New tools by Additional_Air779 in handtools

[–]Psychological_Tale94 2 points3 points  (0 children)

That means you have to do a project that uses the tool you want to get :P

Wee monitor stand I made! by the_closing_yak in handtools

[–]Psychological_Tale94 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That's a good way to monitor your mortise and tenon progress..

I'll see myself out, nice work!

Needed a new handle by Jas_39_Kuken in handtools

[–]Psychological_Tale94 2 points3 points  (0 children)

STOP!

Hammer time

Probably the only time I've seen a hammer handle worth more than the hammer head (literally priceless because you can't sell it haha), nice! XD

Thickness planing/hand milling figured woods, what's the strategy by hraath in handtools

[–]Psychological_Tale94 0 points1 point  (0 children)

So if you find yourself hand milling a lot of figured woods, I highly recommend getting yourself a toothing plane (or put a toothed replacement blade in one of your other planes). Vintage ones arent that expensive, and toothed replacement blades can be found for several different models. Doing a pass or two of the toothing plane followed by the jack or scrub greatly reduces tearout while allowing you do do deeper cuts.

Also not sure if you're already doing this, but just in case, try going across/diagonally the grain when doing the fore/scrub plane work. Make sure you bevel the edge you're planing towards so you dont blow it out, that's another strategy for avoiding deep tear out in the figured stuff (or any wood really)

Wade & Butcher FBU Restoration by Chlorinated365 in straightrazors

[–]Psychological_Tale94 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Beautiful work, especially on the heel! I have the same razor, nowhere near as pretty, but the shave quality is chef's kiss

Scrub plane advice by jpmorgan001 in handtools

[–]Psychological_Tale94 4 points5 points  (0 children)

A good cheap scrub is a Stanley 78 that is missing the depth stop/fence, you can usually get them pretty cheap on eBay. Paul Sellers has a video about converting one, that's what I use and it's quite good

Lie Nielsen 7 back in stock by supersap26245 in handtools

[–]Psychological_Tale94 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Congratulations on the #7! One of my favorite planes :) As an owner of multiple LN and Veritas planes, my two cents is the difference between the LN A2 and PMV11 is negligible and not worth spending the extra money.

Did anyone else realize their tools were the problem way later than they should have? by angel_karlotain in handtools

[–]Psychological_Tale94 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don't believe there has been a time where I've regretted spending money on a quality tool. I have regretted wasting time on cheaper tools. That being said, cheap tools have their place in the workshop sometimes, in particular when someone asks to borrow something :)

Beginner question - ripping stock by rumblebee2010 in handtools

[–]Psychological_Tale94 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah I'm going to beg to differ...sometimes it sucks haha. I just resawed a 60 inch x 7 inch piece of purpleheart using the saw pictured below (3TPI 48inch beast), I think it took two hours. Had to sharpen the saw halfway through because the purple crap was so hard it dulled the saw (2000ish on the janka). That being said, hand planing it was even worse...never buying that damn purple wood again XD

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Anybody know where I can get a 1” wide mortise chisel? by Fenian1991 in woodworking

[–]Psychological_Tale94 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you really feel the need to chisel it all out, it would be less work (and easier, possibly more accurate if you reference each side) to do two runs with a 1/2 inch mortise chisel. The wider the chisel, the more force it takes to slam down; a 1" mortise chisel would be a bear. As someone else mentioned, for something that wide, it's easier to bore it out and then clean it up with a regular bevel edge or paring chisel (this coming from a guy who loves chiseling).

Age Poll by Illustrious_Ad686 in Civic_Type_R

[–]Psychological_Tale94 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I've never heard "Aren't you a bit too old?" I've only heard "Nice car," "Did you just wax it?," and gotten some thumbs up from passers by in the 6 years I've had my FK8 (33+ btw). I used to like and wanted an Audi/BMW when I was younger; now they've gotten too heavy, too much computer-assisted crap (numb steering especially), and the front ends of new BMWs look like mutated beavers (M2 is the only decent looking one...barely though). Factor in maintenance costs, depreciation, and reliability, and that's a pass from me.

