Making a Jewelry Bench (With Vise Restoration)
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- čas přidán 3. 07. 2024
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My PO Box for if you have any cool old tools, maps, or blueprints you’d like to see hanging on the walls (please don’t send just anything) is:
Will Stelter
PO Box 514
Manhattan, MT, 59741
Editing by the talented @isaiaharnoldfilm
Website www.willstelterbladesmith.com/
“Next week on Will’s Wild Ride: We use the leftover half moon semi circle, you know what I mean to make a stool for our jewlery bench!” It’s a no brainer and a perfect fit!
I was thinking Will could maybe use that semi circle cutout as a mini tool holder/block/shelf for the Jewelery Bench. But you know what... your idea is WAY better! Love it!
Are you infuring Will may be getting a bit broad of beam?? LOL
Will: “unless something terrible happens…”
Me: immediately gets flashbacks of his power hammer falling over and him screaming
I still have sympathy-PTSD from that!!!
I'm concerned he will go down the rabbit hole of Alec spending to much time on shit no one cares about.
One of the most guttural screens I’ve heard in my life.
@@brianbecher5781
Right there with you….
Well the cordless drill did take a header off the table while he was sawing, Will's old enemy gravity.
the time-lapse with the drill falling off was pure quality🤣
Omg I absolutely died laughing when I watched the cordless drill rattle off the table in the time lapse. Was I the only one who found that hilarious?
You are not the only one. haha
"...some casters underneath that, 'cuz that's how we roll." Absolute Dad material right there.
An unbelievable bladesmith with a phenomenal workshop…had to borrow a jig saw from his father. Will, you win the internet for the day!
Love how that drill vibrated off the table in high speed. That’s happened to me so many times… 🤦
It hurt bc I felt that pain, have had a couple Milwaukee battery casings and impact heads busted by that very thing😭
@@walterammons5344 Exactly. I have two workstations that vibrate more than the others… I’ve definitely gotten better, but it still happens from time to time
the drill was in hammer drill mode and that made drilling wood so challenging.
@@noelandrew3600 ah just asked the same question lol, did wonder
@@walterammons5344 my craftsman at least waited about 16 years before it decided to jump off my ladder XD it still works just fine but it has a bit of a crack where the batt snaps in. i honestly cant believe the the stuff is still working i bought the set in 2002
11:15 I love how that drill just suddenly disappeared 🤣 that's must be a magic trick 👏👏
It's worth having those books that are falling apart professionally rebound or repaired. Especially if you actually use the books
Better still, scan them and put them online so everyone can use and read them, like Keith Rucker does, he may already have them in his back catalogue
Funny how you mentioned that the books say "make it in a way a simple minded person can grasp it" is actually the motto that we used in school. Whenever we had technical drawing class, the old engineers said that we need to make everything 100% clear, dont ever assume common sense from the other guys. Thats a very good rule to live by if you document any kind of manual :)
“Cuz that’s how we roll” 😂😂😂
I love old textbooks, not just from a perspective of learning the material but also from a historic perspective. I study chemistry and my mom found a collection of chemistry lectures from the 1800's which I found fascinating because first of all it was describing reactions in terms of pounds rather than SI units, but also because at one point the author describes one of the first things modern students are taught in Chemistry as "A controversial new idea from this Avogadro guy, but I think the math checks out and makes sense and you all are lucky because it's going to make this class so much easier and I wish I had had it when I was learning chemistry."
Will, you're right about mechanical drawing, which was a required class back in my teens. It's all about precision and discipline. A perfect starting point for your projects. 👍
I've had to take a class on mechanical drawings a few years back for my bachelor in mechanical engineering. We had to do like 20 drawings in total, nowadays my CAD just spits them out automatically 😅
@@AramcoPhil I also had a required class in hand setting type, does that age me? 🤣
@@saginawdan oof.. yea 🤣
@@saginawdan Yep, me too. Print Shop in High School in the late 60s, along with Mechanical Drawing.
