5 Tablesaw Jigs from 1/2 Sheet of Plywood - WOOD magazine
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- čas přidán 2. 06. 2024
- Count 'em: 5 essential tablesaw jigs from a mere half-sheet of plywood. Jim Heavey shows you how to build and use five jigs that will make nearly any cut you can make on your tablesaw easier, more accurate, and repeatable.
00:45 - Saddle Fence
04:17 - Tenon Jig
06:43 - Crosscut Sled
12:18 - Ripping Sled
17:41 - Dado/Cutoff Gauge
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Bought this for my friend for his birthday, and he loves it. Father-in-law was a little jealous, even. :) Built solid, but light enough to move around for projects. Easy to use czcams.com/users/postUgkxPeGkHOMe05FySypTOvYumxMn-xi39oRe and makes great precision cuts. Doesn't come with a laser mount, but the fence is straight as an arrow and if you measure carefully, it's not a problem. Can handle dimensional lumber with ease, but of course, there's a limit to how thick. Handled a 4x4" post without a problem, but 4x6" we had to flip and cut twice. Only thing we've noticed is make sure to tighten the nut that holds the saw blade when you take it out of the box and maybe check up on it occasionally. For some, this is probably a no-brainer, but we neglected to do this and a few months in, found the motor running but the blade spinning at about half speed or less. Tightened the nut, and problem was solved. Very happy with this purchase. Dewalt makes sturdy stuff.
Awesome book that gives you step-by-step photos czcams.com/users/postUgkxTNB_zFBSnTo_O1PqfVUwgi7ityw0JlKt and directions to make every day project. I can see myself making a few of these projects and giving them as housewarming and holiday gifts!
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Finally, someone is using standard measurement. ☺
Great tutorial, you remind me of my 8th grade woodworking teacher Mr Blackmore ❤❤
I met Jim Heavey at a wood show in Columbus, OH many years ago. I must say he is as knowledgeable and as kind as he appears on this video. Thanks to WOOD and Mr. Heavey for bringing the craft of woodworking to thousands of garage shops like mine. Thank you so much!
I met him in Baltimore a few years ago. Great guy.
Great video!
But if I may offer a hint, a better way to cut threaded rod is to set two nuts at the required length, and using two spanners, jam them together.
Use one of the nuts as a guide for your saw. The nuts won't move while you are sawing - but you will achieve a precise, 90º cut that creates minimal damage to the end of your thread
🤙
Last one is genius in its simplicity.
Harvey jigs serve the philosophy of repetitively creating with ease and precision
Owe you a lot for teaching skills and techniques
GBU
Being a baltic birch user myself, because I like it better than domestic plywood, Mr. Heavey's use of 3/4" baltic for his very usable jigs is/was a very good choice. And... I subscribed in order to see what else he has to offer. Mr. Heavey is obviously a very experienced wood worker, who even those of us who are thought of as experienced can learn something new. Well done Mr. Heavey ... thanx!
Good luck finding let alone affording, Baltic Birch nowadays.
you can find it - but it is $$$$$$
Would not be my choice for making jigs.
It is difficult to understand the economics of imported lumber being more expensive than imported goods made from imported lumber. Something smells funny, and if I had more time, I'd follow the money and figure out what billionaires it benefits .
Found it yesterday in NJ for $148 full sheet
Very nice birch for $86. I took the birch
@@samh9072Really. Where did you find it? I'm in NJ. Thanks.
I’ve watched a dozen or more tablesaw jig videos. And just when I thought I had seen it all, I watched your video and learned a ton of techniques. I am giving my older tablesaw to a friend just starting out…this is the best video to recommend he watch, right out of the gate.
That’s it I need a bigger shop to store all these jigs and everything else of made from this channel. Love this channel
Thanks 👍
I never once considered a sled stop. Going to make one! This is the most interesting takeaway from this video for me (it was all really done well!). Thanks!!
The best how to video on CZcams this is perfect great job thanks for this content
Thank you Jim & Wood Magazine for your long time sharing of woodworking.
This video is A W E S O M E. I'll be making all of these jigs for use in my shop. Thanks for the information. You're the man!
Very informative and clearly explained. Thanks you. UK Dave
Thank you Jim, Great to see you back making these great videos..
Thank you for your information packed time consuming well presented content ,
👍👍 Very cool video.
Tons of useful ideas are springing forth for new projects I can do now. Thanks for posting this ☺️
I particularly like the dado jig.
Excellent video. I've seen a bunch of shop made jig videos and this is the one for me. Brilliant.
Thank you so much.
Amazingly simple and yet precise instructions make following a joy to be a woodworker with theses jigs. Thank you.
Very clear directions. I appreciate the details on all the drill sizes.
Thanks for everything you guys have taught me over the years.
