Building My Timber Frame Dream Shop, One Piece At A Time



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46 thoughts on “Building My Timber Frame Dream Shop, One Piece At A Time”

  1. Looking good. I just got my new WM LT35 from WM South, my first mill. After a 6 hour drive back home already ruined 4 blades finding lag bolts. Loving every second. Keep the videos coming love them.

    Reply
  2. So much to see in little time squences but interesting . BTW – your bumper music full of acoustic fills good old flat top pickin' . Has a great Appalachian sound . I hear a touch of Jethro Tull early years flow . Who is your bumper music mystery band ?
    08/05/2022

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  3. We work hard in the trades up here in the northeast, building buildings for other people that will last many lifetimes and benefiting millions of people, generating untold value of trillions of dollars.
    But you, my friend, and your sweat equity, are building a lifetime for your family's benefit while generating a a shared journey worth untold human value. For your steady nature and your (camera) work ethic, I salute you.

    Reply
  4. One piece at a time Johnny Cash great great songwriter and what a good song that is! Your place is looking fantastic congratulations you must be excited and motivated. Keep up the good work and keep playing the good music!! 👍👍👍😎🇨🇱

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  5. As soon it is closed in you will gain weight to compensate for the A/C and no sweating… Be A Man and Bare it you will love that you are at the current weight not 25 lbs. bigger!!! This is going to a Mail Pouch or a Red Man Chewing Tobacco Barn being that it is Red!!! Am I Right??? Could make it Clabber Girl Baking Powder???

    Reply
  6. I really like Ur videos and Ur slang, xD.
    If U can afford buy two things.
    Fist a tracksaw any is good. Festool, DeWalt or best mafell

    Second a tabelslidsaw like a 8/10 feet.
    They are super expensive but saves time. My is used 10 feet from SCM model 16SI. Old but awesome.
    Greetings Wolfgang

    Reply
  7. Good God man, Please get yourself some safety glasses when cutting steel and using your nail gun. Eyes are very precious but also very vulnerable to flying pieces of steel. I had a hot piece of steel land on my eye ball and not only penetrated the surface but burned itself onto it. It is not any fun at all to lay on an emergency room table with your eye immobilized but still seeing the doctor headed for your eye with an instrument to remove the steel. Then you can hear him picking at it to lift the steel off the surface. Thank God I suffered no permanent damage. But wearing an eye patch for a week or more taught me all I need to know about what it's like to be blind in one eye. Depth perception stinks, things like lining miter saw blades up to the line you drew on the board are really hard when the blade blocks vison from the only side you can see from without tipping your head and body to see the other side of the saw. Let's not even talk about merging traffic. Yes. I know safety glass are a pain in the rear when it's all humid and sweaty, but it's a small price to pay for protecting your sight. While you are building that new shop build a safety glasses box on the wall near every machine station and use them.

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