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Howdy!

Here's day two. This whole daily video thing is surprisingly hard to get used to. I'm finding that I just have to let go. As I'm editing, I badly want to go out and re-film the talky bits to make my dialogue more concise, but the whole point of this is to get much more casual videos and a deeper look at my days. This is definitely turning out to be an interesting experiment for me! And yes, I am enjoying it quite a lot.

Also, I changed the thumbnail design for this video. The thumbnail for yesterday's video was just awful. It was so bad I went back and changed it.

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Making Window Holes and Discovering Electrical Problems

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Comments

Anonymous

Regarding mic situation - I would try to rule out external noise sources such as LED lights. Perhaps you could use a phone sound analyzer app for that?

KL

I'm happy with the talky bits. Lack of flow is outweighed by spontaneous fun comments we probably wouldn't get otherwise.

KL

Could also try the mike outside, far away from other electrical stuff. And if it's a consistent tone, then it might not be too hard to filter out in audio post-processing.

Anonymous

For the mic if you cant figure out the issue just start using copy right free music as much as possible

MrSonicOSG

Dude those leftover restaurant benches are hella cool, no clue with how you could reuse them but they look great regardless

Anonymous

I think that would remove quite a big chunk of the charm Robert´s videos have.

Anonymous

The talky bits are great... It almost feels like an interesting and humorous FaceTime call I don’t have to respond to.

Kevin Campbell

If you glue to a painted surface your bond will only be as strong as the adhesion of the paint to the metal - so perhaps an etching primer is required?

Tuomas Haarala

Urethane adhesive for metal to metal. Cheap, incredibly strong bond. Paint over. Cheap. Looks like Home Depot on that continent has good selection, you can get the stuff in different colors and apply with caulk gun. Put the sheet metal in its place, drill the rivet holes, take the sheet off, apply the adhesive, rivet the sheet metal on. Those clips that cool guys use when assembling airplanes are really handy in this. (Cleco fasteners? Must be other brands as well)