• chiliedogg@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    Not as specific as it should be. They’re all insane with the tools and materials these days.

    Let’s make a box for Amazon deliveries.

    We’ll start by breaking down this $300/sheet plywood with my $1500 festool track saw setup plugged into my $1,000 festool vacuum.

    Have you tried [insert meal delivery plan subscription]? Sign up for a 5 percent discount at the link below.

    Now, before we actually start cutting, let’s measure and square everything up with this $150 Woodpeckers square and a $60 knife I use for some reason instead of a fucking pencil…

    • Captain Aggravated@sh.itjust.works
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      6 hours ago

      Woodworker here, the reason you use a marking knife rather than a pencil is because it is more precise, in two ways:

      1. A pencil line has width to it. Even a very fine mechanical pencil line. A marking knife has a single bevel, so the cut it leaves looks like |/ The vertical surface is the mark.

      2. If you need to transfer the mark around the board, say for tenoning, you make the first mark, then you turn the board, put the knife in the end of the cut, butt the square against the knife, and then cut. With a pencil you might stair step a bit. Then, when it’s time to cut, you can register a chisel against the mark, you can feel when you’re in place because it clicks in.

      Note I’m talking about chisels here, because you use a marking knife when using hand tool techniques. It doesn’t help at all when using power tools like a track saw, so using a marking knife in a power tool workflow is a bit pretentious.

      A marking knife does not need to be expensive, you can use an ordinary utility knife to get the job done, and a cheap single-bevel marking knife can be had for a few bucks. I bought mine from eBay for $9.62 American. Or you could buy this weeb shit for $2400.

      • chiliedogg@lemmy.world
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        5 hours ago

        Yes, a pencil almarknhas width. That’s why you choose a side of the line to cut. I’ve been woodworking for decades, and nobody ever needs more precision than a pencil because wood’s movement and change over time is enough to erase that extra precision.

        • Captain Aggravated@sh.itjust.works
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          5 hours ago

          Eh, if I’m doing something like chiseling the shoulders of tenons by hand, I like using a knife to mark that so that I don’t stair-step it around the board, plus it makes sure the line that will be visible in the finished product will be straight and not jagged. When marking out for using power tools, I use a pencil, typically a Pilot Sharpwriter. They’re cheap as borscht and the spring action they have reduces the amount of lead I break on wood.

    • Rcklsabndn@sh.itjust.works
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      13 hours ago

      That $60 knife is the last one you’ll ever need and it’s only available at our web shop, Link below.

      (Actually just a rebranded Ali Baba drop ship)

    • grue@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      More like a $600 Damascus steel knife made by another Youtuber that they were given for free, but otherwise this is spot-on.