*that all woodworkers need to know.

Тәжірибелік нұсқаулар және стиль

The half-lap joint, strong and simple. Maybe not monkey simple.
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0:00 Intro
0:54 Control Piece 1
2:57 Half-lap 1
13:15 Cleaning the joint
15:38 Half-lap Variation 2
19:57 Dove-lap
23:05 Test 1
25:30 Test 2
27:33 Test 3
30:14 Test 4
32:55 Outro

Пікірлер: 356

  • @MeneM2Mateo
    @MeneM2Mateo2 ай бұрын

    I hope you read this: I'm a 46 year old dude from Amsterdam the Netherlands. I never touched woodworking because of my father. Who was a woodworker! But his gruff way of "non-explaining" how to do things made me hate the whole thing. Watching you, learning from you, is filling in the gaps my late father left behind. And now I'm starting to understand what he was trying to teach me, and why he was doing things the way he wanted me to do it. So, without a doubt, you are helping me understand my father better even when he is no longer around. And I thank you for it... It's meaningful to me.

  • @stevefletcher52

    @stevefletcher52

    Ай бұрын

    might be ok, sometimes, should be, one way...c'mon man give us some direction here..

  • @MeneM2Mateo

    @MeneM2Mateo

    Ай бұрын

    @@stevefletcher52 ?? I do not understand

  • @user-fu4iw5dx3f

    @user-fu4iw5dx3f

    Ай бұрын

    That's a cool story! I had a father like that so I can understand importance of this to you, have a great day!!!

  • @johnschillo4452

    @johnschillo4452

    23 күн бұрын

    My father was a good carpenter & never explained his methods. I later that he was in a mode to work fast to complete a job. He never switched into a teacher mode.

  • @allstarwoo4
    @allstarwoo42 ай бұрын

    I'm very much a casual wood worker and I think an idea people need to keep in mind is to creep up to your lines. Once you master this skill most joints become much easier because I think that's where most people's problems come in.

  • @wyssmaster

    @wyssmaster

    2 ай бұрын

    With that in mind, it's also a good idea to mark your waste, so you can be certain you're cutting into the waste rather than cutting your joinery too wide to begin with. Definitely not something I've done before...

  • @jonathanstoffregen390

    @jonathanstoffregen390

    2 ай бұрын

    I had the same experience,@@wyssmaster. Once I saw folks on KZread doing that, I started doing that, too. It was a game-changer for me. Now I mark everything very clearly and deliberately, even if it seems simple. Then I double-check as I go along with everything that I'm doing. *Far* fewer mistakes, lots more fun and satisfaction!

  • @garrettbell619

    @garrettbell619

    2 ай бұрын

    🎉

  • @christ9359

    @christ9359

    2 ай бұрын

    Yep. I often get impatient and overcut, despite going in with good intentions lol.

  • @adultonsetwoodworking

    @adultonsetwoodworking

    2 ай бұрын

    ​@@christ9359 story of my damn life...😣

  • @iamwhoiam4410
    @iamwhoiam44102 ай бұрын

    I've been using the half dovetail joint for 50 years making reproduction furniture and cabinetry and never had one to fail me. I also make a reproduction 1774 tavern step stool with thru dovetails on the top and the sides and then a half dovetail joint brace between the sides. Sold 100's of them and never had a failure. Anyone getting into woodworking and joinery should watch this video. Simple and straight forward. Thanks for sharing.

  • @dwainlambrigger3769
    @dwainlambrigger37692 ай бұрын

    Your commitment to detail in discussing this "basic joint" was both refreshing and welcome. I really appreciated this video and hope to see more just like it.

  • @Mark_Fer.
    @Mark_Fer.2 ай бұрын

    Reminds me of how my woodshop teacher 40 years ago worked and taught us monkeys. Thanks for keeping the craftmanship alive.

  • @Yogi_Bear69
    @Yogi_Bear692 ай бұрын

    This brought back memories working with my dad on a popsicle stick bridge back in my youth. We had 100 popsicle sticks to build with and my dad being a carpenter had lots of wood glue. We built a bridge that could stand 400lbs of weight as well as 2 grown men standing on the weight pulling down. The bridge only broke when they started jumping on the weight. Needless to say I earned my plaque on the trophy that year and learned the strength of glued sticks and clamps. One of, if not my favorite memory growing up.

  • @royreddick2934

    @royreddick2934

    2 ай бұрын

    Cough Cough BS 100 popsicle sticks. I don't think so. I gotta see that, you got pictures???? real proof??? BS. Stop lying.

