a track/plunge saw versus a circular saw and straight edge is dust control. The circular saw is going to leave dust everywhere and the track saw is going to direct most of it to the vac. The huge difference between the dust extractor and broom is the amount of airborne dust which settles on everything.

    • @ENCurtis
      @ENCurtis  Před rokem +4

      Absolutely. Festool’s dust collection is the best on the market.

    • @sleinbuyt402
      @sleinbuyt402 Před rokem +3

      Would be interested in you trying mafell tools. At least equal quality, if not better on some products. But it's more designed towards traditional timber framing.

    • @HondoTrailside
      @HondoTrailside Před 9 měsíci +1

      I have pretty much everything you could ever want for woodworking in my shop. For several months a year I work at the cottage. We can't keep much around as the shop floods every few years. About the only tool I have is an old table saw I have to recondition after every flood. But with that, a mechanic's bench vise, clamps, and basic hand tools I bring each year, I get by surprisingly well. A planer would be nice, but one year I didn't place it high enough above the water...

    • @jcsrst
      @jcsrst Před 5 měsíci +1

      As a professional finish carpenter, nothing wastes time and adds potential for mistakes like using a fence and measuring to make long straight cuts. The track saw is a game changer for PROFESSIONALS. So as a woodworker who retired from professional carpentry to my own shop I am delighted to have many nice tools but if your just getting started the advice in this video is excellent!

    • @michael.schuler
      @michael.schuler Před 4 měsíci

      Dust collection is important, but it can be added, or is available, on many saws other than track saws. Two separate issues.

  • @mleys3248
    @mleys3248 Před 3 měsíci +2

    As an occasional DIYer, so not even a hobbyist, it is extremely important to me that a maximum of safety features are build in the tools that I buy for a certain project. An example, I bought a cheap table saw a decade ago. Using that thing made me break out in sweat, because I felt it was hella dangerous. I never touched that cheap table saw again and bought myself a Festool jigsaw, for building garden beds and the likes.
    Now I am faced with a big renovation project and will be faced with larger sheets to cut and I have been educating myself on saws for a while now. Mostly because I don't want to buy something I will be too afraid to use again. So a regular circular saw is just not an option for me as a risk conscious beginner. I need a tool that has the latest safefeatures the market is offering, a tool that will correct or prevent most mistake I might bring to the table. So yes, I am looking at the latest festtool track saw with kickback prevention and I will not buy another tool. I will be saving up for that. Because if I hurt myself with a cheap tool and land in hospital, it will cost me a 1000 times more in medical expenses, revalidation and lost income. But what I will do to cut costs, as I don't yet need it right away (I am guessing I have about a yea) I will be at the lookout for a used one and pay only 2/3rd of the price or 1/2 if I am lucky.

  • @jesseelovaas
    @jesseelovaas Před rokem +9

    Appreciate that you still actually make things. Several woodworking CZcamsrs I’ve been watching for years has gone strictly “content”, aka videos with top 10 lists and no actual building or woodworking anymore. I watch these videos to learn and be inspired.

    • @ENCurtis
      @ENCurtis  Před rokem +2

      Thank you my man. I’m glad you’re enjoying the content.

    • @allannielsen4752
      @allannielsen4752 Před rokem

      Same. I moved here as I really get inspired by your "not typical" box builds, etc. Appreciate the content, and wish I had a woodwork teacher like yourself when I went to school.

    • @disqusrubbish5467
      @disqusrubbish5467 Před 11 měsíci

      And some of the newbies you can tell have never earned a living at it.

  • @deanhambry5208
    @deanhambry5208 Před rokem +6

    I’m a professional carpenter and have made quite a few custom doors for people over the years. All day spent with a plunge router is a killer on the back, so I stumped up the $1500( this was 8 years ago so cost more now) for the big domino. Well I’m making an 8 panel door now and it took roughly an hour to cut in 48 mortises!! The domino and track saw are a must…..yes you can alternate but the dust collection is something that should be highlighted.
    Great video, I’m gonna subscribe mate so keep ‘em coming.

    • @ENCurtis
      @ENCurtis  Před rokem

      Thanks man! I appreciate it!

