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View Full Version : 4 hours of woodworking in 4 minutes (final timelapse)



Alan Lilly
11-22-2013, 11:42 PM
See if you notice anything strange in my woodshop timelapse :)


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FabFgUG2glI

Jerry Miner
11-23-2013, 3:38 AM
I noticed you didn't leave anything in the clamps for very long! :)

I also noticed that you created a cross-grain situation by gluing the ends onto the box on all four sides. You could be looking at a cracked board down the road.

Mark Bolton
11-23-2013, 7:01 AM
Oh lord, here we go... ;-)

Nice video Alan, fun to watch.

Danny Hamsley
11-23-2013, 7:34 AM
You changed shirts. The time on the clock versus your work sequence.


Now I am tired.

Jay Rasmussen
11-23-2013, 7:37 AM
I noticed it would take me 4 days to do what you did in 4 hours, fun video.

Art Mulder
11-23-2013, 7:59 AM
See if you notice anything strange in my woodshop timelapse :)

Ummmm,


You're shop is messier than mine.
that is one HUGE wall clock. I like it.
I couldn't see a splitter/riving knife on the TS

Rod Sheridan
11-23-2013, 8:26 AM
I'll guess that there was recent break in to your shop and they stole the following

- dust collector
- scrap bin
- vacuum
- tablesaw guard and spliter..

I also noticed that it was a great time lapse video, thanks for making that..............Rod.

glenn bradley
11-23-2013, 9:31 AM
That was a blast. Thanks for taking the time to put that together.

Bill Huber
11-23-2013, 9:47 AM
Great video, I really enjoyed it.

So how many hats do you have?

Bobby O'Neal
11-23-2013, 10:01 AM
Really cool video. Thanks for sharing it with us.

Alan Lilly
11-23-2013, 10:46 AM
Great video, I really enjoyed it.

So how many hats do you have?

Great catch Bill ... you found the strange thing :)

Alan Lilly
11-23-2013, 11:02 AM
I noticed you didn't leave anything in the clamps for very long! :)

I also noticed that you created a cross-grain situation by gluing the ends onto the box on all four sides. You could be looking at a cracked board down the road.

I worried about that, but ultimately decided to do it anyway because the top was hopefully small enough. Next time I will just find some quality plywood for this type of project.

Alan Lilly
11-23-2013, 11:07 AM
I noticed it would take me 4 days to do what you did in 4 hours, fun video.

The timelapse was recorded over weeks ... capturing 67000 images at 1 every 2 seconds for a total of 35 hours of footage. I then selectively edited the footage and compressed time further to fill the music clip I had. So the amount of real time shown during the 3.5 minutes is about 3.5 hours. :)

Alan Lilly
11-23-2013, 11:10 AM
Ummmm,


You're shop is messier than mine.
that is one HUGE wall clock. I like it.
I couldn't see a splitter/riving knife on the TS



I am thinking of doing a timelapse of the aftermath and cleanup :)
I find that a splitter is not needed in every instance, like when I was ripping the edge of a board true :)

Alan Lilly
11-23-2013, 11:13 AM
I'll guess that there was recent break in to your shop and they stole the following

- dust collector
- scrap bin
- vacuum
- tablesaw guard and spliter..

I also noticed that it was a great time lapse video, thanks for making that..............Rod.

My dust collector was hiding in the corner... this project produced 8 garbage bags of sawdust :)
I do need a bigger scrap bin for bigger projects like this.
Didn't need the splitter for most of the cuts.

Bill Huber
11-23-2013, 11:30 AM
Great catch Bill ... you found the strange thing :)

What camera are you using, I have been thinking of getting a GoPro for just screwing around with.

Alan Lilly
11-23-2013, 11:48 AM
Yup, I used a gopro hero3. Be forewarned, the hero3 still seems to suffer from some technical issues and the camera can sometimes freeze or lockup during video or timelapse capture. Easy enough to fix by just restarting or temporarily removing the battery, but it can sometimes can cause you to lose footage you thought you had :). But still, I like what I can do with a gopro.

Bill Huber
11-23-2013, 11:58 AM
Yup, I used a gopro hero3. Be forewarned, the hero3 still seems to suffer from some technical issues and the camera can sometimes freeze or lockup during video or timelapse capture. Easy enough to fix by just restarting or temporarily removing the battery, but it can sometimes can cause you to lose footage you thought you had :). But still, I like what I can do with a gopro.

I saw a thing on TV the other night with the CEO and inventor of the GoPro and in it he said something about a problem that they have fixed, don't know what the problem was but it was a software problem.

Have you talked to them lately?

Shawn Pixley
11-23-2013, 12:32 PM
All I can say is, "too much coffee!"

Seriously, nice work on the very fun timelapse.

Greg Hines, MD
11-24-2013, 4:45 PM
What is wrong with it? It needed the Benny Hill music.

Doc

Alan Lilly
11-24-2013, 4:57 PM
The strange thing was the many hats I wore. :)

Bruce Page
11-24-2013, 8:45 PM
That was fun to watch. What were you building?

Alan Lilly
11-24-2013, 9:25 PM
8 pedestals for a small art gallery to display bronze sculptures.

Justin Ludwig
11-25-2013, 8:06 AM
Great video. I don't know why, but the tools dancing on your router table cracked me up.

Darrin Johnson
11-26-2013, 10:22 PM
Great video. Thanks for taking the time to put it together and share it!

Michael Dunn
11-27-2013, 9:44 AM
Great video, I really enjoyed it.

So how many hats do you have?

You have some good eyes there Bill. I didn't even notice a change until he busted out the cowboy hat, then the beret. Even then, it was after your post. Good catch!

Michael Dunn
11-27-2013, 9:45 AM
Great video. I don't know why, but the tools dancing on your router table cracked me up.

+1, that was pretty funny. For a bunch of wood geeks like us. One was spinning around like a mouse lost in a maze. LOL!

Roger Pozzi
11-27-2013, 10:05 AM
At my age, the strange thing I noticed was,,,,,,,no bathroom breaks! :eek::p
Or did you edit those out.