  • @mattstanislen3165

    @mattstanislen3165

    2 ай бұрын

    Please share the 100 popsicle stick bridge that supports ~800lbs shifting weight with the world my dude!

  • @johnschillo4452

    @johnschillo4452

    23 күн бұрын

    If you used 200 popsicle sticks, would it have held 800 pounds?

  • @clemmcguinness1087
    @clemmcguinness10872 ай бұрын

    Monkeys, wasps and spiders can cut straighter than me ... but Rex, I'll give this a go😊

  • @RealJustinWillock

    @RealJustinWillock

    2 ай бұрын

    Yes thank you I can’t cut straight or flat to save my life lol I guess I should try this out too

  • @Ocean-blue

    @Ocean-blue

    2 ай бұрын

    I don’t know if this will help but I had the same issue for a long time however since switching to Japanese pull saws I have improved big time.. I didn’t spend a fortune just a basic ryoba saw (less than 30 euros) I find accuracy far easier to achieve now.

  • @Apillicus

    @Apillicus

    2 ай бұрын

    Have you seen how straight of lines spiders can make? I think it's unfair to most of us to compare someone with spiders

  • @clemmcguinness1087

    @clemmcguinness1087

    2 ай бұрын

    @@Apillicus sorry, I did not intend to be spiderist, but I maintain my constitutional right to be negative towards wasps ...

  • @Apillicus

    @Apillicus

    2 ай бұрын

    @@clemmcguinness1087 I'll stand by your constitutional right to be negative towards wasps. It's tucked away in the fine print where it says, 'Liberty, pursuit of happiness, and the universal dislike of uninvited picnic guests.

  • @HouseDoctorRay
    @HouseDoctorRay2 ай бұрын

    The workshop, lighting, videography, and editing look great. We noticed.

  • @tyfincher8948
    @tyfincher89482 ай бұрын

    You're an awesome instructor. This requires not only mastery of the skills you are teaching, but also mastery of the language you teach in. Everything is articulated so well.

  • @ArniesTech
    @ArniesTech2 ай бұрын

    Damn, the angled halflap dovetail joint looks doable and still 100% rock solid. This is a joy to watch.

  • @toshn4151
    @toshn41512 ай бұрын

    As someone who has been doing this sort of work recently to make shop/garage furniture I say: The most important part of this video is the initial planing of a face and truing of an edge. Also, notice rex is using a big marking gauge, unlike those smaller wheel ones, as those will wobble and not give good results on raw construction lumber because of the rounded corners. If your marks are not accurate it doesn't matter how accurate your cuts are.

  • @SergeyRyabenko
    @SergeyRyabenko2 ай бұрын

    I love how natural the recording is. Even with mic failure and single camera view this video is interesting to watch. And thank you for showing this options. I'm not even in woodworking and enjoyed whole part.

  • @whatsinaname333
    @whatsinaname3332 ай бұрын

    The dovetail could well be weaker than the plain half lap. The compressive forces concentrate at the inside lower corner, causing the upper inside corner to pry apart. Wood is weak in tension across the grain. The plain half lap distributes the compressive forces more evenly. There is less twist exerted on the upper inside corner. Flipping the dovetail edge to the top might make it more resistant to downward force. The occurrence up upward shock would be mighty rare. Yes, the joint survived, even though there was a wood failure that would make it more susceptible to a second shock. But in a controlled test I suspect that the plain half lap would require much more force to fail regardless of orientation. I was really glad to see this test!!

  • @BariumCobaltNitrog3n
    @BariumCobaltNitrog3n2 ай бұрын

    This is more important than people may think starting out. Secretly hidden in the value of a half-lap are detailed examples of how to prep, how to mark, how to saw and how to clean up a joint. I think it's good you left out measuring because that's a whole skill set by itself.

  • @175Rich
    @175Rich2 ай бұрын

    You are clearly a student of Paul Sellers, using many of his tools and techniques and phrases like 'knife wall'. He would be proud of your flattery.

  • @g5flyr169
    @g5flyr1692 ай бұрын

    Rex, you’ve done many fine videos over the years but this one is your best work yet! It’s exactly what I need and I’m sure others will agree. Thanks for sharing your knowledge and experience.

