I Was Wrong This Is The Better Way To Make Chamfers
Тәжірибелік нұсқаулар және стиль
REED Plnaes Kit: www.woodbywright.com/shop
Making Chamfers is a simple and easy task done with a block plane. I do not own a chamfer plane and there is no need for it, but this Chamfer sled from REED planes has changed my mind.
Join the Hive mind where I bounce Ideas around: / discord
Facebook Hivemind: / 233277323895597
Patreon: / woodbywright
Join this channel to get access to perks:
/ @woodbywright
How To Channel
Wood By Wright 2: / @woodbywrighthowto
--Tools I Suggest--
www.woodbywright.com/tool-sug...
--Find Antique tools near you--
www.HandToolFinder.com
THE MAN
Alex Adams Instagram: @typeawoodworking
Top Patreon Supporters:
DFM tool Works: dfmtoolworks.com/
Andrew Wilson
Alan Smith: www.flourishinggrace.org/listen/
JT BelKnap: dfmtoolworks.com/
Brian Suker
Kenny-Anjanette Horn
Christopher Brown
Alex Adams
Unsharpen: unsharpen.com/
Ian McElcheran
Russell Gough
////Help this channel grow\\\\
www.woodbywright.com/support/
////You Can find me:\\\\
www.woodbywright.com/contact-me/
TikTok: / woodbywright
Instagram: / woodbywright
Facebook: / woodbywright
Intro music: Tim Sway timsway.net/
background music: Udo Stehle www.upwork.com/freelancers/~0...
Instagram: @udostehle
Пікірлер: 271
I was angling to be first, but you beat me to the joke about it being acute little jig for a cute little plane.
James, thanks for all your help getting this design to market and for your video. That was a fun collaboration! I am working hard to get backorders filled. Thanks everyone for the kind comments, encouragement and your patience.
ok THAT is a winning design. I love the KLACK of the block plane meeting the magnets too! Hope Jeff sells tons of these.
@morte100
10 ай бұрын
That clack is where it's at. Makes it seem like you're not cheating!
@michaelmcdermott2178
10 ай бұрын
Klack!
If at the end of watching something you say to yourself "Why hasn't someone thought of that before??", you know it's a brilliant idea. Guess what I said to myself after watching this? :) Kudos to all involved 👏👏👏
LOVE the ability to skew the plane for end grain!!!! A simply excellent design to make a Wright wrong....
It's funny how difficult but rewarding it is to design for simplicity. Job well done to Mr. Reed
@reedplanes728
10 ай бұрын
Well said, Thanks!
That satisfying click-CLACK of slipping the block plane in has sold me on this jig.
A perfect fit for my kind of lazy, when a job is too small to plug in a router, and more comfortable to use than a cordless router. I'll figure it out one of these days...
The mark of a fine inventor is not stopping till it's as simple as it can be. Kudos to Jeff, and to James for being the testing team.
I have an aluminium Australian made chamfer plane that works a treat. As you are aware Australian hardwoods rate significantly higher on the Janka scale compared to US hardwoods and being prone to interlocking grain add a dimension to the job. Using an electric router is time consuming because not only do you have the usual set up time but you have to make more passes for the job. The chamfer plane can be out, done and put away before the electric router is halfway through the job, plus their is something about just using the chamfer plane that just brings joy.
The final pun warmed the heart of a former Math major! Isn't it a pain when that "better mouse trap" thingy slaps you upside the head? Isn't life grand?
If you take the round-over blades to the next step you could cut more complex shapes into the blade. I find that very interesting since most of my table tops have edges that vary from simple round-overs to complex ogee-ish shapes. (I don't know who would ever want to use champfers.)
My favorite tool for chamfers is my Stanley palm plane.
OK, that is pretty awesome! I will say, Roundovers have their place...but not enough for me to damage a plane iron 😆
James Wrong - Yes that has a ring too it! LOL
I've got to give people that do these by hand (block plane) credit. Me... I throw a bit into my router table and do it. I'm lazy. LOL I'm in the middle of making about 250' of trim and 30 cabinet doors for my family room and kitchen remodels, all requiring chamfers. I may have to look at this tool/jig for small sections of trim. Roundovers would be beneficial for knocking the edging of door trim.