@@AramcoPhil Learning CAD gives you all the essential knowledge but putting pencil to drafting vellum is so much more personal for me, and really emphasizes "get it right the first time'".
Will, I appreciated you having "Soli Deo Gloria" written on your wall. It made my day.
That quick vise restoration deserves a chef’s kiss.
I learned mechanical drawing and drafting in high school, back in 1986. The second semester we got our first computers in the drafting department to learn CAD; the next year all the drawing classes were dropped in favor of teaching CAD. Thanks for the super-cool video, Will!
I work in Erie and used to pass by the Erie Tool Works building on my way to work. My mother-in-law was one of the first people to use a CAD program at the place I work now, a company that started in Erie. Very cool to see an old vice still being used!
Glad to see you got the cork flag 😍 🇮🇪🇮🇪🇮🇪🇮🇪😎 welcome to the Rebel county 😊🇮🇪
Went to the comments to say the same thing! Very pleasantly surprised :)
Congrats Will!!! Love watching your channel grow and always looking forward to what you’ll do next. God bless!
Normally I skip the 'word from our sponsors' bit but your intro got me. That was the best advertising piece I have seen on you tube, because you made it sound interesting and that you are interested in it,
Love that jeweller's table, I may have to include something similar in my workshop.
So good to see things are working out for you! I’ve never seen a blacksmith with a book before🤣🤣🤣
been following alex steele for a few years and just realized it was will that made the videos entertaining
As a H.S. shop teacher who teaches Technical Drawing. I agree totally with you, in my 20 years of teaching I have seen such a decline in the pride taken in Technical (Mechanical) drafting. I still find it relaxing to sit down and draft a part or item.
For things you want to be able to move, but that you don't want moving accidentally, it's usually better to use 2 caster wheels instead of 4. Then you put a handle somewhere that will let you easily lift the side without the caster wheels a tiny bit off the ground.
The drill slowly vibrating until it goes out of frame, presumably falling on the floor, made me laugh good.
Me, watching this: "that drill's gonna work its way of the... yep, there it goes."
Congratulations on your channel and I've got to say I got a good laugh at the use of the "Son of a biscuit" I haven't heard that in a very long time. But it great that you keep it clean, after all this is a family channel.
"because that's how we roll"... the worst and best pun ever, but I lost it. I wasn't prepared for the pun shock.
Have my thumbs up for that alone sir.
Haha the dog and the shirt! Win! 👍
I started drafting in 8th grade, then had another 4 years in high school and was doing descriptive geometry. I did take another year in college but the course was not as advanced as what I had in high school. I then went on to become a draftsman then later a designer of aircraft instrumentation. Computer aided drafting (CAD) was just being introduced during the end of my stay at the company where I worked. CAD was the end of mechanical drawing by hand unless you were working in a very small company that could not afford the upgrade to CAD. I still make cartoons for all the projects that I do, mostly just sketches. Great video Will, thumbs up.
That second quote from that book was amazing.
true, old, wisdom
I know the weight of the vise(s?) on the front side of the jewelry bench will probably mostly eliminate the backwards tipping issue, but that bench may benefit from having some weights added to the base so it's not so top heavy. Just an idea. I'm glad to hear you'll be getting the power hammer up and running super soon. Cheers, Will, and God bless.
You're a funny guy Will lmao. When you got that splinter I felt your pain, as a carpenter. You had me laughing so hard with the "son of a biscuit" swear word 🤣.
I cant wait to see what you're going to be making soon. That bench top was so nice, what a great find.
You should make it so the half moon piece can be removed and replaced when you need more table space.
I love your love of old tools. encouraged me to restore a lovely old 1930 vice of my dads.
Love all the little notes on the wall 😂 especially the Michael Scott quote
Eric, That 70's show, close your eyes and listen 👂... Am i tight the cadence, the tone. Will stelter is like a competent Eric... Seriously 😂😂😂😂😂
I took mechanical drafting in high school nearly 39 years ago. I used it up until 2001, when I left the construction industry. Now it's all about CAD.