  • @c0d3r1f1c
    @c0d3r1f1c2 ай бұрын

    18:55 There’s an alternative to this, which I learned from watching a Japanese KZreadr. It’s called kigoroshi, and the technique is to use repeated, careful mallet blows to actually compress the wood of the tenon (or equivalent) so that it will fit without being trimmed to the exact size right size. (It does have to be close, though.) After compression, water or glue is applied and the joint is assembled. The water (or water from the glue) will then be absorbed by the compressed part, causing it to expand and lock the joint together. I’m eager to try this myself, because it seems like it would make a *really* strong joint.

  • @pettere8429

    @pettere8429

    2 ай бұрын

    Combine this with undercutting the shoulders a wee bit and you could get the half lap to wedge itself into the slot as if it was dovetailed across its thickness as well.

  • @Chupetex79
    @Chupetex792 ай бұрын

    I did not think I needed to watch this video (seemed to simple), but I was wrong, and I was doing things that were not the best way to do it. I have learn quite a bit. Thanks Rex

  • @asciimation
    @asciimation2 ай бұрын

    I am building a pre-war timber framed car. Had no idea how before I started (and information on traditional coachbuilding is hard to find) so I thought I better learn some woodworking which is how I found your channel. Ended up all I needed was fairly simple half lap and spline joints. But these sort of 'simple' films are super useful for even basic woodwork. They've definitely helped me be a better minimal woodworker!

  • @AussieWoodshed

    @AussieWoodshed

    2 ай бұрын

    EngelsCoachShop here on KZread has a lot of valuable information on coach building and restorations if that help

  • @asciimation

    @asciimation

    2 ай бұрын

    @@AussieWoodshed Yes, he's definitely one I watch regularly.

  • @mikesebphoto
    @mikesebphoto2 ай бұрын

    Rex, this was really nicely done. All of this stuff seems completely obvious, but it really isn’t. There are a lot of little details that you did a masterful job of covering.

  • @JoffJk
    @JoffJk2 ай бұрын

    Oh man I ve missed these sort of videos from you Rex!

  • @diazpty
    @diazpty4 күн бұрын

    Thanks I learned several things, including on how to use my marking tool etc.! It really helps to "see" your attitude, planning and example as you work.

  • @freedom2speak1
    @freedom2speak12 ай бұрын

    I find it funny you uploaded this now. I just watched the original bench video yesterday and am really considering building it! Would you be will to do a video where you analyze some joints and see which might be good or bad for a workbench? I built a bench using a castle joint just because I thought the joint looks cool but not sure if its a bad joint for a work bench.

  • @EverBeyondRadio
    @EverBeyondRadio2 ай бұрын

    My favourite joint. I made a huge garden gate last week with 6 halflap joints. Yay

  • @bigjames1984
    @bigjames1984Ай бұрын

    Beginner tip to accompany this video: if you notice how he grips his saw he keeps his index finger straight as opposed to wrapping it around the handle. This is key for maintaining control of the cut. For whatever reason if you wrap the index finger your cuts can get off track much easier. If he said this in the video I missed it, but it’s a good tip for keeping a straight cut.

  • @paulneeds
    @paulneeds2 ай бұрын

    You’ve taken me back to the very little woodwork I “learned” in school! I so wish I’d paid more attention… I’ve come back into woodworking solely from the aim of making electric guitars, but the ‘orthodox’ side of the craft is very useful indeed! I’ve spent a year off with a broken arm that won’t heal - I’m getting a plate finally put in next month, so a bit of rehab and I’ll be back to work… at last!

  • @rickkjelson5454

    @rickkjelson5454

    Ай бұрын

    I had a nasty smash on my upper arm. Big girder, and several plates. The therapy is rough, but work at it, and you can get it almost all back.

  • @bradstucky9554
    @bradstucky95542 ай бұрын

    such a solid video of essential fundamentals, good job man, I never get tired of seeing someone do great work

  • @dallasmiller4324
    @dallasmiller43242 ай бұрын

    I used the wedge joint on my first bench.... excellent result!.... thank you for sharing

  • @richpeggyfranks490
    @richpeggyfranks4902 ай бұрын

    Your videos are always a breath of fresh air. No over-priced machinery, all common sense and instructions based on actual experience. I bought the Compass Rose router plane kit several months ago. I was in the market, but didn't want a plane that looked like it was from outer space nor did I want a cheap plane from an unknown entity. I got frustrated looking for an older model. It's beautiful and works perfectly. I used a simple tung oil/wax finish on it. Thx.

  • @timseroka8956
    @timseroka89562 ай бұрын

    Great in-depth video and explanation!!! The only thing is to keep in mind that the operations require a certain amount of patience!! I always fight against the urge to get things done too quickly, doesn’t always work!!!

