3 Jigs (and a BUNCH of tips) for better table saw rabbet joints
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- čas přidán 25. 10. 2016
- STUMPY NUBS WOODWORKING JOURNAL►www.stumpynubs.com
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Support us by using these affiliate links:
Fence clamps: shrsl.com/?el62
Bench Dog push blocks: shrsl.com/?el63
Freud flat grind rip blade: amzn.to/2dYm649
Amana flat grind rip blade: mywoodcutters.com/Amana_610240 - Jak na to + styl
You have a great voice for teaching. You're clear, easy to understand, and not rushing through the information you're giving. Thank you. Great video.
I spent 20 years teaching 15 - 18 year olds sawshop skills. Shop safety, rabbets, dados, miters, jig making, glue ups, assembly etc. When you see the lights come on after a teen completes their first cabinet or enclosure, it's rewarding. Soon after you see them using the same critical thinking in other areas of life. I just found your channel. Thanks.
I'd like to add a tip. When using a dado blade on large pieces it's almost impossible for the depth of cut to be consistent, even with push blocks. I always follow up with a dado cleanout router bit. I've been in the business for 40 years, and really enjoy your videos.
That bit about the cutoff falling away is a valuable piece of information for novice tablesaw users. I have a scar on my left hand that you could check for square with, and I got off lucky.
Yes, those cutoffs can be like little arrows that shoot out at you.
Not only are you a good wood worker, you are a very good teacher.
I always learn from your videos.
Never too old (or overconfident) to learn. Appreciate the great tutorial!
Some how my phone saw me write down rabbet and this suggested video showed up. Thanks for the tips
James "Stumpy Nubs" Hamilton knocking it out of the park again, with incredibly useful tips!
Your comments are always very much appreciated!
Once again you present some of the best, simple, clever and wise advice for woodworkers on the net. Thank you James, over and again you amaze me with what I can learn from both you and the mighty moustache lol. You are blessed with the learning experiences that your father and your work history have given you and and I, that is, all of us out here, am blessed that you choose to share it with us all. Thanks mate, you’re truly a living treasure and if you keep teaching, I’ll keep learning, an absolute bonza mate (that’s Aussie for the bestest with 11 thumbs up 👍🏻)
I've been a woodworker for over 50 years and still learning new tips from your video's. .....great job
Thank you. Excellent advice and so well illustrated.
I love these "basics" videos! Thank you!
Really great video. Winter has me locked out of the shop and this is gonna get me through til warmer weather
You are a great presenter of information and I appreciate the time to produce a quality video that isn't just thrown together. Excellent work.
I really appreciate all of the great woodworking information that you put into your videos; thank you for helping us all become better craftsmen!
Nicely done. Thanks for the info and the time you spend making it make sense. And then figgering out ways to make it more useful as you continue to think outside the box!
Very professionally explained. Makes it easy to understand. Your work is appreciated.
Great video, as always! Very informative and clear.
Wow: Great help, thank you sir!. I am just beginning and i am just now getting to learn rabbets and I'm really glad i found your video.
I really like your video's. Very informative. And I have been doing this for 30+years
Thank you
Scott
Another fantastic tutorial. Thank you.
Great advice. It always comes down to the basics.
excellent presentation. easy to follow. thanks.
Stumpy, how long have you been into woodworking & where did you get ALL this knowledge that you are sharing with the rest of us? Did you take A LOT of woodshop classes in high school or what? If you don't mind someone that is a lot older than you asking & in awe of your seemingly endless skill!
I have to agree whole heatedly about "sneaking up" on the final cut. I do the same thing on my home made router table. There is only 1 additional tip I would add to this however. Use a piece of scrap to dial in the cut that way if you do happen to mess up, you don't ruin your actual work piece.
Really nice video my friend. Isn't this tube a revelation!👏🏻
I've used these joints a couple of times but I've never known what they were called. Thanks for the informative videos.
Thanks for the great video James.
I love these jigs. Thank you so much!
excellent info and advice.
y'know, I'm wondering why your channel doesn't get more views, good tips and projects consistently. keep at at it mate. some of the other guys can get a bit boring
Great instructions Stumpy! I learned a lot and will be able to work more safely
I appreciate that you appreciate it!
Cheers Stump. Great tips
Great tips thanks as always.
thanks for the tips,I learn from each of your videos
Loved this video!
Those Rockler fence clamps are great.
Always enjoy your videos! keep it up!!
A Great informative video !!!!! Well done ! Thanks a lot !
An alternative to the Rockler Fence clamps are guide rail clamps (Festool and others). That way you don’t need a limited use clamp like the fence clamp.
Well done
I always strive to meet the quality of videos such as yours
Much information in a short time. Very good made!
Great lesson. Thank you!
Learning's a process...thanks for the tips!
Really good advice explained really well. Thanks!
All good points. I really need to get some better push blocks and stop risking my precious wittle stumpy nubs. (fingers)
Thanks again.
Thanks for your videos. Also thanks for posting the info in the description box. I might have to order one of those Frued Blades.
Thanks . excellent piece.
No wonder I can't find a plane, you got'em all!
Good advice like your videos always informative cheers from England
So did I.. I learned a lot..
Thank you for making this video
would like to see the extra uses for the universal fence clamp.
