How To Create Strong End Grain Joints - WOOD magazine
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- Опубліковано 28 вер 2024
- Learn how to create strong end-grain joints including mortise and tenon, dowels, biscuits, and pocket-hole joints. WOOD magazine's Jim Heavey shows you how to make stronger joints that hold.
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Very well done! Simple explanation with a smooth delivery. Keep up the teaching please!
Brilliant video for a woodworking beginner to understand the joint options available!
This presentation took the mystery and accompanying fear factor out of these techniques. Thank you!
not sure if you guys gives a shit but if you're bored like me during the covid times then you can watch all the new series on instaflixxer. Have been watching with my girlfriend lately :)
@Ronnie Terry yup, have been using InstaFlixxer for years myself :)
Dowel joints when done correctly are effectively very strong. Look up the joint strength comparison videos currently making the rounds. Surprisingly strong.
Thanks, looks like a doweling jig will work fine in my case. ☺
I’m planning a cutting board with horizontal pieces (end grain) sandwiched between vertical pieces (edge grain). Would doweling work to construct this?
Typical example of someone just repeating BS he's heard before without doing proper tests.
You CAN do end / end or end / side straight joints, and it's probably the second strongest possible joint in that configuration, below mortise / tenon
Biscuit joints are also really, really weak. Just don't listen what he's telling in this video.
Here from: Glue Myths: 1. End grain,
Patrick Sullivan
The biscuit joints aren't actually very strong, there are many tests you can watch here on youtube.
They are great for alignment though.
The video looks and feels like it were made shortly before the Berlin wall fell.
That's right, and pocket hole joints aren't "exceptionally strong" when tested, either--they take some doing to completely pull apart, but begin to give with relatively low force, which I consider the failure point. Dowel joints are generally stronger; add a third dowel to this example, and it may approach the strength of the mortise and tenon joint.
In manufacturing furniture on a large scale, to be efficient and producing within a specific timeline, which would you recommend ?
I work full time as a cabinet maker. We primarily dowel what we can, unless it just needs to be fast, then pocket screws. We build high end custom cabinets, and you'd be surprised at how strong a dowel joint can be.
The domino would be an excellent choice if your budget allows for it.
need the joint to be Flat End To Flat End & easy to become one piece again 3/4 x 2 1/'2 x 30 joined to another board of the same size to become 3/4 x 2 1/2 x 60 to span 53 inches.
Domino!?
I suspect that the video was made (not posted) before domino joints.
Let me be the "I think biscuits are trash" button
The assertion that end-grain gluing is inherently weak has been debunked.
End-grain joints are generally weak because these types of joint almost always have small glue surface area vs long grain joints. Per unit surface area end grain joints are not weak. The real implication is that end grain gluing should not be given up but should be included.
I need those, but in the shape of an L. It needs to be able to hold a force of 400lbs.
Using a pocket hole jig with 15mm pine, every time I screwed in the screws the wood split. The process works fine with slightly thicker wood, for example 18mm.
Im working on a project that has a 15 degree angle and decided to use dowels. The jig u used and others I've seen don't allow for this or any angle so i align them by eye.have u seen any doweling jig for this application? If not im working on a jig design
I`ve never used biscuits but have the rest & never had any trouble so I just never needed them. looks like it should work fine
You're just repeating the BS you've always heard. End to end grain joints are STRONGER than any other joint.
here from Glue Myths:1 Patrick Sullivan ?
Nice explanation,Thanks!
Was this filmed in 2006 on a Sony Potato Camera? What gives?
At least it was a Sony Potato Camera and not some low grade one. However, did you learn anything about joining wood together despite it not being filmed in 4k, 5k or xk?
A very good video but a very experienced video made before the Domino was available the age was a give away besides the first gen Kreg jig the cordless tools are legacy tools that have not been available for some time.
@John Smith Yes it is expensive and close to a grand with the tenon kit but it out performs all but true tenon joints for strength but it is easier to use.
You can get the same strength with a precision dowelling jig and enough dowels. The Domino is about time savings in a production (i.e. not hobbyist) workshop.
. Dowels are very common in production furniture most of the furniture you buy today is put together with glue and dowels. Domino lets the hobbyist get predictable results without the expensive setup it takes to get repeatable results like a production furniture maker using just dowels and glue.
Good video with a nice simple explanation. However, why is the production quality so bad for a professional magazine? How old are these videos? Your magazine would get a lot more traction with the younger crowd if you put more time and effort into your UA-cam channel.
Nathan B i know. Look at all the other content creators that do woodwork. Even a decent go pro would do a better job. I have a feeling these are older videos.