  • @mikedarr6968
    @mikedarr69682 ай бұрын

    Rex, I like your style. Explaining very well, without any Bravado. I also see that you are aquatinted with Paul Sellers, another of my woodworking mentors. Thank You!

  • @bramweinreder2346
    @bramweinreder23462 ай бұрын

    I recently made 2 pocket joints with nothing but a coping saw and a chisel. I'm not a carpenter. But they were tight, very precise and easy to make. I got my inspiration from Crimson Guitars.

  • @travisfamadventures9044
    @travisfamadventures90442 ай бұрын

    I love your videos like this where you break it down so simply and into easy steps! In my experience in working with woodworkers less experienced than me (and memories of my early woodworking) they see us do these cuts and joints and it just looks so easy. They think they should be able to be successful first try! But they forget they need to get some cheap wood and make a bunch of practice cuts and improve their saw techniques.

  • @Psittacus_erithacus

    @Psittacus_erithacus

    2 ай бұрын

    As a guy firmly in the newbie camp here, I can attest to your being 100% correct. Skill always seems simple until you have to actually apply it. "Cut straight" is child's play in my mind. Actually controlling the movement of a saw in 3D space … not so much. Once you actually start doing, that's when you find yourself lost in details you never even noticed before. Advice about how to position a piece so you can see more than one line, etc. become invaluable; but even so, the boring business of repetition to build actual skill is the only way forward. I've got a dozen hobbies in which I "understand" quite a lot, but only a couple where I can actually compose/build/create anything worthwhile. The difference never seems to be in how good the information I can find is or how much I learn. It's always in how much I practice!

  • @John_vDongen
    @John_vDongen2 ай бұрын

    Such a well executed presetation Rex! Very enjoyable to watch that refreshes way back when I was at colledge of furniture in the 70's London. UK 😀

  • @dvandamme00
    @dvandamme002 ай бұрын

    this is why i watch your videos.. truly excellent foundational information.. yes, I can build fancy things occasionally, and yes I know how to use my tools, but damn, there's so many things I dont know, and this video has a bunch of gold

  • @morriss2162
    @morriss21622 ай бұрын

    I love your videos, I am just getting into woodworking, so I am hungry to get info,I am on the tools purchase mission,so your advice is appreciated. What I like about your videos is that you have not forgotten we were all beginners once

  • @JoeBob79569
    @JoeBob795692 ай бұрын

    Yea, I built your English Joiner's bench during the first lockdown. I built it on the kitchen table and assembled it in the spare room down the hall after removing the carpet. Bought an old Record 52 on eBay for €25 and I was all set. It's definitely a great option for beginners, and it's held up fantasticly so far.

  • @joeyshofner639
    @joeyshofner6392 ай бұрын

    Even if you are not building anything that requires a half lap creating this joint is a great way to relieve stress. I do it all the time

  • @jonesey1981
    @jonesey19812 ай бұрын

    Glad to see you doing better Rex. Thanks for your time and wisdom.

  • @rosestanyer6709
    @rosestanyer67092 ай бұрын

    Long time viewer, infrequent commenter here: I love your channel! It inspires me to get out there and MAKE stuff. And you teach me how to do it, as well. Thank you, much love!

  • @victoryak86

    @victoryak86

    Ай бұрын

    Most key joints in benches are mortise and tenon, single or double mortises depending on the width, thickness of the stock being used. These are used most often in joints between stretchers and legs and also vertically at joints between legs and upper stretchers. Aprons on table are sometimes dovetails which looks great, is strong. Half laps tho are a definite option between stretchers and legs.

  • @ocoro174
    @ocoro1742 ай бұрын

    hey cool channel. appreciate the hand tool usage, helps those of us with less expensive equipment and smaller workshop get some projects done 👍

  • @jonesey1981

    @jonesey1981

    2 ай бұрын

    If you become a patreon for $5 a month you get all his plans for free. Totally worth it for that alone!

  • @petewoodhead52
    @petewoodhead522 ай бұрын

    Thanks Rex, you're a great instructor, offering tons of detailed explanations and encouragement in a judgement free style.

  • @jons2447
    @jons2447Ай бұрын

    "Thank you!", Mr. Krueger! So good to know, & not so hard a monkey like me can't do it. Or, as some say, "you can do it!" Have a GREAT day, Neighbor!

