
Tag Archives: Joinery
Kreg K4 Pocket Hole Jig Review: Right for Our Shop?
In our shop, joinery tools earn their keep fast—or they gather dust. The Kreg K4 Pocket Hole Jig feels designed for the “use it every weekend” crowd: sturdy, straightforward, and ready to turn scrap boards into clean, confident connections. We like how quickly the drill guides adjust for different stock, letting us move from 1/2" plywood to 1 1/2" lumber without a fussy setup routine. The result is the kind of tight, rock-solid joint that makes a face frame or quick cabinet build feel less like a gamble and more like a plan. Still, we wanted to know: does it stay accurate under real project pressure, and is it worth the bench space?
JORGENSEN No.60-1/2 Block Plane Review: Our Shop Fit?
In our shop, a block plane earns its keep by doing the small, fussy jobs well—breaking sharp edges, flushing a proud joint, and whispering away end grain without drama. The JORGENSEN No.60-1/2 (6-1/4") sets itself up as a classic low-angle helper, pairing a professional ductile iron body with an adjustable mouth for dialing in the cut. In hand, it feels purpose-built for trimming and quick fit-ups, the kind of plane we reach for when a project needs “just a hair” removed. But specs don’t flatten boards—steel and setup do. In this review, we’ll look at how it sharpens, how it adjusts, and whether it behaves like a dependable daily driver or a tool we only grab in a pinch.