You had me for a second with the white paint gag. I gasped!
That sponsorship transition was completely flawless man, nice job
My jewelry bench is my retirement plan, it probably consists of 70% gold dust after 35 years of use, LOL!
I'm so glad your channel is doing well. I hope you can find the time to provide more content for it. You deserve the success. I'm proud of ya.
Ahhh the joys of isometric and orthgraphic projection
When it comes to computers I am at the " see spot run" level so I do all my drawings for projects on paper with the same equipment I used at school 40 years ago
It can also help you sort out the order of work processes as you draw
First year of architecture school (2004) was all about hand drafting and shop knowledge. The year after my class matriculated, they converted the whole first year curriculum to CAD, 3D, and parametric design. So I definitely believe I witnessed the actual “loss” of a “lost art”.
I made a custom jewellery bench last year its so much more cost effective and you can get it exactly how you want, nice work Will
Alec misses you.
Metal shop class in 7th grade (the late 60s for me) we had to make high quality to scale pencil drawings of all our projects before we built them. We started by practicing drawing cubic and other solids with straight edges using 45 (?) degree perspective (I still recall getting dinged a point because one of my almost invisible eraser marks was deemed too "smudgy" ... we were graded on a curve and it could have cost me an "A" for the class!)
Enjoyed your project. Especially the vice. Love learning about different vices. Loved your Bible quote. I have a shirt from Kerusso that just says Fe sharpens Fe.
A Damascus chefs knife crafted by your good self? I need. Can't wait for the giveaway Will congrats on the 200 thousand.
Love the method you used to trace out your half circle XD you definitely understand the saying "work smarter, not harder"
Been here since the post Steele day. So glad you made it to 200k. Love you sharing your journey. Bless you.
Will: "Let's cover up this gorgeous wood bench top with w h i t e p a i n t"
Me, a woodworker: "...and I took that personally"
" we're gonna screw our screws onto the.....this" 🤣🤣🤣🤣 love your explanations Will.
Will, I love seeing you working both Alex's shops or yours. I have been a designer for thirty years. I, and the fabrication companies that I have worked for agree, that drawing a sketch with dimensions can save shop errors. You are young and quick to cut; at least sketch the item, then you can miter joints and your end product will look more finished. Keep working for perfection in your design, fabrication, and finish of all your projects!
I have old watchmaking books, and they are utterly fascinating. Old books have so much lost information and techniques
The technical term for what you hunt, Will... is "Man-tiques."
Noticing the cross on the chalk board made me happy
Dude, I just love your channel. So glad your doing you own channel since you left Steele Co. I agree with the book, your craftsmanship is art.
I love your videos and have followed you since you left Alex's shop. I'm just here to say your music selection is always great. I love the fusion between traditional and then low-key beats.
Loved the subtle background scripture drops.
👍👍👍
Nice vid Will.
Congratulations Will :) You deserve 1 Mil subs !! Always happy to see a new video coming from your new shop !! Blessings to you !!
Will very nice video this week. Very beautiful design and vices. Can't wait to see ur next videos. Keep up the great craftsmanship and hard work my friend Will. Forge on. Keep making. God bless.
Name a more iconic pair than:
Will and having to borrow stuff from parents
I'll wait.
Love the way your videos are evolving over time, keep up the great work!
Watching Will’s drill eject it’s self off the bench was painful to see 😂
I have an old physics textbook from the late 1800s and it was so interesting. The author made some predictions about how electricity would be used in the future. It’s fun to read through!
Oh Yeh.. production Quality is getting better. Enjoying your work Will.
It's pretty good for small filing work. You may need something more anchored and wider for chipping work or engraving. You may want to use a vise for draw plate work, which produces wire to make inlays, ring shanks and chain links. If you pull wire through a draw plate, it will try to yank that narrow bench over.