  • @CodyBrandt580
    @CodyBrandt5802 ай бұрын

    This is a wonderfully executed master class on the half lap joint! I really hope you make this a series on different joints and their strengths and weaknesses. I very much enjoy your work and look forward to seeing your videos when they drop.

  • @0ddSavant
    @0ddSavant2 ай бұрын

    New shop is looking good. Always glad to see new content from you. Cheers!

  • @scottroberts5511
    @scottroberts55112 ай бұрын

    these videos are just getting better and better. I've learned so much. thank you

  • @whatdoyouthinktodd
    @whatdoyouthinktodd2 ай бұрын

    Wow I've been making half lap joints when I started framing houses at 14. I had to build saw horses with no help from anyone part of the new guys job. They're not hard If you're having trouble making a half lap joint you need to step back and figure out what you're doing wrong. Slow down and just get the job done. Remember, slow down to go fast That's how it all works slow down means you learn. To go fast means you have been doing it for a while. Now I know somebody's going to read this comment and think I'm an ass. But where I come from. That's a compliment. Thank you. Bring it.

  • @user-fu4iw5dx3f

    @user-fu4iw5dx3f

    Ай бұрын

    You're right, I've worked in many factory jobs and I learned that when first starting a new task I would work really slow and purposeful ensuring I did everything right but slow, once the pattern has been created and your tools etc are placed where I would automatically go to reach for them, the speed just increases and increases to bizarre speeds. Every day I did the jobs, I not only smashed targets but also produced the highest amount every single day.

  • @SeanBlader
    @SeanBlader2 ай бұрын

    As a former software engineer, what I've noticed in cutting that exact halflap for a trailer fence is that the muscle memory, strength, and the practice of using the saw is far different for us newblet schlubs than it is when a professional like Rex or Paul do the exact same thing, it's like watching the Olympics of wood cutting and then trying to match it. I know Rex has had his editor(?) do a cut before to show that even newbs can do it, and I also know Rex has shown stuff being done with a commodity saw as well, but in the end what I find makes my joints a bit better is not just doing a knife wall to start my saw cut, but also having a knife wall going down both sides of my cut helps keep the saw on track as well. Even then muscle tracking for me isn't as straight, nor is my chisel work, and when you're relying on 5 surfaces to all be accurate as in the non-dovetail halflap, then your opportunity for error quintuples. All that being said, my trailer fences on my second set of them are holding up remarkably better than the first set I made... but the wood filler is definitely chipping out, and if I hadn't driven in two 1 3/4" screws I'm sure they'd have failed.

  • @AndyPanda9
    @AndyPanda92 ай бұрын

    You have a real gift for making these sorts of videos. Very clear and easy to understand and enjoyable to watch!

  • @joeybobbie1
    @joeybobbie1Ай бұрын

    I had this Video Pop Up on KZread and decided to watch it. I’m glad I did. I don’t do any Woodworking unless I just need to repair a Bench or something made out of Wood. I have been wanting to build a nice Workbench, some Shelving, Carts and other things. I just didn’t really Trust the sturdiness if it wasn’t done correctly. I Subscribed and plan on joining your Patreon Channel. I like how you take your Time to show how you make the Cuts, the marking of the Cuts, and Trimming to Fit. This was a very well put together Video, and I feel like following your advice on things that I will be able to do it. You really got my interest in Woodworking Peaked.👍👍

  • @dxpvxo711
    @dxpvxo7112 ай бұрын

    Rex does us all a great service. Your videos are much appreciated Rex thanks

  • @bakerzermatt
    @bakerzermatt2 ай бұрын

    Paul Sellers also recomends filing joinery saws rip. That always seemed awkward to me, until I started working with hardwoods. Small crosscut saws are onyl really useful for softwood I discovered.

  • @1pcfred

    @1pcfred

    2 ай бұрын

    With a fine tooth pitch I don't think crosscut does anything for you. Especially when you're doing the knife wall. But the saw being good and sharp is a plus. Good handsaws are not as common now as they once were. Your typical hardware store special today is pretty poor. If you want to do this hand tool woodworking thing you pretty much have to learn how to sharpen handsaws.

  • @victoryak86

    @victoryak86

    Ай бұрын

    @@1pcfreddefinitely a worthwhile skill to master, one I hope to develop. Paul Sellars has at least one good video on this as I’m sure does Rex and others. I’m wondering what is the real distinction between really expensive saws and much less expensive ones. I’m guessing it’s the tooth details as well as the steel used etc.