I was telling my wife about 44 mins ago that I needed to make a jig to achieve better chamfers … and then this just dropped. James, are you secretly listening to your audience!??? I no secretly listen to you (in KZread tho)
@WoodByWrightHowTo
10 ай бұрын
Stink. he is on to me!
That is great. I have found that the best item in the world won't be used as often if it isn't convenient to use, and this seems to be almost as convenient as just grabbing the plane -- but with the added benefit of repeatability. Very cool!
Your presentations are great: they're just plane talk.
I do admire simple genius. Regards Jim UK.
How about instead of butchering your plane blade for a round-over, you put a radius on it like a mini scrub plane and use that profile for your chamfers? Would add a ton of visual interest.
"I like to be Wright" would have been a really funny channel name.
Dang you James Wright!!!! Never bought any thing from YT channels I follow and you go and do this. Can’t wait as I have a ton of iron wood I’ve been wondering what to do with.
Humility can be a hard pill to swallow. You’re taking it well.
Sweet! Would have been nice for chamfering the ~1000' of edge-banded plywood I just got done with a couple of weeks ago. Too late now. My little Stanley block plane, as you demonstrated, does a fine job, even without the jig. But they would have been more even and consistent with the jig.
REED stuff is awesome, totally revived an otherwise cranky old Stanley 4 1/2 into a sleek beast
The journey to a "simple" elegant design can be interesting though fraught with frustation potentially involving many iterations, failed ideas and "we can do better", cute plane
Ahhh. You're right.. That is cool.
I kinda like jigs, as being at the beginning of my woodworking as it helps with accuracy. But this looks very very simple and very clever!
Even if less is more, this is brilliant!
Hi James, have a great weekend.
nice little add one, will keep it in mind
I agree with all of your comments!!!
Outstanding! I am going on your webpage and ordering one, no, two; I'm ordering two kits tonight!
What a great design, I'm sold on it already. But as my block plane is brass, I'll need to buy a steel one to use it!😂
For the algorithm! Great design and presentation James!
I will look for this set of plans...
This is a cool jig. Thanks for sharing your experience.
Hey, just wanted to say that I just found your channel, and it is pretty much what I was wishing for. As someone who learned the (I would say bare necessities) of actual true woodworking in my apprenticeship as a carpenter over here in Germany, this channel really deepens my understanding of old-school as well as modern carpentry. Even tho I "specialised' in windows during my working career, wood is still a passion I want to pursue as a hobby. Thank you for your informative and simply great content.
@WoodByWrightHowTo
10 ай бұрын
My pleasure. Let me know if there is anything you want to see
Lolll...now I have another tool to make!
what's so cute about those angles
Nice concept - only worry might be steadily magnetizing the plane ?
You have a great collaboration! Nice work
Wow! This is a brilliant idea. Thank you for posting this up. 👍
Now that's an awesome design!
I like your little puns.
Alright, I'm exercising the "snide comment" rule.... you said around 5:50-6:00 that you don't like jigs.... but have you considered that your beloved block plane is nothing more than a jig to hold the iron in place so you can move it across the wood easier than just by holding the iron alone ??? Barring that bit there's these REALLY neat things called Chamfer Planes that came out like last month when we first learned we had opposable thumbs... sorry James, I couldn't resist. I honestly like the idea of taking a tool I already own and being able to use it for more than it was designed to do. Very nice.
@WoodByWrightHowTo
10 ай бұрын
Lol you are so true.
That's pretty slick.
Most excellent design and review. Thank you.
This is a well thought-out design.
Your videos are most enjoyable. Keep it up. You are an inspiration.
Thanks for sharing, just what I was looking for
Thanks what a great idea and very helpful for everyone.
Thanks James
Very cool. Can it make non 45 degree angles too? If you can set the gap of the fences I would guess you could calculate the off set and get 30 degree chamfers as well. Interesting. Still back to my magnetised blades and diamond stones problem though. Oh and by the way, Girth is in your name too but you don't have to increase that. I am on that for both of us mate. LOL.
