This is a great example of designing on-the-fly and making adjustments when your first idea doesn't work out. Here April Wilkerson cooks up a design for wall-mounted bit storage, and after she finds her initial concept too unstable, devises a clever way to remedy it without having to start all over:
Breathing in a lot of sawdust over time is no good for your long-term health. Using a device that can read airborne particle counts, Matthias Wandel compares the sawdust amounts produced by a tablesaw, miter saw and a bandsaw, showing you which produces the least and under which circumstances:
This week, Izzy Swan designs and builds a dolly rig for a camera—enabling it to do a curving tracking shot, using an adjustable four-wheel-steering set-up:
Here Jesse de Geest demonstrates a clever Japanese technique called "Killing the Wood." This is what you do when two pieces that are supposed to fit together are off by just 1/32 of an inch:
As always, part of the fun of watching a Jimmy DiResta video is trying to figure out what he's doing at certain points. In this one, where he makes a mallet, it wasn't obvious to me when he started measuring the Forstner bit—then you see why later and think "Ah, of course!"
Frank Howarth's working for his wood again, continuing to turn a friend's fallen walnut tree into slabs with a chainsaw mill:
Might be too basic for the average Core77 reader, but will be helpful for people working with wood for the first time. Steve Ramsey breaks down a basic materials question: Why use hardwood vs. softwood, plywood, or MDF?
Father of the Year, Bob Clagett, figures out how to DIY an air hockey table for his kids, using a shop-vac as the blower. At the end, he helpfully runs down a list of mistakes he made along the way, things you might want to do differently, et cetera:
Sandra Powell had a ton of drawers to build for her island cabinet project, and here seeks ways to increase her efficiency with several different jigs and set-ups:
Remember that shed that Linn from Darbin Orvar constructed a few weeks ago? Now she's finishing it up, creating a barn-style door from 2x10 framing lumber ripped into components of more manageable size. She then completes the organization of the interior:
Laura Kampf wanted some cargo space on her bike, and here she welds it up. If you're wondering why she opted for flat instead of a basket, it was for the sake of flexibility: "I built it so you can securely attach a Systainer, a [case of beer] or a basket to it...or a passenger," she writes.
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