  • @1pcfred

    @1pcfred

    Ай бұрын

    @@victoryak86 yeah saws have different handles, different plates, the teeth are done differently. There's a lot of differences. What you like will probably be different than what someone else likes. Everyone's journey is going to be different. I know what I've gone through and I doubt what you go through will be the same. Finding the right saw can be a challenge. We're not living in the peak handsaw era. Right now I'm agonizing over what files to buy. That's gotten ridiculous. I don't want to buy the wrong ones. At the same time I'm not sure what the right ones are. I have an old Disston backsaw I need to touch up. I was lucky enough to find it. Now I want to do right by it. What files you use really makes or breaks the sharpening experience.

  • @victoryak86

    @victoryak86

    Ай бұрын

    @@1pcfred thanks for sharing your thoughts. Really appreciated.

  • @1pcfred

    @1pcfred

    Ай бұрын

    @@victoryak86 I wish I knew easy answers. I haven't found any myself yet though. The sad truth is that joinery saws are relatively rare tools. I looked for a long time. If you want to spend money you can get something. But if you like a deal they're few and far between. In my life I've only ever managed to run across one good joinery saw. Maybe I'm just not lucky? But when I did run across it I did buy it. I am now the proud owner of a very good condition 10" Disston backsaw. Before then I did go through the trouble of making myself a backsaw. A guy can't wait forever. That came out pretty good too. I downloaded a handle pattern off Blackburn tools. I'd picked up one of those cranked flush cutting saws made for trimming mouldings. I took the offset out of it, filed new teeth into it and fitted it into the handle I'd made. It's not bad. I enjoy using that because I made it too. So that's an option.

  • @Mark-EFMB-Combat-Medic
    @Mark-EFMB-Combat-Medic2 ай бұрын

    Rex, this is really a great instructional video. Keep up the excellent work sir.

  • @robertwilkinson9946
    @robertwilkinson99462 ай бұрын

    ha! too late for me rex! I just did this last week and did my half laps with table saw, they needed a good amount of construction adhesive :)

  • @gregguarino563
    @gregguarino563Ай бұрын

    I don't know if I'll ever make joints like this by hand, but this was very well done. Step by little step. Everything clearly explained.

  • @williamanderson8789
    @williamanderson87892 ай бұрын

    I just built the joiners bench and I'm loving it. I still need to add the half lap crosses so this is perfect for me :) I made some modifications to the original design as well and just did it by watching the videos. I'm thinking for fun I should try doing the sunk half lap joint and adding it to the back beam as well. Though I was wondering about adding a shelf to the bench too. Fun stuff thanks Rex.

  • @CorbyQ
    @CorbyQ2 ай бұрын

    I absolutely love these type of videos. Right in my wheelhouse great job Mr Rex

  • @214rwoz
    @214rwoz2 ай бұрын

    Thanks for all your time and effort.

  • @tonyc7352
    @tonyc73522 ай бұрын

    I've seen several of your videos but haven't for a few months. I don't know what it is but the whole production value and your presentation on this video is so much better. Keep it up.

  • @billymartin1047
    @billymartin1047Ай бұрын

    Excellent tuition

  • @richardwilliams232
    @richardwilliams2322 ай бұрын

    Used a lapped dovetail on a brace under the plywood top of my model railroad framing along with other joinery. It is/was my first project with joinery and I dedicated it to my joiner/builder/cratemaker ancestors and my father.

  • @ClarkyClark
    @ClarkyClark2 ай бұрын

    Fantastic as always dude. I appreciate you doing these sorts of videos. You explain well and easy to follow. Cheers!

  • @mrrobscleaningservice6059
    @mrrobscleaningservice60592 ай бұрын

    I love the half-lap joint use it all the time

  • @johnford7847
    @johnford78472 ай бұрын

    Very informative video, Rex. Thank you for sharing.

  • @theeddorian
    @theeddorian17 күн бұрын

    The half-lap joint in furniture is often concealed under the top on tables with drawers in the front. The apron may be composed of up to four pieces. The upper piece spans the distance across the legs and may be set into the top of the leg using a dove tail. It's odd because it is a face-grain tail set into an end-grain mortise cut in the upper end of the leg.

  • @edwardgurney1694
    @edwardgurney16942 ай бұрын

    I used half laps when i built my bookbinding bench on your recommendation from the English bench video. I didnt even use glue, just screws, because i needed it to come apart for a move. Its really solid, no movement at all even with my iffy joinery and cheap lumber.

