DIY Cabinet doors with just a table saw!
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- čas přidán 18. 02. 2021
- Well built, durable and nothing but a cheap table saw required! (No dado set!)
Free table saw classes (In SNU Courses section)►www.stumpynubs.com/
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Free table saw class (In SNU Courses section)►www.stumpynubs.com/
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Free table saw classes (In SNU Courses section)►www.stumpynubs.com/
ISOtunes Bluetooth hearing protection (Use $10 off code STUMPY): bit.ly/2mdAqcn
Video about homemade splitters►czcams.com/video/gzdF-bLXc8Q/video.html
Free table saw class (In SNU Courses section)►www.stumpynubs.com/
AMAZING Hedgehog featherboards (seen in video)► amzn.to/3b4KcVl
(We may get a small commission if you use one of the above affiliate links.)
I'd love to hear stumpy's thoughts on the incra fence.
I just tried the stumpy nubs discount code for Ridge carbide for my 2nd table saw blade. What I found that the discount code is good for one purchase.
I will sign up as soon as I get my contractor table saw set up. I am trying to decide what I am going to do about an Outfeed table. Never used a table saw before outside my shop class a million years ago. :)
@StumpyNubs thanks for the lesson. It's worth noting that mdf should always be cut/drilled while wearing a filtered mask. It's manufactured with toxic chemicals like formaldehyde.
James I normally use reclaimed materials like pallets because I can get them free. If I wanted to make a vertical slat panel in the door...should I glue the slats together and not the outside edges or use only tongue and groove?
@fdort3971 Glue them together to make a single panel, then let that float in the frame. Otherwise, gaps can open between the loose slats.
I always like your ability to explain your build. As a beginner in woodworking your knowledge is impeccable. Thanks Jim
James I know this is just one more comment but I do need to tell you that THIS video was amazing. I've been building a box riser for a lady's mini refrigerator so she doesn’t have to bend down so far. The door part was the only part I was nervous about and I didn’t want to just put hinges on a piece of plywood and watch it warp in a week. I wanted a proper door. YOU saved me. Trust me when I say you are an outstanding teacher and that is something I know a lot about. For over 40 years I taught thousands of people all over the country and wrote 5 books on a very technical topic. Nothing at all connected with wood working. What makes you a fantastic teacher is that you never assume that the student already knows the terms or is reading between the lines. You teach like its our first day in the wood shop and THAT is what makes you a fantastic teacher. I built this door using oak for the rails and styles and then sandwiched three sheets of 1/8 masonite for the panel and the result was as perfect as what you showed in your video. Great instructions make for a better student. My confidence has grown as a result. I have never seen any woodworking videos that are as clear as yours. I admire you as a teacher and a person. Please don't ever change. I have an entire folder in my CZcams library and nothing is in it but Stumpy videos. Thats the good stuff. Thank you most sincerely.
It does not get any easier to follow than that James. You have a great teaching method, clear and concise and no attitude! Thank you
ha, refreshing that this is a video targeting DYIers that don't have a full blown wood shop with every pro tool available. Cheers!
I am not a native english speaker (and listener), but the way you teach, the words you choose, make my not-good-English seems to disappear. Thanks for every video you post.
I can’t wait for the solid wood doors video.
James is the neighbor every woodworker wishes they had especially during the early learning period. I'm building doors similar to this and thought "let's see if stumpy has a video for that!"
@ 13:55 if you look closely you can see the fence move away from the blade as the work piece encountered the feather board, I was quite surprised, to say the least. Especially considering it is a Incra fence system (which I highly respect), and I watched as the video continued and it happened again . . .
I feel like I'm serving an apprenticeship when I watch one of your instructional videos. The voice of experience speaks with authority. Thanks for being a patient teacher.
That's funny...I feel like a student back in woodworking class!
Thank you for the tip about using 1/2 MDF or Plywood and cutting the 1/4 rabbet on all 4 sides.
Thanks James for this straightforward tutorial. I appreciate the pace of the lesson - very “absorbable” for my brain. Kudos for showing how this can be done with a Job Site or Contractor Table Saw. Sincerely, very Satisfied Subscriber [just when I thought that I’d watched all of your videos…I found this one. I’m glad that I did.]