If you want to get a rolling mill, get a French one and stay away from the imported stuff. The press wheels in the Chinese ones break a lot. Instead of an anvil I use a 6 inch long piece of railroad track. A book you should get is Oppai Untracht's Metal Techniques for Craftsmen. I was able to make some pretty good niello from a recipe in it, and there are a lot of small metal craft heat treatment techniques in it that you will find interesting.
The binocular bench magnifier that Alex uses with a ball engraver is a great, almost perfect way to do small work. I look at that setup as something I might put together some day for myself.
From what I can tell, Blacksmithing is a YOUNG art. Good job Will!
So all in all good stuff in this video
I learned a long time ago. Not to weld casters to anything. It's so much easier to replace them when they break if bolted to a plate. That, and if you are worried about your frame being twisted its easier to shim. But then again I have some casters that are over 20 yrs old.
Oof watching that drill slowly walk off the table was hard 😂
Congrats on 200K.
Lord bless you, Will.
Oh wow those books awe AWESOME! Thanks for sharing those with us! So friggin cool! I just love how you use all these old old tools, and bringing back American craftsmanship. You're an absolute inspiration. Time to make my own workbench!!!
Great video sir and thanks for the book recommendations
I'm glad that I'm just old enough to have had to learn drafting as well as CAD when getting my technical degree (since have gone and got my mechanical engineering degree), many younger colleagues were jealous that I could make such good sketches when working with clients, they only ever learnt CAD... I have an old book on (mechanical) power generation and transmission from the 1930s, not only is it still relevant (though I don't design canals), not much has changed, the math is still valid... I pull it out as often as my books on CFD...
Nice work Will.
Thw marker was spot on, awesome job !
Good looking bench!
I laughed way to hard at “cause that’s how we roll” 😂
keep it up my dude
im studying engineering over here in Aussie land at the moment and im super excited to see those engineering drawing books get put to good use in the future!
we do those too but they are made in a program called cad or solidworks as far as my experience has shown me, i love the idea of doing them by hand.
The lighting was very nice in this video!!!
As always another great video , always good seeing you. God bless and stay safe, HUGS
I've learnt mechanical drawing in highschool and it was fantastic, doesn't use it often but when I do it comes in handy
Congratulations will
Love you brother. Great shop update. Soli De Gloria.
I started learning drafting in the 7th grade (part time, and some in 8th). Took 2 years in high school, and used it to design theatrical productions.
When putting things down to paper, you have the time to figure out how to make it, what measurements, cuts, joints, etc to do. Basically, you can plan out your project and solve problems before you start.
I also like doing isometric drawings to “see” three sides at once: to get a better feeling for the total look. It also helps your client to visualize the project.
great video Mr.Stelter
Maybe consider filling the bottom tubes of the frame with some sand to make it more base-heavy. Just cut a opening in the top side of the tube and pour it in. then tack the "lid" back on top of it :)
Beautiful vise man, i really like the gold highlighting aswell! Keep it up man
Grew up in Erie. Currently in Pittsburgh. The vise is super cool.
I felt that splinter from putting the wax on. 😩
Looks fantastic!
Not sure if someone already suggested this. For the tall toppling mobile bench, you could widen the base by adding a lower bench top on the other side, also with wheels. It could attach to the tall bench with bolts, to remove. Then you have space for chair work too and the bench is stable. Though its nice to be able to work 360 around a bench. Maybe just weigh the tall bench down and you're good.
Looking forward to seeing the power hammer making blades!
That cut off would make a sweet cutting board. Along with that chefs knife..
BIG congrats on 200K subs!!!
Congrats on 2k Will.. You really deserve it.. Keep up the great work buddy !
Like this alot!
Congrats on the subscribers man!!
Keep and eye out for nice cast iron pans when antiquing, some older pans were also made in Erie.
I didn’t expect that whole part about the books to be so interesting. Your passion for Learning and enthusiasm is definitely what captivated me in that clip
Congrats on 200k will
young man, you have certainly hung in there strong since the beginning good luck good job