  • @ipwnreviewer
    @ipwnreviewerАй бұрын

    not interested in the content but have to give a positive comment about the formatting of the thumbnail/video title with the asterisk - genius

  • @jimmaccauley
    @jimmaccauley2 ай бұрын

    Excellent and detailed instruction. Thank you.

  • @Pomaufour
    @PomaufourАй бұрын

    Oh god I dove again for 30+minutes into one of your videos without realizing it ! Damn !

  • @alanfarnworth2802
    @alanfarnworth28022 ай бұрын

    the half lap dovetail looks great. nice video

  • @jbocaneg17611
    @jbocaneg176112 ай бұрын

    This was fantastic. I will look at that bench.

  • @joeljamesconroy
    @joeljamesconroy2 ай бұрын

    Yup. You are a natural teacher/instructor

  • @gregnewberry4813
    @gregnewberry48132 ай бұрын

    Nice to see you have some acoustic absorption in your shop for audio. !!!

  • @thomascostello5780
    @thomascostello57802 ай бұрын

    Thank you Rex. Excellent explanation

  • @belisarian6429
    @belisarian6429Ай бұрын

    Love the premise "I should not tell you its easy, I should make it easy" and also rest of the video is also great.

  • @salottin
    @salottin2 ай бұрын

    I've done the second type and they're pretty good. Still need to try the others!

  • @harveyalan788
    @harveyalan7882 ай бұрын

    I used carriage bolts on the half lap joints of my workbench that lives in my unheated garage in northern Vermont. Each spring I tighten the nuts, and they are good for the season.

  • @scottferguson2982
    @scottferguson29822 ай бұрын

    Great production Rex. Nice camera shots and presentation.

  • @Vazmenko
    @Vazmenko2 ай бұрын

    Another great video. A lot of useful details as usual. Thanks!

  • @jumboshrimp987
    @jumboshrimp9872 ай бұрын

    This was great! Would love to see you design some simple furniture that highlights joinery like the dovetail lap joint!

  • @daiblaze1396
    @daiblaze13962 ай бұрын

    Comes at a right time as I was wondering about the best joint for a frame for a screen. This overlap fits the job, strong enough, less skill intensive. I see that you also has your own way to saw. I think that praticing sawing is the key to find what suits someone. After trying quite different techniques, I was able to feel that sawing from the sitting position with a japanese saw is the way for me. Just feels natural and more stable, even without a workbench. Most important thing to remember : let the saw follows its track with gentle touch. Brute force is useless. I also found that the blade of a japanese saw doesn't really follow its track once I take a break. So sawing in one go is key apparently. Well, just pratice like you mentioned again.

  • @steven_vogt
    @steven_vogt2 ай бұрын

    Monkey see, monkey do - thank you for this! :) 👍

  • @PhilNPrice
    @PhilNPrice2 ай бұрын

    I built my first workbench a year ago, a kind of hybrid design that is mostly a Nicholson bench. I did half-lap joints for most of the joinery (the full version, with the interlocking components) and I made every mistake a monkey could make. For instance, the trick of making the joint deliberately too tight and then planing the intersecting surface did not occur to me, obvious though it may be, so instead I made the joints too tight and then tried to trim down the shoulder a micron at a time (by cross-cutting on my table saw). Of course I overdid it once or twice and had to re-cut a piece. Also, I didn't have a router plane (still don't), so getting the cheeks perfectly flat was pretty much impossible; I had to settle for 'flat enough.' Doing through-tenons for the stretchers seemed too ambitious, so I did the poor-workman's version: cut half-laps in each half of a leg, creating a rectangular tenon when I glued the halves together. The resulting bench definitely looks amateurish when I compare it to a lot of the workbench porn here on KZread, but I'm still very happy with it. It is absolutely rock-solid, I cannot rock it or twist it in any direction by any perceptible amount at all. Oh, and I checked out an old workbench at the North Haven (Maine) historical society museum, the bench was used for 80 years to build wooden boats Back In The Day...and it was beat all to hell by the end of its days but was still doing its job long after the man who built it was dead and gone, so who cares if mine doesn't look great? I mention all of this because: (1) Thank you, Rex, for saying in an earlier video that if you need a workbench just go ahead and get started, don't keep dithering about what kind and don't worry about making it perfect because I don't have the skills yet to make it perfect. All of that was great advice. (You also said to expect to build another one someday when you have better skills, but I don't think I'll have to. I think this bench will last the rest of my life, and that whoever ends up with it after me will be able to use it for several more decades, if they don't mind how it looks). Also (2) anyone else who has read this far: you can do it. You don't have to just use hand tools like Rex does, use whatever works. But think it through. You know that thing about 'measure twice, cut once'? Terrible advice. 'Think three times, measure twice, sneak up on the cut', that's my version. Thinking is the key. Most of my mistakes were not physical ones, they were conceptual...including boneheaded things like cutting the wrong face of a workpiece. (3) As long as I'm giving advice, here's one more for newbies like me: don't be in a hurry. If you only have fifteen minutes and you want to make some progress, sharpen a chisel or lay out something but don't actually make the cut. At my level and probably yours, you need more time than you think to even do simple stuff.