  • @nathangardner772
    @nathangardner772 Před rokem +16

    The tsc 55 is straight gangster 😎
    The hkc55 is just as good on a smaller scale, with the fsk track even better.
    The cxs and c18 are so sensitive yet strong it’s unbelievable
    I’m entirely cordless out of my van with the exception of my tablesaw, I’ll buy the new festool tablesaw day 1 if I can get one.
    The systainers fit better in a stack or side by side, rather than the ridiculously sized pack outs
    The Bluetooth of the midi vac in conjunction with the tools is ultra clean and the remote for the end of the hose saves countless trips walking back to your vacuum
    I could go on about the routers and vecturo but yeah. You get the point

  • @jeremycrisp4488
    @jeremycrisp4488 Před 10 měsíci +1

    Where I live, people won't pay for hand made high quality wood work. You could put your heart and soul into a beautiful work of art and people would rather go to hobby lobby and buy mass produced crap.

  • @myerscok
    @myerscok Před rokem

    Thanks Eric - this video definitely made me think and question. Keep them coming please. 👍

  • @markbangert2576
    @markbangert2576 Před 11 měsíci +3

    I love your approach to the subjects at hand. I've been wood working since trees where invented and love learning new stuff. Keep it up.

  • @jerrybyrd7778
    @jerrybyrd7778 Před rokem +36

    Beautifully done. I am at the hobbyist stage of woodworking and I find refreshing to see the professionals telling us that we really don't need the most expensive tools. Use what you have and enjoy the process.

    • @ENCurtis
      @ENCurtis  Před rokem +2

      Glad you found some value in it my dude 🤙

    • @farmcat3198
      @farmcat3198 Před rokem

      Get Mafell instead.

    • @sz3231
      @sz3231 Před 11 měsíci +3

      @@farmcat3198right because festool isn’t expensive enough.

    • @farmcat3198
      @farmcat3198 Před 11 měsíci

      @@sz3231 Each Festool saw I have has some little quirk that requires you create a jig, buy an accessory, or buy an updated saw to overcome. Mafell tools have less of those quirks, so you aren't wasting your time or money building jigs or buying accessories. When you look at the whole equation, Mafell seems more efficient and cost effective overall.

  • @2007bambino
    @2007bambino Před 5 měsíci

    Just found your channel, love it!

  • @commentsonthetube14
    @commentsonthetube14 Před měsícem

    I got a Milwaukee track saw recently and it has made a huge difference. It's so much easier to break down sheet goods than having to do offsets and clamp down guides for my circular saw. Not to mention how much less dusty it is.

  • @einsteinbpc
    @einsteinbpc Před 7 měsíci +2

    As someone who has learned this entire hobby by watching CZcams it is so refreshing to find someone who cuts through in the CZcams bs and just says “just make a thing” and stop farting what others have or don’t have. My philosophy is just to “ use what you have until you get to where we want to be.” Thank you so much.

  • @josephberkeley
    @josephberkeley Před 5 měsíci

    Great to hear from a practitioner rather than a bullshitter. I love my Festool sander with dust extraction. Makes a huge difference working on boats.

  • @mikeandlucky
    @mikeandlucky Před rokem +16

    I am truly very happy for those who have the budget to buy Festool and Sawstop, etc. Thanks for the reminder from a skilled professional that we don't have to have that budget to get joy from woodworking :)

    • @ENCurtis
      @ENCurtis  Před rokem +2

      If I have a message, it’s precisely that 🙂

    • @HondoTrailside
      @HondoTrailside Před 9 měsíci +2

      Sawstop is an amazing technology and I would have it in a flash if I had employees and insurance. Because employees, not as people, but as risks, are morons. There is never any reason to be hurt by a table saw. Though I have been on two occasions... Moron!
      Basically get a not too powerful one if your workflow allows, I got hit by a 3HP throwing things around and that was horrible;
      Don't make the saw do everything, some of the things people try to push them to do are dangerous. For instance I almost never through rip any more. I don't recommend it for everyone, If I had to run quantity I would gear up for it. But for me, I just never pass my hands. even with a push device, past the blade. The problem is that the accident mode is very conditional on the set-up, and I have seen a new process go south twice. In a home shop it is a different cut almost every time.
      I will use other power saws, or hand saws if they are safer.
      SS does not protect against kick back which is a lethal threat. My current saw has a leeson 1/2 horse power motor on it. 3/4s is enough. This motor came off my small lathe. I would not recommend that small a motor, but it is fine with softwoods. I prefer staying within the 110V range of motor sizes.

  • @JeffFontecchio
    @JeffFontecchio Před rokem +1

    Great information, thanks for sharing!

    • @ENCurtis
      @ENCurtis  Před rokem +1

      Thanks for watching, Jeff!

  • @TinyBasementWorkshop
    @TinyBasementWorkshop Před 11 měsíci +1

    The broom got me bursting with laughter 😁👍🏼

  • @JuanGarcia-tg4od
    @JuanGarcia-tg4od Před rokem +1

    My friend, who cares what people’s judgments. Most people are so unhappy that trolling is therapeutic for them. You know, misery loves company. You’re awesome and I agree with you completely.