The details you give are always gold. And you deliver information with grace. Been watching you for a while. You're one of the best on CZcams my friend!
Great job with all of your instructions James. You’re doing a great job and service to the woodworking communities. Thanks for sharing with us on CZcams also. Fred. 👏🏻👏🏻👍👍
Thank you for the free course ! Looking forward to learning how to use the saw correctly .
Another video filled with great info. Really appreciate what you do, James.
This guy is the best. Wonderful teacher.
As always James a fine job of presenting solid information without lots of jump cuts and distracting music. I continue to look forward to your videos! Stay well & stay safe!
Cheers from Nova Scotia 🇨🇦
The self-centering is so simple and ingenious! Thanks a lot.
What a clear and informative video, James. Thank you for taking the time to make and share this. I'm a novice, but with guides like this, my path to becoming a semi-decent woodworker is easier to follow.
Best video by far...thank you
Perfect, absolutely perfect. That was the easiest, and by far the most useful cabinet door video I have watched. Thank you. Your clear and step by step process gives a great sense of confidence for this beginner. Now on to a cabinet box.
Thanx. I watch a lot of videos as curiosity because they are things I will never do. This one speaks directly to me.
Great video!!! You explain everything so a novice to a pro can appreciate the process. Your explanation of why it’s ok to used a feather board was perfect. Many people gloss over things they feel are obvious but you take the time just to ensure what you are showing is understandable to all who watch. Thank you.
Very cool!! I am new to your channel and finding myself binging a bunch at a time. I really appreciate how you take time and explain each step instead of time lapsing the entire process.
Thanks Stumpy! Much appreciated 😊
Thank you for all of your content. You are a great teacher.
Thanks. That was beautifully done.
Great video and safety procedures on the table saw.. thanks
Absolutely the best cabinet door video I've seen. Clear, precise, great reminders for safety, hopefully I can turn out a door or two. Maybe even a cabinet to put them on. Now off to watch the table saw tutorial on your website. This 60yr old lady is about to build cabinets.
DUDE!!!! THANK YOU! THANK YOU! THANK YOU! Seriously, thank you! The information in this video is thorough, detailed & complete. All of the videos I’ve watched just completely gloss over the entire issue of choosing the materials!
very informative, without talking down to the viewer. good job!!!!!!
Simple but very well explained thanks.
This is great timing. I am just about to start some cabinet doors for a desk I'm building. Been spending the last couple days looking at building methods that will work with the tools I have.
Excellent instructional video. Thank you. I definitely intend to use your method.
Glad I came across your site. Very helpful to me as I start building cabinets for myself. Very good instruction.
Brilliant video Nubs.
Thanks for bringing value to my life!
This was very helpful and practical as I am building the doors for a bathroom cabinet. Thanks.
Thank you so much with these details. You are such a great teacher. I learnt a lot. just in this video!!! From South Africa.
Made some doors this way just for the shop, using 1/4”MDF panel. Good enough for the shop. Nice video!
One of the best instructional videos I've ever seen...on any topic. You're a cool dude🙂
There are so many useful approaches in this video that can be applied to other jobs...been looking for a way to build a picture frame for a large poster and can easily adapt this as well as for cabinet doors with glass inserts (will just miter in molding).
Great video! Thanks for sharing your expertise
I cannot thank you enough for this video. I'm in the middle of building a new cabinet bench for my basement and it has 4 doors. Having never made cabinet doors before, I am...less than confident. This is an incredibly timely video (at least for me) and makes the prospect so much less daunting. Thank you.
Great video, I’m making some doors just just like this for my shop cabinets. I’m using scrap 3/4 inch plywood for the rails and stiles. It doesn’t look the best but for the shop it’s fine. This is nice practice for when I build a new set of cabinets for the house.
Excellent and easy to understand description of one of the most practical ways to get frame & panel parts (not just doors) that I am aware of.
BTW, I like using my isotunes ear phones for listening and watching how to videos while my CNC machine is running.
Thank you! I'll definitely be using this
Great video and timely for me since I am about to make these type doors for a pantry. Thanks!
