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1 day, perhaps 1 week, after you throw that scrap of wood away, you will go look for it because your wardrobe has fallen on your put slug, Geoffrey, and you wish to prop the wardrobe up whilst you rescue Geoffrey.
The general rule in my shop is if it's at least 3 inches of scrap, I'll save it. That's a good amount of wood at that point and I do use those. That's a drawer panel in a chest or box.
Planing a sawed surface is easier than a chopped surface.
This is why I have three table saws. And three band saws. And three circular saws.
All forms of wood waste can be put to good use. From "offcuts" to dust.
With a continental frame saw, I have found that I actually enjoy ripping boards quite a bit. It's therapeutic almost.
Surely you rive it with a froe?
I like ripping. It's resawing that is hard
If it was the ripcut you started with the offcut wouldn't look like that…
You’ll never need the scrap till you get rid of it
Mr big shot here throwing away his scraps
Draw knife makes great kindling
Heck, back in the day when working on expensive lumber some people would saw the rabbets out to save that stick.
Impresionante
Depends on how much I'm taking off. If I'm only taking a bit off, I'll waste away, if it's a couple inches wide or a valuable wood I'll rip.
I like hand tools but there is a lot of waste in this. Maybe in Ohio things are cheaper, but I couldn’t afford that attitude
I use 80% of my scraps… i usually only work hardwoods so my scraps get glued up into cutting boards and the like the rest if possible gets tossed into the forge starter bucket or if they are suitable they go into the bucket of chunks used in the smoker then ash gets spread on the garden… practically no waste
You never fail to tell the truth
What if I need to rip a board for being too thick
As a teen, I spent a whole day resawing a 2×6 piece of white oak. Will never forget it.
If I ever get my act together, I'll heat my garage in the winter with the scraps
"If you confess with your mouth the Lord Jesus and believe in your heart that God has raised Him from the dead, you will be saved" (Romans 10:9).
When training as a machinist a rule was drilled into me "If you can't think of three semicommon used for an off cut it's scrap and scrap gets recycled not saved" Good rule.
The useful part is eventually you can make a reference sheet to compare to. The shortest, narrowest, and thinnest a scrap can be to be worth saving. It makes using scrap more appealing too because you know your pile is useful and you'll save stock. It also will be in your mind to see if you can see if an offcut has a chance at being actually immediately useful.
The idea of hand tools is more appealing than actually working with some of them.
Dovetail saws, chisels, hand planes, joinery tools … enjoyable.
Breaking down stock? The table saw is what I find enjoyable.
Your logic is restarded and childish.
Destroying scraps, in this economy ?!
And in most cases if the off cut isnt "scrap" but actually part of the build, you can cheat and use a power tool. Because unless you're on camera/stage, noone is watching you and noone will know your dirty little secret 😅😅😅
That’s why I just burn the projects and keep the scrap cuts.