  • @user-po4xd8ou6b
    @user-po4xd8ou6b Před rokem +1

    I love your work! Your youtube videos are very informative

  • @christopherharrison6724
    @christopherharrison6724 Před rokem +2

    Your a pro I’m a hobbyist I enjoy making with hand tools and I also enjoy your tips and tricks I don’t care how expensive your tools are,thanks for sharing.

  • @martinsnell253
    @martinsnell253 Před 10 měsíci +2

    @ENCurtis
    I have to say that, since I found your channel you have become my favourite woodwork content creator - not only is your work amazing but your philosophy is inspiring.
    My late Father was a true craftsman who created beautiful perfect scale models of Napoleonic era cannons and flintlock pistols - his most beautiful creation was a working reproduction of a Queen Anne Dragoon officer's flintlock pistol - perfect in every detail right down to the coat of arms on the escutcheon plate which he crafted by melting brass key blanks onto a plate and then hand filing the design.
    He worked in the evenings after his day job as an industrial engineer in a 10'x8' brick outhouse using mainly hand tools that he collected over 30 years. His two pieces of technology were a hand-held black and decker drill, and a small bench top bandsaw.
    Oh, and he also had a sort of cradle thing that he could attach his drill to that became a small wood turning lathe.
    If he had the resources I'm sure he would have embraced much of the technology we take for granted today, although I'm pretty sure that he would have taken a pretty jaded view of much of it.
    As a boy he used to take me fishing and I was constantly browsing fishing tackle catalogues, imagining what I might catch if only I had that new reel, or this latest rod but, as he used to say 'most fishing tackle catches more fishermen than fish'.
    I think that kind of sums it up.
    It's worth thinking about some of the greatest names in furniture design - from Chippendale and Hepplewhite, to Hans Wegner, and remembering the level of technology they had available to them, yet both their designs and the craftsmanship have stood the test of time.
    (Incidentally I have actually seen close up an original Thomas Chippendale chair (that isn't actually listed in the known commissions - it is the seat of the Grand Master in a Masonic lodge!). In 2003, after around 250 years, it was being sent for its first ever restoration!
    Now that's 'heirloom', and not a domino in sight!

  • @1szera
    @1szera Před rokem +2

    Stellar post, information, AND hands on examples ... and "Just Do It"!
    Many people in the early learning stages of - a variety of creative actualization - get stuck unnecessarily. It is very easy to see why you would be/are great teacher and inspiration!

  • @JamesCrandallPainting
    @JamesCrandallPainting Před rokem +2

    Great comments in the intro about using modern (and quality) tools. Just as in woodworking and accounting, the same applies in making artwork (I’m a painter/illustrator). Many amateurs in painting are caught up in nostalgia to an absurd degree, and put so many obstacles in their own way that (especially if they are getting a late start) they will literally DIE before they achieve any kind of proficiency.

  • @sterlingb3667
    @sterlingb3667 Před 5 měsíci

    THIS video is why I subscribed. I love the sense of humor and the attitude. "Stop complaining; start hammering" indeed!

  • @Liveforwhatyougive
    @Liveforwhatyougive Před 5 měsíci

    Very entertaining, love the channel!

  • @sfallier
    @sfallier Před rokem +38

    Having upgraded from a Milwaukee cordless and Makita corded sander, I will say a Festool finish sander is 100% worth the price jump. Dust collection, vibration, and braking when you turn it off really make it a huge improvement.

    • @ENCurtis
      @ENCurtis  Před rokem +3

      Their sander is brilliant for sure… but I had nothing to comp it to really 😂

    • @allannielsen4752
      @allannielsen4752 Před rokem +6

      Piece of sandpaper wrapped around a block, been using it for years 😂

    • @janee7995
      @janee7995 Před rokem +1

      ​@@ENCurtis mirca ,Metabo if you need to compare .

    • @brucecraig4954
      @brucecraig4954 Před rokem

      Any sanding of volume needs Festool

    • @HondoTrailside
      @HondoTrailside Před 9 měsíci

      I hear good things about the sander, but... If Ave is right about internals in Festool, I wonder if they will last. Air sanders if you have the air, have a lot more torque. What do car shops use? And if you really want to take a bit, I move up to a 7" polisher. Internet woodworkers aren't necessarily the pros.

  • @donaldally7314
    @donaldally7314 Před rokem +1

    Brother, I love this video! Everything you mentioned is absolutely true!

