derinthescarletpescatarian:

thetruecthulhu9:

derinthescarletpescatarian:

derinthescarletpescatarian:

transcyberism:

derinthescarletpescatarian:

thetruecthulhu9:

derinthescarletpescatarian:

I’m inexperienced at DIY, it’s good if the wood catches fire when you’re cutting it right

How do you even achieve that? Are u using an electric saw? The only thing I can think of is getting caught on a knot or bit of metal and doing a whole bunch of friction

I hat to trim off a bit that wasn’t worth disassembling the whole thing and using the circular saw for so I used this dinky little electric thing that I bought to cut holes in drywall. It was friction yeah.

Tooth size was probably way too small for wood, I’m assuming it was some kind of reciprocating saw? The fine-tooth blade is for metal and the coarse-tooth blade is for wood and drywall. Drywall has the handy property of not being particularly flammable so all that will happen if you use the wrong blade is that it will cut slower, but wood is both more dense and likes to be on fire more so using the wrong blade will do that.

I don’t care enough about this window I cludged together out of roofing plastic and cheap pine to go digging through the piles and piles of random shit covering the floor of my shed trying to find the other saw blades. It’ll trim down with the blade that happened to be installed and it’ll like it.

It was this thing

Dude that’s a multi tool it’s for stupid thin material and also metal. Works the same way as a cast cutter iirc

No it’s for everything because it’s the power tool that was within reach without me having to dig through piles of junk in the shed full of spiders with no functioning lights.