Impressed with the simplicity of the swap over
I thought I'd started started supporting you on Patreon months ago. I had not. 😢 I just signed up, though. You and Rex are the only ones I support. Keep up the awesome work, brother! My first comment, too! So 10 thumbs up!! 👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
@WoodByWrightHowTo
10 ай бұрын
Thanks man!
Now I need to make this too.
nice clean setup. its really cool.
A genius idea.
Yes
Informative, and fun. As usual, thanks!
That jig is amazing. But I agree, I like the freedom and challenge to create chamfers free hand. Yeah, being consistent cutting chamfers, it is a strong and often irresistible "tug".
Thank you.
Absolutely brilliant, love the innovation. Also kits are all sold out already.
@WoodByWrightHowTo
10 ай бұрын
We just opened the back order stock. we should have the next batch in a week or two.
Great vid :) It is fun to learn new things
Thanks for sharing.
Brilliant!
Gotta love it when you almost accidentally your way into a perfect/near perfect design
i wanted to thx u for posting all these videos over the years. I just got done refurbishing an old wooden telephone from 1900s. It was given to my great grandparents on their wedding day in 1910, and my dad wanted me to finish refurbishing it, he started it in the 70s. It turned out wonderful and i used alot of ur tips and tricks and idk if i would have been able to get it looking so nicely without ur videos. So once again, thx u 😊
Thanks
Darn you James, now I want that too. I have very similar to your thoughts about simplicity. And that is a genius design for a block plane. Gotta go order one now. 😅😂
I like round overs. I use a block plane to do them. I've done over well 100 feet of round over, restoring various portions of the trim work in my old house. I have even matched the original rounded corners of the original trim. For me round overs are a solution to a finished trim piece that far less vulnerable to the dings of daily life than a single sharp corner or the two sharp corners of a chamfer. Less splinter potential, too, since those sharp edges are where splinters seem to appear spontaneously. But, I make boxes occasionally and I do chamfer the visible edges. Chamfers do look nicer than round-overs. This looks great for that.
Looks over to my 55 ....
This looks like it is game changer and worth the freight costs to get the kit to Australia.
I would like to toss a correction your way. Us Wrights can't be wrong. We can however be incorrect. Clever idea. I am impressed. Robby Wright
a great design and another fun video
Jeff likes a challenge, eh? I can't tell you how many times I've needed a block plane jig like that for my spokeshave so that I can refine the faces of a Mobius strip. Ready, set, GO Jeff! 🤔🤔🤔
@reedplanes728
10 ай бұрын
Would a Stanley no 65 chamfer spokes shave do the trick?
@NickLuker
10 ай бұрын
@@reedplanes728 It seems my smartassery bit me in the buttocks. A 65 probably would, but can't we make it better, with Bluetooth?
@reedplanes728
10 ай бұрын
@NickLuker all good,keep challenging me😊
Wood by Wrong - now with 100% more welding
@contestwill1556
10 ай бұрын
wwrong
I'm also not a fan of "a tool for every operation"... BUT, it is an awesome idea. What I think I like best is that you can lock the fences down for a specific size of chamfer and leave it there and make ALL your chamfers exactly the same size. All the same width. All the same angle. I normally have a problem with one end of the chamfer (normally the toe end) being deeper which poses a problem when going all the way around.
Thanks!
Wow. That's one of those things that like so many good inventions seem obvious once you've seen them. Cool.
Great advise 😊
Ten big thumbs up
Ok… I did not want to want this but now I do
Cool jig
Great idea
Praise the chamfers
I like round overs.
thank you
Very cool! What will he think of next!
Been eyeballing the Reed adjusters for a bit, and now you put this out there. I jumped on it.
That is very clever.
That was not just fun to watch, but informative. Thank you. I got a great deal of pleasure from your debating with yourself and the emotions shown. That helped sway me.
This is the beginning of the end, you'll just add a jig after another... Gnahahahahah
What a great idea!
That is simply brilliant. Especially good for folk who are starting out as it will certainly assist with consistency and developing muscle memory.
Great video. Makes me want to make one.
Ohhh... I want one!!! 😂 Thanks, James!!! Stay safe there with your family! 🖖😊
Such a simple straightforward design 🥳