  • @johnsanchez1619
    @johnsanchez1619 Před rokem +1

    Nice, I really enjoyed this. Agree - JUST MAKE THINGS! Cheers!

  • @robohippy
    @robohippy Před 8 měsíci

    I was cutting plywood forms for concrete work using a 2 by 1 inch piece of aluminum channel and an old worm drive Skill saw, at least 40 years ago. Necessity is the mother of invention....

  • @layneinchains4047
    @layneinchains4047 Před rokem +7

    Your background is perfect! Screw the “ CZcams” set up! You have channels out here that play woodworkers on CZcams and all they do is tool reviews and have built a few coffee tables out of 2x4’s and shill tools with affiliate links and lie to ppl! Oh and try to spread the gospel lol! Unreal dude. I love your channel because it’s NONE of that! Your SKILL is the reason I watch brother! Keep up the great work! Sorry I don’t usually comment that was a bit of a rant I’ve been holding in! Shout out from NYC!

    • @spycedezynuk
      @spycedezynuk Před rokem +3

      😂😂😂 I know who you speak of brother, couldn’t watch that anymore.

    • @layneinchains4047
      @layneinchains4047 Před rokem +2

      @@spycedezynuk Lol dude it’s gotten so bad! I can’t either! It’s like a cult!

    • @ENCurtis
      @ENCurtis  Před rokem

      Thank you brother! I appreciate that. Though now I’m curious who’s out there preaching 😂 but I won’t ask!

    • @layneinchains4047
      @layneinchains4047 Před rokem

      @@ENCurtis you’re the man bro! Lol ohhh I think you have an idea!

  • @eugenematison5571
    @eugenematison5571 Před 4 měsíci

    The benefit of the domino over dowel is not the strength, but speed. The only factor - "loose fit in one direction" - allows fast hand-by-eye alignment of the tool over wood piece.

  • @bw162
    @bw162 Před 2 měsíci

    I retired from an unrelated industry and took up woodworking with zero experience. But I liked technology so I bought a nice CNC that had many more capabilities than I “needed”. My lack of experience has many times caused me to question what heck I was doing. On occasions I lost the enjoyment of it. Your comment about “just make something and enjoy it” really hit home. I am blessed that I can afford nice equipment. But I do get frustrated that I am not able to get the results the equipment has the ability to achieve. Gotta get back to “having fun” even if the outcome is firewood.

  • @devinteske
    @devinteske Před rokem +1

    Great video! Loved it.

  • @whomadethatsaltysoup
    @whomadethatsaltysoup Před 5 měsíci

    Thanks for sharing! You are absolutely right: Just enjoy making things. And as a professional, of course you should strive to save time by being more efficient.

  • @josepalacid
    @josepalacid Před rokem +2

    There are lots of options between the festool vacuum and the broom, having an immensely better, not only quality/price ratio, but also quality and performance than those shown.

  • @HookedonWood
    @HookedonWood Před 11 měsíci +1

    Great video, man!, I enjoyed it!

  • @craigthimm184
    @craigthimm184 Před rokem +1

    Love this!! Thank you!

  • @danajberry43055
    @danajberry43055 Před 9 měsíci

    So glad, I accidentally found you. Definitely will subscribe. Keep up your inspiring work.

  • @papaduck459
    @papaduck459 Před 9 měsíci

    I actually love the fact that your CZcams background is your true workspace, not some ad driven marketing for woodpeckers or festool or any other tool brand. I get so disheartened by people who launch CZcams as content creators being makers, then get the sponsor bug, or the need to tell you the 7 tools you need in your shop and have completely strayed away from the roots of why they started. THANK YOU for being true to your craft and not succumbing to the majority. I prefer makers who make content, rather than content creators who "sometimes" actually make things. Keep being true to your craft, thank you for the education you provide.

  • @user-gv4ue4lm7j
    @user-gv4ue4lm7j Před 4 měsíci

    As a professional restoration painter….my festool gear is an absolute must especially in high end finishes.

  • @trevhaydon5090
    @trevhaydon5090 Před rokem +1

    You knocked this right out the park and then some. Very lighthearted and funny, and right up my street. Never been a "must have it because its the best, chaser" So the points you make resinate very well with me. Thank you for your point of view and input and for sharing your content. Keep up the great work. Love and Respect from North London UK.

    • @ENCurtis
      @ENCurtis  Před rokem +1

      Thank you! I'm really glad it resonated with you.

  • @5150show
    @5150show Před rokem +1

    Nice end credit music too , can’t beat a resonator

  • @bixwor
    @bixwor Před 9 měsíci +1

    OMG !!!!! Thank you for this post!!!!!! I never understood the obsession with the tracksaw. It's nice but just feels like everybody is making this a must have. I absolutely love this post. tks.

