New video about a new joinery system

 

I received an e-mail from Leigh, letting me know about a new video just posted on YouTube. The video is about their new R9Plus joinery jig, and was produced to show in a few minutes what it is capable of doing.

I have been posting about this new jig; but the new video does a wonderful job showing it in the context of a 30-year historical perspective. It is amazing to me how much joinery systems have evolved, and how this manufacturer has managed to create a new jig loaded with features, at a great price point.

Enjoy the video!

I have set up the R9Plus to machine dovetails and finger joints at the router table. Stay tuned for more!

Disclosure: Leigh sometimes provides equipment to me, for evaluation and testing.

 

Al Navas

 

 

A tear-jerker

 




 

If you can watch this without crying you are a better man than I am.

Robert Scoble, on Google+ 

 
Sometimes we are touched in ways we never expected. This was one of those times. I started to watch the video, but stopped myself in my tracks; I asked Sandy to watch it with me. We both cried.
 
I will get back to woodworking after I take the written exam for the Missouri Court Interpreter program. I just returned from two intensive days of Skills Workshop, a prep course for the Oral Exam I will take in March or April 2012. First, though, I must pass the written exam on November 6.
 
 

—  Al Navas

 
 
Photo credit: Brenden ii,
by Bombardier
(Flickr, Creative Commons)
 
 

Woodworking in America video: Honing straight or curved plane irons

Sharpening curved irons can be one’s nemesis in the shop. However, Christopher Schwarz demystifies this critical skill for us – simply create a letter X on your sharpening stone, and you will do well! This was a terrific session, and a suitable follow-up to the session on grinding your tools. What could be better than first learning to grind a straight or curved iron or chisel, and then properly honing it? A key point to remember: It is proper honing that will give the edge durability.

I hope that the video, edited to just over 9 minutes, will show you the way to get that super-sharp and durable edge in your plane irons, whether straight of curved. Just do it! I included sharpening of an iron for the foreplane – that is, something like a #5, set to take a 1/16th-inch thick shaving in one pass; however, use the same technique to sharpen irons for all your planes. Edit to add (with thanks to Bob Easton for pointing it out): The two other blades that Schwarz mentions in the video, but which I did not include, are for the smoother (flattest), and for a jointer.

If you believe the technique shown by The Schwarz will help you get nice, sharp tools, please let me know in the Comments section. If you have been doing this all your life, I want to know, too. Do you use sandpaper to sharpen? Do you use water stones? How do you sharpen and hone your tools?

Al Navas

Right-click to download the low-resolution video (95 MB)
Duration: 9:04 minutes