Nice video! I will be making the ripping sled with one minor adjustment. I’ll be putting a runner for the mitre slot so it’s not necessary to set the fence ever time.
Thanks Jim; you’re a great teacher!
Excellent, thank you for showing this
Thank you this will help me a lot ! Very nice explanation on how to make! Thanks again just what I was looking for.
Awesome presentation and amazing jigs and best of all very cheap to make thanks for sharing I’ll be building those for sure.
Cool jigs. I will modify some to fit to my fence. Thx for the inspirations.
Clean, clear and to the point! Great presentation and very impressive. You have great teaching ability. Simple enough that even this twit can follow. How can one not love that it is made from just 1/2 sheet of ply. I will save this video for reference for when I build mine. Only suggestion I would make is using the two sliders instead of just one on the crosscut jig for better precision. You now have another subscriber.
Axel aus Berlin, Deine Videos sind einfach Klasse
Hello Jim, Fix a Tape Rule alongside each T grove. Now you can easily select the pair of hold down blocks at one distance so you can make two cuts parallel.
Excellent - will definitely use your jigs
Amazing. Thanks for wonderful ideas!
Great job! And thank you for those tips!
Awesome !!!!!!!!!!!!!! Thanks for the knowledge.
Thanks for sharing your knowledge very helpful
Jim your ideas are great ...
Excellent!!! I learned a lot!!! Thanks, God bless you
Great information. I had almost given up on Wood Mag as the info had turned a bit stale. This video was extremely useful with just enough detail to keep it on track. Kudos to the producer. New sub.
Excellent...Thank you.
Great video.....i m excited with the taper jig...i was searching on how to make the "clamps" to avoid buying the expensive ones from rockler
Ha! watched jim's old jig video many times, and who better to update it with none other than Jim Heavey himself. It's nice to see him not only woodworking still, but even make some improvements to the jigs he originally mentioned. Awesome
Great jigs - simple but yet very useful. Thanks Jim. I also wonder if the last jig can be used in such a way as to compensate for the blade width by adjusting the screw and then use it for cutting dados for any material thickness.
Holy crap, I've seen a lot of cross cut sleds but again, holy crap, yours has got to be the best, now I have to toss the one I already built a few months back and make a new one your way. I'm a retired carpenter trying my hand at woodworking so all this is new to me. I've never needed a crosscut sled before now so thank you for the genius idea to make things easier for me. I already built a router table and a drill press table but I was never really happy with the crosscut sled. I will be now though.
By far this is most accurate and amazing woodworking Chanel, thanks for the contents.
Great video. These are great jigs
Excellent...thank you 🙏
Great video! thanks
good job Jimbo !
Thanks for sharing those tips and the make!
You bet!
Jim is the best
That's Great work!
Really cool.
Couldn't believe I saw you cutting a tall skinny piece of plywood standing on end. If you get that piece at all sideways, you'd need to be faster than the Flash to avoid the kickback coming your way!
Great video.
For the ripping sled and many other applications, go for the dovetail clamps or rail clamps instead of those hold downs. Cheaper (clamps can be used in many different jigs and are quick to move), way quicker to adopt to different thicknesses, easier to slide than a bolt, no bending of the jig since the clamps takes the force, more wide spread force on the routed t-track compared to a bolt head.
I think those clamps might be faster to use for a single piece, but not as good for repeatability on multiple pieces for tapers since you'd lose your taper every time you removed a part
@@tmuka That is solved easily by adding a side fence that can be angled. Weblinks seems to result in that this comment is deleted but search for "improve your jigs with rail clamps fine woodworking" and you understand what I mean.
Excellent. I've started building jigs like this, but I need to step it up and build better quality jig. Nice project for the woodbe woodworker expanding their tool kit! 😍
Excellent video 👍👍👍👍👍
Brilliant.
Wonderful
Sometimes we forget to have a nut on the bolt or all thread when we cut it to length, to clean it up just run the cut portion on a wire brush or wheel. Works great.
Before taking off the nut, I always grind the circumference at 45 deg to remove the razor sharp edges:; plus, it helps when starting a nut.
dragging a hack saw thru the buggered up threads does too
Love these videos...
A possible addition...
On the fence tools, especially the saddle tool, I'd worry about vertical stiffness. There is a fulcrum created by the bridge board to vertical fence boards. If a person tightens the knobs on the back too much or if a person pushes too much on the top of the taller fence boards you might see deflection at the bottom of the taller board resulting in inconsistent cuts. To fix this I'd add some gussets that attach the bridge board to the taller fence board to stiffen up that joint to better keep the taller fence board vertical.
great video
EXCELENTE.
I really enjoyed your video.
Your instructions are very precise. You presentation is easy to understand . Thank you so much..