  • @andrewfrisard8960
    @andrewfrisard8960 Před 11 měsíci

    Great content!!

  • @caseystein1227
    @caseystein1227 Před 9 měsíci

    I laughed out loud in the office when you pulled out the “old school” track saw alternative. 😂

  • @dougferguson6445
    @dougferguson6445 Před 6 měsíci

    God bless you for making this video! Everyone on YT is all about Festool, but they are pros and they are usually sponsored. Thank you sir, great relief!

  • @michaelmcdermott2178
    @michaelmcdermott2178 Před 5 měsíci

    Not a fan of Festool but you be you. I am retired, so don't need to worry about production rate. You make the point well for your own case. For me, after six decades of woodworking of one type or another in the nooks and crannies of life, I enjoy the Paul Sellers approach. Not to say I'm a Luddite, nor is Paul; I do have and use a Sawstop, I use a band saw for resawing and my lathe is the powered variety. But I can't recall exactly how long it's been since I used one of my electric routers. And my most used tool is a bench chisel. You add a reasonably balanced discussion and thanks for that. I just worry about newbs who might shy away from the 'entry costs' of woodworking because of the Festool (and others) hype. Thanks again.

  • @steveschultz300
    @steveschultz300 Před rokem +2

    Another saying that should be added, "Stop buying equipment; start building".
    I work for a national woodworking chain (blue is their color) and I sell way too much expensive equipment to people that say, "I'm setting up my shop...". Dude, why are you spending thousands of dollars for "schtuff" when you don't even have a ruler or marking gauges!
    Great video and love the snark bathed in reality.

    • @ENCurtis
      @ENCurtis  Před rokem +1

      Ah, yes. You know the ravages of capitalism first hand 😂 I own a few items of blue equipment myself but certainly encourage learning folks to build these things themselves. That’s where the learning happens!

  • @HarisDimitriou
    @HarisDimitriou Před rokem

    I enjoyed every second of it.
    Great tips (or no brainers for some) but the style they are presented is the what makes them stick.
    “Stop complaining, start hammering.”
    I loved it.

  • @robertbartholomew5330
    @robertbartholomew5330 Před 4 měsíci

    Got it! Thanks

  • @kennethholmes9315
    @kennethholmes9315 Před 11 měsíci +1

    I love the video. I recommend Festool to anyone who can afford the tools. I was a production woodworker for 30+ years. Now I’m partly retired, so still woodworking as a hobby. And yeah I would recommend Festool. Have a great day.

  • @kooale
    @kooale Před 8 měsíci

    Highly amusing video, very encouraging & informative, thanks wise guy. Sup w wooden scowling Frankenstein in our top left corner of your shop wall?

  • @paulallen5267
    @paulallen5267 Před rokem +1

    Thanks for bringing us back to earth as new woodworkers. It's overwhelming seeing all these guys on CZcams buying up Festool and SawStop.

    • @disqusrubbish5467
      @disqusrubbish5467 Před 11 měsíci

      "Buying"? *cough*..... Let me introduce you to the term "influencer"...

  • @davebauerart
    @davebauerart Před rokem +4

    Some things Festool improves on is occupational safety and health, noise and dust control. Definitely worth considering. Professional tools are more expensive for a reason.

    • @ENCurtis
      @ENCurtis  Před rokem +1

      Agreed 💯. The dust collection on festool products is second to none.

  • @marshallmurrell4583
    @marshallmurrell4583 Před 11 měsíci

    I just got around to watching this episode. I'm a multi-year hobby wood worker working out of a two car garage in which we still park two cars. When I'm done for the day, everything is cleaned up and the equipment rolled back against the walls. I would love to have a jointer, band saw and drum sander, but I have no space for them. Therefore, I use work-arounds in every project. I can get a flat edge square to a flat face without a jointer. It just takes me much longer to do so. Getting a straight edge on longer boards is more difficult, but I can do that too with a jig and my tablesaw. That's just one example. I do have a lot of nice power tools which I love using. I have a lot of hand tools which I love using. If I were a production shop or even just a custom shop from which I made a living, you can bet your last dollar that I would be buying Festool and Sawstop because I would be safer and more productive/efficient. Thanks for a good video.

