Couple years back I did something similar in an apartment using a rolling box. I called it the micro shop and did a YouTube series about it that no one ever watched. This dude's work is waaaay better.
I have a dedicated 28 x 28 two story shop and I still don’t have enough room! Idk how people work in small spaces like that. I follow a couple makers from Europe and South Africa with tiny shops that do some amazing work though.
He's definitely a crafty guy, but there is nothing super innovative here, just a worktop with an interchangeable throatplate to accommodate various powertools. The T-slot, edge guide, dust collection/blade guards mimic what one would find on a table saw base.
Something I am curious about, why didn't he do his jointing with the router+fence instead of saw+fence like he did? Looks like he got his straight edge, but you wind up with the saw marks instead of a nicely milled, finished edge which would result from kissing it with the router.
Couple years back I did something similar in an apartment using a rolling box. I called it the micro shop and did a YouTube series about it that no one ever watched. This dude's work is waaaay better.
Possibly Austrian or Scandinavian.
He must be Swedish as it looks like an Ikea project !
Yeah, has to be Scandinavian. Maybe Norwegian. They're not as woke as Sweden. One of my best friends lives in Norway. Beautiful country.
You might also enjoy the joerg sprave yt channel.
Clearly, he thinks in wood. I've seen components of this rig in other places, but he really pulled it all together. Nice.
wow, he has every CAMERA ANGLE covered as well. dang
I have a dedicated 28 x 28 two story shop and I still don’t have enough room! Idk how people work in small spaces like that. I follow a couple makers from Europe and South Africa with tiny shops that do some amazing work though.
The About page on his YT channel says he’s Austrian.
Sounds Scandinavian.
He's definitely a crafty guy, but there is nothing super innovative here, just a worktop with an interchangeable throatplate to accommodate various powertools. The T-slot, edge guide, dust collection/blade guards mimic what one would find on a table saw base.
Something I am curious about, why didn't he do his jointing with the router+fence instead of saw+fence like he did? Looks like he got his straight edge, but you wind up with the saw marks instead of a nicely milled, finished edge which would result from kissing it with the router.