Walt Sommers
Your sentences are so short. Thanks, Walt Sommers!
Thanks
VERY WELL INSTRUCTED AND PUT TOGETHER ENJOYED. NOW CAN YOU MAKE A DADO SLOT JIG I DO NOT HAVE THE DADO SAWS LOL THANK YOU
very nice
Great jigs.Very well explained.I think I will build your taper jig Mine is a bit cumbersome.
👋👋👋 great job!
Is'nt the crosscut sled back fence should be fix permenently only after doing the bullet proof 5 cuts method mesurement for accuracy ?
I too noticed there was no mention or process shown to make sure the back fence was square to the table saw fence. I attach back fence with one screw on the outside end, then use a high quality precise square to square things up. Works well. 5 cut method good if you need ultra precision.
Very nice. Is there a reason you put the tee nuts on the top of the taper jig instead of the bottom? Putting them on the bottom would make the tightening force push the tee nuts in place instead of pulling them out. (Of course, the force is probably small enough that it doesn't matter.)
Legend
Cool
Great video. Now, can you add a sixth jig for cutting tapers?
Use forest enter bit first, then then smaller bit to make hole for threaded insert.
good
This would have been an excellent guide to building all your jigs IF you had specified the centimeter system as well! Too bad, because I liked what you did.
On your tapering jig, how would it work to have the expansion pieces for larger/thicker material notched from the center hole to one edge so they can be slipped in without needing to completely remove the tightening knob?
Great video! Can't wait to make it. Do you have a full cut list / instructions that can be printed and brought to the workshop?
Yep. Check the video description for the download link.
@@Wood I see it now, thank you very much!
I don't see it
Hey Jim, I have a old craftsman contractor saw. Adjusting this saw to cut a 45 degree bevel very difficult. Then afterwards to dial it back to an accurate 90 degree is equally difficult and very time consuming. In your collection of table saw jigs do you have or can you recommend a jig that I can use on the table top to achieve a 45 degree bevel without moving the saw blade? I really enjoy your instructional videos. Thanks In advance.
Awesome jigs, tutorial, and videography ❤👍👍. Would the jigs work on a small, benchtop ( portable ) tablesaw ?
They should, but you may need to modify them to suit the smaller miter slots and fences on benchtop saws.
@@Wood
Thanks for your courteous reply 👍
Can you use 1/2" Baltic Birch plywood? Thank you
Is there a reason for not using a runner for the tapering jig? I know it may make limit the width of the piece you are cutting but, it seems like it would make it a little more secure. If I am missing something important, just let me know.
Hi there,,, thanks to youtube for recommending this to me! Can you tell me what issue this is (sorry but I didn’t see it anywhere)? I have about 15 years of your magazines…. Thanks!!
Issue 231 (March 2015), Elmer. Thanks for your loyalty!
❤️
Where do you all get your double sided tape. I’ve looked at both big box stores and all I can is a thicker foam tape. In all the videos I watched your tape looks to be the thickness of painters tape. Thanks in advance for your help.
Look for double-sided carpet tape at the home center or here: amzn.to/3vn4zdK
Can anyone tell me if these jigs would work with an 8inch blade table saw? Or do I lose too much depth of cut? Many thanks to anyone who knows
what's the saw stop straight thing your using
Baltic birch for jigs? Very expensive.
I think maple ply would be good enough.
How do you make sure the ripping sled gives you a cut that is square?
The sled itself is square.
Sorry...spoke too soon. ?The taper jig is great!
The only part I didn't like was bolting the block into the wing. I think there are other ways to get it in position without drilling into the table saw wing. Also, some people's table saws don't come with cast iron wings like that, but they have smaller sheet metal and that trick wouldn't work.
We didn't drill or bolt anything into the wing. Can you give us a time in the video so we can see what you're talking about?
@@Wood It starts @10:42 and @11:00 you start drilling with a smaller drill bit, and then use a bigger one. It's clearly drilled into the wing. How can you say you didn't bolt it? @11:07 there is clearly a ratchet tightening up a bolt with a wrench behind it and he says, "...and finished with a 5/16" bit for the bolt hole."
I'm 90% sure that Jim is ex military. Only military give concise and rapid fire instruction...
ex Fire Department Battalion Chief, as a matter of fact.
A minha nunca usei!! Pois não se adapta com óculos!!
Vai depender muito do formato do rosto!!
E é tamanho único!! Ou seja, a minha ficou pequena!!! Tá parada na Caixa a meses!!
one question if I may why are you working with timber and machines and wearing rings? a good way to loose a finger IF a ring should catch on timber YES know of this happening and as a apprentice and tradesman were always told to remove any rings while working , still do , only a matter of when
Forestener. Sp.
Forstner. Ok.