  • @stephenburrows8909
    @stephenburrows8909 Před rokem

    Thank you for this. Yes, I like Festool but I only have a tracksaw and a sanding set up (ETS 125 sander & CT 15 E HEPA). Got the tracksaw for the same reason you stated in your content and I also have a very small shop. I do a lot of live-edge work, table mostly and on the small side, coffee and entryway tables. And I did not have a table saw when I started back woodworking 2+ years ago. The sanding system is a recent addition was mainly for health reasons and my shop vac/dust collector did not work to keep the smaller particles out of the air. The smallest HEPA system from Festool (CT E 15) was the most logical choice and so far I love it!
    I will likely never buy the domino system as I have dowel systems and a biscuit system, which works just fine for the type of joinery I need for my projects.
    Oh, I love your background! Again thank you for the content and keep it up.

  • @_urbanmonk
    @_urbanmonk Před 10 měsíci

    Sage advice:make things. As a commercial photographer for years, back when film was a thing, so many people asked for camera and lens advice. I'd tell them to master whatever potentially shitty camera they owned until they understood the limits of their current gear and principles of composition and exposure. This meant lenses, bodies, flash, light meters, even tripods. If you don’t know why your pictures suck even a Hasselblad won’t make you good photographer. Same with woodworking tools. Been a woodworker for 20+ years and I suggest that two things matter most there too: accurate measuring and proper clamping. Master those and you are on your way. Great video and advice.

  • @07roadking43
    @07roadking43 Před rokem +1

    I think your background looks awesome!!! Very well done sir !

  • @MrXavierwalls
    @MrXavierwalls Před 9 měsíci

    My favorite is all these fellow DIYrs who post how-to videos for noobs then quickly bust out a tool that cost 1000's. Thanks for offering alternatives to those just starting.

  • @ollieh8010
    @ollieh8010 Před rokem +1

    Right on!! Thank you!

  • @andredaedone7732
    @andredaedone7732 Před 5 měsíci

    I have a DeWalt circular saw I purchased in 1984. Just changed the blade the other day. I have used biscuits.with a DeWalt trim router. I have the Skil 300 buck table saw and love it.

  • @2freedomworks
    @2freedomworks Před 26 dny

    Loved the video. I've been honing my craft for decades and i get paid lots of money to do everything for the customers and when building fancy stairs or cabinets I need better equipment so it is easier to do a better job and do it faster so finally festool is slowly replacing all fine wood crafting tools and I will still have the DW tools for the outside rain days and other places that are not going to see fine finishes. I have subscribed to enjoy your ideas on the craft we all have something to share. Thanks for sharing.

  • @paulmaryon9088
    @paulmaryon9088 Před 11 měsíci

    Brilliant! Still love my Festools. Back in the day we fixed a piece of ply to our circ saw fence thus making a 'rail' of sorts, also loose tenon joinery is not a new thing, it's been around for years, great video thank you , subscribed look forward to more, keep ,em coming, cheers

  • @VietTran-xl2ms
    @VietTran-xl2ms Před dnem

    Use the rounded arch on the hand router, not the straight edge of the router guard. This will completely eliminate accidental slip or jams of the straight edge which results in a messed up router line if you are trying to make straight cuts with a reference edge. No matter how the router happens to roll on the rounded arch side, the router line will always stay perfectly straight.

  • @misury
    @misury Před 8 měsíci

    Ah hahahaha! Love this video. I could own Festool, but I'm a hobbyist at this point... we'll see in the future. BUT you made me laugh. Thank you.

  • @kalegallarde6369
    @kalegallarde6369 Před 3 měsíci

    I agree nothing is wrong with having expensive tools but 1 thing for sure is nothing on earth is more satisfying than building something all by hand as far as the feeling you get with the end product

  • @user-hb1bs1dl5m
    @user-hb1bs1dl5m Před rokem +1

    Have to say I really appreciate your passion for the craft and you must have been an excellent teacher. I had a great woodworking teacher in a boss I had almost 30 years ago. I let that part of my life slip away when I had to concentrate on Raising a family but in the past year or so I have began again to "make a Thing" Thanks for your content.

    • @ENCurtis
      @ENCurtis  Před rokem

      Thank you my friend. Good teachers are invaluable, and I owe much of my career to a few key folks who were brilliant and patient teachers. Grateful that those people exist in the world.

  • @spycedezynuk
    @spycedezynuk Před rokem +21

    One of the reasons I subscribed was because of your background. I like how it’s uncluttered and organised with the things that are needed. And for the newbie’s to woodworking I think it also looks like an achievable armoury. Some people just love to complain about nothing 😂

    • @ENCurtis
      @ENCurtis  Před rokem +5

      That’s good to know, actually. Hadn’t considered how it would feel achievable to newer woodworkers. Thanks for pointing that out.