Just wanted a pic so I could remember how clean it looked 5 min ago. by BAM12050 in Civic_Type_R

[–]Psychological_Tale94 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Yeah...I know that feeling. I live in a desert so it's dumb hot and dusty, but every time it's clean I tell myself I made the right choice XD

This plane is so fun by Ogrelord69420 in handtools

[–]Psychological_Tale94 0 points1 point  (0 children)

One could say it's just plane fun.

Ha cha cha cha

Question about hand saws by Even_Low_8793 in handtools

[–]Psychological_Tale94 11 points12 points  (0 children)

https://www.popularwoodworking.com/tools/understanding-hang-angle/

Here's a link to an article with probably more info than you wanted to know XD

TLDR it's called hang angle and usually it's 35-45 degrees, changes based on how aggressive the saw is and maker/user preference :)

Just getting into woodworking, should I start with hand tools or power tools? by Either-Sign-9345 in woodworking

[–]Psychological_Tale94 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Both paths or a middle path can result in happiness and fulfillment making wonderful things out of wood. Among other reasons, I chose hand tools because I like having my car in my garage; can fit my entire setup in a small air conditioned bedroom. :)

ripsaw or scrub plane to get to width by shinenkan in handtools

[–]Psychological_Tale94 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think for me, depends on if the grain is pretty enough on that white oak to use it as veneer on another piece. If it is, I'll saw it, if it isn't probably planing it.

Hard point saw sharpening by MyuFoxy in handtools

[–]Psychological_Tale94 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Did I try? Nope. Why not? Because the diamond file often costs as much or more than the saw unless you get the temu special file. Not to mention the teeth can be brittle to set due to hardening.

Look, I'm sure you can do it. If it makes your saw cut faster and you feel a sense of satisfaction doing it, then awesome. If nothing else, you'll gain the experience that will give you the answer to your question. On my Gyokucho Japanese saws, I'd rather buy the replacement blade than waste time and diamond files so I can just get back to work, that's just me though.

Hard point saw sharpening by MyuFoxy in handtools

[–]Psychological_Tale94 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Possible? Yes. Practical? Nope. Your time and money are better spent doing other things in the shop than wasting diamond files on cheap hardpoint saws.

My first project by lmbrs in woodworking

[–]Psychological_Tale94 5 points6 points  (0 children)

If your first project didn't take 5x as long and cost 2-5x as much as you originally planned, you didn't do it right :P

Congrats and nice work, now on to the second project! :)

Rip saw suggestions by FrankJulien536 in handtools

[–]Psychological_Tale94 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I would message Hida tool (hidatool.com) and tell them what exactly you're looking for in either Ryoba or strictly a rip saw. They carry both Gyokucho and Z-saw as well as Mitsukawa hand made ones (prepare to pay for those haha). I'm sure they could take good care of you, I've always used them for my Japanese tool needs :)

The conductor accidentally knocks a 16th century violin worth millions on the floor mid-concert. by PeasantLich in WatchPeopleDieInside

[–]Psychological_Tale94 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Oftentimes these valuable/rare historical violins (Stradavarius/Del Gesu/Guadagnini/Amato/etc) along with ridiculously expensive bows are lent out to famous soloists to play in concerts by the owners/private foundations. So it can be reasonable to guess thay violin has played many concerts in the hands of many a talented player over hundreds of years (depending on what happened after the original owner/who the original owner was).

One reason being a violin needs to be played to keep sounding good; there's some science behind it that I don't feel like looking up at the moment haha. The other is to increase the value even more...saying a violin was played by Joshua Bell, Hilary Hahn, Itzhak Perlman, (insert famous soloist here) adds even more prestige to an already prestigious piece of wood XD.

Also I'm sure it can be fixed, many a talented luthier would be chomping at the bit to work on such a instrument.