  • @WarER4X
    @WarER4X2 ай бұрын

    Sounds like you got the audio all sorted out in the new shop. 👍

  • @paperjawa
    @paperjawa18 күн бұрын

    Good call on the acoustic panels. Your audio is great :D

  • @jimjimson6208
    @jimjimson6208Ай бұрын

    Just finished my first project, it had a few of these. Didn't know what they were called but let me tell you, the first few that I cut were a travesty haha. Definitely got easier by the the time i got to the 4th one

  • @jerrystark6766
    @jerrystark67662 ай бұрын

    As always, good advice. Thanks for the video. 👍👍

  • @barberousse1149
    @barberousse1149Ай бұрын

    There are clever little details usefull for other things.Even if I knew how to / made this type of joints before.

  • @pathardage1880
    @pathardage18802 ай бұрын

    Informative as always. Thanks, Rex.

  • @jslonisch
    @jslonisch2 ай бұрын

    Half lap joints are great. Easy, simple and quick and perfect for when all the force is going to be against the shoulders and you don’t expect there to be any twisting. Like a shelf support.

  • @calebbaker7452
    @calebbaker74522 ай бұрын

    Damn that's clean. I am currently struggling with even cutting straight, so I'm working on that now and hoping I can get to your level one day

  • @1pcfred

    @1pcfred

    2 ай бұрын

    Sawing is one of those things. Part of it is you and part of it is the saw itself. Some saws are definitely better than others are. If you're game you may even be able to improve the performance of some saws too. But sharpening saws is not always a simple thing itself. I still can't get the hang of fine tooth crosscuts. At a certain pitch I don't think it even matters. A sharp fine rip is going to cut good too. When you touch the teeth of a saw with your fingertips it should feel like needles.

  • @curtisclark802
    @curtisclark8022 ай бұрын

    @RexKrueger Why is woodwork so calming and fulfilling?

  • @johnfisk811
    @johnfisk8112 ай бұрын

    Proper old school Rex. Thank you.

  • @davidbaker8483
    @davidbaker8483Ай бұрын

    I haven't used winding sticks since i was in school woodwork lessons 50 years ago.

  • @BlankBrain
    @BlankBrain2 ай бұрын

    I'm mounting a motor to a cider press grinder via a worm gear speed reducer. The motor will be mounted 90° off-axis from the grinder. I made a 45° tongue and groove test miter, and couldn't break it. I can apply what I learned from this video to make the joinery more precise. Thank you!

  • @011CJ
    @011CJ2 ай бұрын

    I use the dovetailed half lap all the time it holds good I just use 2 to 3 dowls and glue to finish it off to add to the appeal 👍 I allso bevle bolth sides and bevle them a little less thanks again

  • @brucematthews6417
    @brucematthews64172 ай бұрын

    Nothing at all wrong with half lap joints. Especially the full (2 sided) half laps as shown. And the perfect companion for half laps or even full tenons is a large'ish sole router plane. After I made and used my first router plane I wondered why I had not gotten one a couple of decades earlier. Just SOO much easier and accurate. Anyway, a great video on a basic but totally useable joint

  • @forrestmatthews158
    @forrestmatthews1582 ай бұрын

    Awesome video. I'd love to see a collaboration between you and project farm to test the actual strength of those joints.

  • @zachansen8293
    @zachansen82932 ай бұрын

    The wood at the end getting damaged takes a LOT of acceleration off the joint when you hit it with a hammer. It's basically like the crush zone of a car. Even just taking that impact over a tiny fraction of a second drastically reduces acceleration.

  • @user-yl5cr3eb9w
    @user-yl5cr3eb9w2 ай бұрын

    Hadn’t seen the half dovetail. Interesting that the direction makes a difference.

  • @g5flyr169

    @g5flyr169

    2 ай бұрын

    +1! I’ve never considered the direction either.

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