Perfectly executed! Now, if the three large panel doors I must make from 3/4" oak (rails & styles) and 1/4" oak veneer plywood that fit onto the patio cabinet (each door 29 3/8" x 65 1/8") would be the 1,000 or so panel doors I had made instead of my first, I would be proud to show the confidence you bring to your video! But, they aren't and I don't... but I will do my best. I am forever grateful to you (and others) who take the time and produce such great training videos for which this one is just one more of the hundreds before it have been. I am ever grateful and much appreciative... thanks just does not seem sufficient! THANKS! (still insufficient 😉)
Thanks for the Upload Stumpy, I was just pricing Cabinet Door and was amazed at the high prices, did a CZcams search and your Video popped up, this is going to save me tons of money, already have the tools I need but I thought the process was a lot harder then it really was , DIY'ers like me appreciate this kind of content, new sub for me
Thank you! It's very much like you said, many presenters in videos on this subject assume a novice such as myself knows the steps they are taking.
Very clear and informative.
That tablesaw fence deflects quite a bit when cutting the grooves.
There are two locking points for the Incra fence, one on the positioner arm, another on the fence rail itself. I did not have the fence rail lock engaged. It looked way worse in a video closeup than it actually was. I didn't even notice it, and it didn't affect the cut.
Thank You!!! Much Appreciated!!!! 👍😎😃
Was going to do pocket hole technique but then stumbled upon this video. I'm a beginner. Mistakes to avoid: Make sure fence is lined up correctly. Don't clamp so tight that it bows the door. I didn't realize i did this until everything dried. Be patient with rails and make sure the tongue fits good. Get a decent mask especially when cutting the mdf board.
Awesome video Mr. Nubs. I'm about to make some garage cabinets so this will help a lot. I enjoy this format.
Really good information and demonstration
Best Shaker style door video on CZcams!
Thank you
Excellent...thank you.
AWESOME setup tips for the TS doing dados and rabbets. Doing the rough center then flip technique removes all possible errors in getting the grooves centered and stiles/ rails flush with each other. With a good flat top blade, the machining steps shouldn't take long at all.
Great job explaining everything thank you
You make it simple. Thanks
Another great educational video. Thanks.
Well done James
Thanks for sharing that!
Thanks for sharing your tips and videos, you do great work.
Great tips thanks very much
Very good video. Thank you. Have a table saw but it's just a contractor saw that doesn't take dado stacks, and i don't have a planer or jointer so this is perfect to make doors for a small cabinet i'm planning.
Great advice
great video , thank you
Watch this video before I built some bathroom cabinets for my neighbor.
Used Alder frames and 1/2 " birch for faces. Very easy built 5 door and 3 drawer fronts. They loved the. And Iiked the simplicity of the build . Thanks again
Great video, thanks!
Thanks!!! Great video, looking forward to the next one
Another advantage of using 1/2" panels w/ rabbeted edge is it makes a flush back that's ideal for drawer fronts.
Easy and perfect 👍👍👍
Well said about the position of Your featherboards Sir . I do the same and have a pair of vertical featherboards as well .
Brilliant! just what I wanted. Greetings from Ireland👍
This was a great tutorial. I have to make a 60” shaker door so this is very helpful.
Sharpening chisels, sliding dovetails, cabinet doors and much more. Your videos are always appreciated.
Great job!
Nice. That technique is going to come in handy.
A great instructional - thank you :)
A bit more advanced but always like watching your videos James, thanks again you never disappoint!
Very informative man! Good video
Thanks for another informative video.
Thank you.
All I had to learn from was the new yankee workshop back in the 80’s. Old Norm. My hats off to Norm but what you do here on CZcams is phenomenal. If I would have just had this back then. Wow. Except then the world would already be over as we know it now. Well I never get tired of learning and it feels great to be learning from you here. Even if I can’t see as well as back then. 👍❤️✌️
Love the wings can holder!
Love this one, it gave me some incentive to use the router after you demonstrated how easy it can be.
Very good Video
As always wonderful
Nice Thanks
Very good Stumpy. Best explanation yet. U dun good!
Very nice video!
Great video thanks for sharing
Great video, loved it
Geez…what a great video!!! Great Channel
The level of expertise is shown with the amount of hand planers 😂. This guy is hundreds of levels above most carpenters
Great video