    • @andersonolive4553
      @andersonolive4553 Před rokem +3

      Great point! I spend a lot of time looking at the tools and the set up in the background rather than the speaker.

    • @99sentcoins
      @99sentcoins Před rokem +2

      ​@ENCurtis
      I always look at the background.
      I have OCD and a messy room, cluttered tool cabinet, saw dust everywhere ~ I cannot watch the video no matter how good the info is.
      A clean shop is what I always had and my customers thought I hired a cleaning company. 😂
      I messy shop is run by a messy person.
      Messy people make more mistakes.
      I subbed because of the clean workspace.
      Neat, organized, let's learn bro !
      (I'm assuming it's not that hard. I'm a former custom car builder, sheetmetal fabricator/ current artist)

    • @markusscholter4097
      @markusscholter4097 Před rokem +1

      @@99sentcoins Yes everything has to have its place. I'm traveling since 3 years and sometimes where I stay I help people to organise. Once I put up a tool wall and hammered nails in it to hang all the tools. I hated it! For me it has to be organised and beautiful. Everything to be precise.

  • @tonyburdick5512
    @tonyburdick5512 Před 5 měsíci

    Loved the video. As a former carpenter/contractor, my garage is full of tools more suited for carpentry than cabinet making. Over the past 5 decades, I've built a few pieces of furniture, but trim work was my specialty. I've been without a shop for the past 5 years after building and moving into our new home. I am currently considering what I need for furniture building, as if I need more tools. Your video is helpful in reminding me that there is always a work around, even if I can afford the fancier tools to add to an already crowded shop. Looking forward to watching your other videos.

  • @michael.schuler
    @michael.schuler Před 4 měsíci

    Very necessary and realistic view of Festool, as viewed by 50 year pro (and Festool owner.) Simple embellishment of the straightedges you show for saws and routers can raise their technical level much closer to Festool at very minimal expense: Make a two piece straightedge comprising a wide bottom piece of 1/4" ply or hardboard with a narrower 1/2" thick straightedge attached to top. Make sure the bottom piece oversails the straightedge by a little more than the offset between edge of machine base and the cut line. Make an initial cut (with saw or router with specific bit installed) right through the bottom piece of the straightedge. You now can place the cut edge of the straightedge directly onto your layout marks without any math to accommodate offset.
    Yet another step closer to Festool functionality can be achieved by installing anti-slip strips to the bottom of the DIY straightedge, thus eliminating need for clamping (as well as the possible interference of clamp heads discussed in this video.) In another lifetime as shopfitter, we ran miles of high dollar slatwall and laminates using such straightedges for perfect results, long before Festool had crossed the ocean. And we certainly did not invent these basic aids. Knowledge and logic have always been the fundamental tools of the trade --- for centuries before electricity got involved...

  • @myreason2cry206
    @myreason2cry206 Před 11 měsíci

    Thank you!

  • @mattc688
    @mattc688 Před 11 měsíci

    I am a hobbyist woodworker n I own a few pieces of nice power tools including a festool track saw. As my go deeper in my journey I notice the real art and joy comes from making better quality products with the existing tools that I already have instead of wishfully relying on another new or better tool. I think I understand and appreciate good quality tools but the increase in speed does not warrant for buying one for since I am just a hobbyist.

  • @thomasthetankengine8418
    @thomasthetankengine8418 Před 6 měsíci

    Love the channel 😁

  • @jefffink8405
    @jefffink8405 Před rokem +2

    Great video! I've been a cabinetmaker for over 20 years. And never bought into the green cool-aid. Then last summer. I was cutting a lot of white oak 1.75" thick was using the straight edge and circular saw technique. And no matter what the cuts were not square or straight. Bought the Mafell mt55 and the cuts were so smooth and straight. Next was a ct26 vac for my shop at home and then ro 150 and of 2200. And now I see why these tools are so great. Does a hobbyist need these tools no. But if you're making a living these professional tools are worth the investment.

    • @ENCurtis
      @ENCurtis  Před rokem +1

      They are absolutely worth the investment… if you have the ability to invest. But worth it and necessary are different statements!

  • @tommoeller7149
    @tommoeller7149 Před 9 měsíci

    The last bit of advice was priceless. Thx.