Nice video. Very informative.
Great video stumpy
Very informative video. Thanks for sharing
Thanks, nicely done. Good stuff!
Great video sir.
Great video tips, thanks
Just want to add make sure you have a zero clearance throat plate installed, learned this one the hard way
fantastic tips
As usual tons of info, thank
Great Video!
You know what your shop and mine have in common, we both have the same coffee cup!!! lol...Great shop!!
That's all the proof I need to know we're both awesome.
👍
If you going to make one too many rabbits joints it's worth to make weigh down feather block it attaches to table saw with magnets behind the fence. Similar one can be used when cutting two cuts rabbit pushing it against the fence
I guess you take after your dad....GREAT TEACHER! thank you
Muchas gracias por la idea👍👍👏👏
Munches grasses to you to, sir!
Great Video, I actually learned something.
Thanks Jim!
Great advice, mate!...
My incra fence jig allows me to adjust to 1 thousandth of an inch with the turn of a knob. Much easier than applying tape to the fence.
James this is very useful. Kinda like mikes useful tips. Outstanding young man
Thanks!
Thank you sir.
Very good video. Any way to get a printable plan for that jig?
OK, that opening shot, I now have clamp envy.....
Do you mean plane envy?
Great info. thx.
I drew a ton of good advise from this, thanks!
You're welcome!
Thx. I wanted 2 use my table saw 2 cut my rabbets, but my piece kept wanting 2 slip down n2 the blade gap. That last jig would fix that. Looks like it could b useful 4 other things 2.
Stumps, how do you like the saw stop compared to other saws. Power, performance, fence etc
Wonderful 👏
Good advice. Like!
Nice Video 👍🇨🇭
This was so satisfying informative from someone who is clearly a master. When the master is 10% confused, the student is 90% confused. This man has 0% confusion. 🙏🏻
Hey Stumpy, the link you provided for the Amana saw blade is not available. Great video though! I learned a few things I didn't know. Keep 'em coming.
Nice video! Where did you find al those moulding planes? Looks like a fortune in antiques.
Can I extend that last jig to cut a rabbet 1/4" deep and 3" high (max of my jobsite Sawstop blade height)? I don't have a band saw yet and I'm thinking I would do that on a 6"x 3/4" board to make it into 6x1/2" by flipping it over.
What are those clamps called?
Do you have a link on that jig. Would like to make one.
Dude you have a lot of rabbet going on there :))
A little help please. The link to the Amana blade doesn't work. Maybe it's just me and my computer skills. Not as good as my nunchuck skills. Love the videos!
Tenon = inside-out rabbet, I like it. You are a genius, Stumpy. Sort of...
Close! A BRIDLE JOINT is an double-sided rabbet inside an inside-out rabbet... sort of. :)
i just bought a set of the auxiliary fence clamps, (milescraft, not rockler) i am finding that when i tighten the clamps to my auxiliary fence that the top of the auxiliary fence is being drawn into the table saw fence at a very slight angle with the top of the aux fence leaning into the table saw fence and making the auxiliary fence out of square to the table ...is this a common problem with thesew clamps? do you have a suggestion how to alleviate this? i have the holes in my aux. fence drilled to a depth that allows the clamp to go as far down as possible. the aux fence is slightly higher than the table saw fence by just under a 1/4"...also i used 3/4" particle board because it was the straightest flattest scrap i had around the house...thanks,,,rob
nice good information / I don't wood work but I want a Puzzle table and I want it to look good ya I can make table top but the thing that scares me is the skeleton its on and how do / and how strong / are the joints I have no wood working materials I will buy a table saw Plus the joints that seem the cheapest are Pocket joints so I will buy a jig for about 60 bucks don't want it that way so Im trying to learn more your video was awesome I will look up more TY
What kind of wood is this and where can it be found?
This sacrificial fence is dangerous if it's installed on a automatic fence, unless it's very thin so the fence stops just before the plywood hits the blade from side. If the blade is very low, then it might cut through and that's not too bad
Another excellent video. Why do you ONLY have 90,000 subscribers? I don't get it! Should be 900,000
Channels that do a lot of DIY projects draw more subs. We're a strictly woodworking channel. But we manage :)
I'm a better CARPENTER just from watching this video!
'achieving a perfect joint is an act of finesse'. That needs to go in a woodworking bible.
Can you provide a link to your site for he build plans for the jigs you used? I think we could all benefit from that. Love your vids. Sub’d to both your site and your channel. Keep them coming!!!
Your actual pushing in 3 directions, down against the table, sideways against the fence and pushing the panel forward.
how would you cut a rabbet at a 15 degree angle
I am brand new to would working and am slow to figure stuff like this out. I hope I get better with time.
I don't have a dado set yet and I don't want to get want to have to get one if I can avoid it.
madmopper31 If you're serious about woodworking, you will get one.
Do you have a recommendation on a dado set brand/model to go for? Been looking around and reading reviews, but finding that even for 'good dado sets', people end up having non-uniform grooves due to edge blades and/or chippers have slight variation in diameters.
Ridge Carbide. Use discount code► SNWJ10 Here's a video about dado sets: czcams.com/video/Ex4UgxzaB0Q/video.html
What about single cut without a dado ...just wondering. 😁