All Of The Saws One Video

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There are a lot of saws. we may call them all hand saws but there are many names and types of saws.

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I’m sure that many people including myself really appreciate this tutorial. Thank you.

GrantHendrick
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The most comprehensive saw video I ever saw. A cut above.

AllanMacMillan
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I was waiting to hear of the "one saw to rule them all". But, I thought, "Then it wouldn't be a saw, it would be a ruler."

rhpsoregon
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Wood grain whispers tales,
Sash saw sings precision’s song,
Craftsman’s art revealed.

thebulletproofpoet
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This is the first time I’ve heard any explanation about the difference in how push vs pull saws are controlled. I’d never thought about how the leading tooth side matters so much. Everything you said rings true to me

JustinGoogle-frbq
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The nice thing about Japanese saws is they are so cheap I can throw them in a tool bag for home improvement jobs and not stress if they get dinged or bent. Plus they leave a super thin kerf.

AndrewWade
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I bought the veritas carcass saw on your recommendation a while back, and it is an excellent saw! I find myself reaching for it all the time

mattlewis
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Thanks for the lesson, James! 😊
Stay safe there with your family! 🖖😊

MCsCreations
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The best thing for the Japanese saw is the thin kerf. Just makes hand sawing so much easier. Some western frame saws approach that, but then you've got a lot of weight you're pushing back and forth and it gets tiring again. Oh yes, and the ergonomics can be spectacular when you learn about the floor props: low little saw horses. You can really go to town.

johnfreiler
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Very helpful! Thanks, this is about my 3rd video in... I imagine that the more videos I watch, the t-shirts will just get cheesier and cheesier-and that's a good thing cause I like milk products. Happy New Year!

bradincaliphas
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Great explanation of so many options. Thanks!

SeahawkSailor
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James, I saw this one coming. Great information with lots of teeth.

Rwjudy
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i SAW this an instantly knew i hade to dig my TEETH in and gat a HANDLE on all the types of saws.

asherdoubek
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Started with Japanese saw because of the cost and now that's what I'm most comfortable with

LazyCat
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Panel of people...Quintessential dad pun. I saw what you did there. Thanks for sharing.

johnford
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You left out Zona saws and micro saws for really fine work!

makenchips
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Personally, I've come to love western style tools. On the other hand, I find having the Japanese saws and planes are indispensable when doing certain kinds of jobs - especially when workholding or positioning is an issue as they are way easier to use in weird places.

Western saws really expect you to have a certain setup, whereas the Japanese ones seem to be ideal for a guy doing stuff on the go or in an inconvenient place - the long, round handles and ease of starting and use lean into that. Frames saws, to me, feel like the power tools of the set, as they can just attack things at a surprising speed but are the most prone to goofy results thanks to being touchy and needing a lot of awareness.

pacefactor
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I tried Japanese saws but have the “slightly off turns into way off” problem. I mostly use western saws.

But sometimes I want the precision of a backsaw, but too deep of a cut for it. I don’t have one as deep as a tenon saw. I’ll start the cut with the backsaw and switch to a ryoba to finish it. Total hackery, but it works.

If you say “fret saw” I think of a narrow kerf (usually gent) saw for cutting fret slots. Some have a stop built in, but I use a mitre box-like jig that catches the back at the right depth. I forget people call coping saws that. Now I’ll say djent saw. (metal dad joke)

mikesalmo
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Are you aware of a saw that used to be quite common here in the Netherlands: the "schrobzaag". Could be translated as a scrubsaw.
It is like a panelsaw with a narrow blade, tapered to the end and with an open handle.
It was used to roughly saw curved lines.

SimonWillig
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My favourite kind of saw sits on a small tricycle, but again, I've no space for a shop!

Zoso