  • @helderlage
    @helderlage Před rokem +1

    BRILLIANT and FUN as always... Hugs from Lisbon, Portugal, EU

  • @rednekokie
    @rednekokie Před 6 měsíci +3

    Eric, thank you so much for your down-to-earth explanation of everything you talk about and demonstrate. Even as an 87 year old retired pipe organ builder, I find something in each of your videos - which inspire me to get out into my old workshop and work on something new. Especially, thank you for shoving aside all the BS about Festool - which, I realize are high quality tools, but so expensive that most people who really want to express themselves through woodwork, feel that the expense is not worth it. Keep it up - and continue to keep us all informed - whether in how to do something within the area of woodwork, or what to avoid by all the rumor mongers.

  • @chrismoore6359
    @chrismoore6359 Před 8 měsíci

    Your introduction here was [chef's kiss]! Bravo! So well reasoned and funny! But overall, continue to be yourself/"keep it real" as the kids say.

  • @desviz
    @desviz Před 11 měsíci

    Great video, important perspective. Learn to do the most with the least FIRST.

  • @dsokodrum67
    @dsokodrum67 Před rokem +1

    I agree. Whatever it takes to build efficiently. BUT don't tell me to buy a cnc machine, or a Festool etc. As long as you and the client are pleased with the end result.
    Thanks for a cool video!

  • @williammaxwell1919
    @williammaxwell1919 Před rokem +1

    I have always said (as an Architect using CAD for over 30 years (Autocad 10 circa 1992)) that "with computers, you can get everything very accurately wrong".
    Computers and computure operated machines (e.g. CNC) are just tools, and it comes down to the competence of the operator.
    I've come across woodworkers who believe that using any powered tool "isn't really woodworking". As far as I'm concerned, it's all about the quality of the finished product; how the product was manufactured/ made /crafted is way down the list.

  • @elliotguerrero187
    @elliotguerrero187 Před měsícem

    very clever presentation.....

  • @Maxwell7724
    @Maxwell7724 Před 10 měsíci

    This candid video made me subscribe. The hammer hand waving at the end got me lol

  • @hoffmeisterwoodworks
    @hoffmeisterwoodworks Před rokem +1

    Entertaining :) so spot on.

  • @jeremytoepp8704
    @jeremytoepp8704 Před 4 měsíci

    Started off as a recommendation against Festool, but realized all the reasons that I’m planning to buy into it slowly match exactly what he said were great about them. 😂

  • @seanfaherty
    @seanfaherty Před 3 měsíci

    As a hobbyist I find that making a jig will often take more time than doing it by hand.
    If I gotta make two I make the jig.
    I don’t see the value of buying a $1500 tool to cut biscuits when one of the reasons I like wood working is the cutting and fitting of joints.
    You do you.

  • @FryChicken
    @FryChicken Před 6 měsíci

    This video is so on point. It's like Apple's marketing "Buy an Apple Watch, or you will literally die".... well.... people have survived thus far w/o an Apple watch.... people have done woodworking before festool.

  • @ronh9384
    @ronh9384 Před rokem +1

    Great video as always. I just checked your website…. You have really nice pieces there!
    Found your channel a couple of months ago and subbed.
    I have been wood working for almost fifty years and have upgraded equipment over the years. I started out with a handsaw, hammer and nails and upgraded when needed or could afford it.
    I have been looking at Festool recently and have used some of a friends Festool tools. They are quality and enjoyable to use.
    What drill was that you showed at the 11:24 mark. I didn’t recognize it.
    Keep up the quality content.
    Ron

    • @ENCurtis
      @ENCurtis  Před rokem

      haha thanks man. That's the old wackin' drill 😎

  • @jimrosson6702
    @jimrosson6702 Před rokem +1

    As usual another great video funny and informative so very true use what you have and be happy for the people that can afford and make a living with great tools. Also love your background

  • @edsweeney7266
    @edsweeney7266 Před 11 měsíci

    I love this guy........well ...like him. Practical, hilarious, informative and heck, he teaches a lot.

  • @burnu2240
    @burnu2240 Před rokem +1

    "Are you seeing the pattern?"
    Yes! DEWALT lol

    • @ENCurtis
      @ENCurtis  Před rokem

      Love my some dewalt! Always have, always will!

  • @mengmengme
    @mengmengme Před 11 měsíci

    appreciate your content, great work @ENcurtis, here is a question, from the using experience point of view, does it worth to buy battery powered Festool, or are the corded Festool more practical? due to their fantastic vacuum system and the design of detachable cord.

  • @euge5618
    @euge5618 Před rokem +1

    Festool track saw is so precise that I was able to make a table top without a jointer... By cutting all my boards on both sides (90 degree angle) I got absolutely no gaps. This is what you paying for.

  • @NemoSampaio
    @NemoSampaio Před rokem

    You nailed dude! When I see people criticizing and complaining about any machine or tool it is simply because they have never built anything before.