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FROM THE EDITORS OF POPULAR WOODWORKING MAGAZINE

Joinery
BASICS
Learn 6 Classic Joints

Dovetails

P LUS:
Finger Joints

Text to come

SPONSORED BY
Mortise-&-Tenon Joints
ts
popularwoodworking.com

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age
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9
8

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11

CONTENTS
2

Mortise &
Tenon Basics

Learn how to cut this workhorse joint and


have it last for centuries.
BY C H R I S TO P H ER S C H WA R Z

Shop-made
Mortise Jig

An inexpensive shop-made jig makes quick


and accurate work of router-cut mortises.
BY G LEN D. H UE Y

11

Better Finger
Joints

This nifty shop-made table saw jig helps you


cut accurate machine-age nger joints.
BY RO BER T W. L A NG

18

With a router, straight bit and a scrap of


plywood, learn how to turn a weak joint into
a solid and strong mitered corner.

25

BY G LEN D. H UE Y

20
11

Mitered
Half-lap Joinery

Cut Accurate &


Clean Rabbets

Discover three good ways to cut this joint: by


router, by table saw and by hand.
BY C H R I S TO P H ER S C H WA R Z

25

Dovetailed
Plane Cabinet

Learn to cut dovetails by hand as you make


this handy and handsome storage cabinet.
BY C H R I S TO P H ER S C H WA R Z

EDITORS NOTE

Solid Joinery for Several Lifetimes

ure, you can use metal fasteners


(nails, screws etc.) and build nicelooking projects. But if you want
your work to outlast its maker, you
need to learn how to cut solid joinery
it makes your projects stronger, more
attractive and more durable.
In Joinery Basics, you get a introduction to some of the most useful and
common joints in woodworking: rabbets,
nger joints, mortise-and-tenons, dovetails and more. With these must-know
joints in your tool kit, youll be well on
your way to making most any project
and making it to last.
Youll nd a combination of hand- and
PHOTOS BY AL PARRISH

power-tool techniques approaches


that can be achieved with the tools and
machinery found in most woodworking shops from some of our best-loved
and most experienced writers: Glen D.
Huey, Robert W. Lang and Christopher
Schwarz.
Plus, the nal article, Christophers
dovetailed plane cabinet, not only teaches you hand-cut dovetails, but grooves
and dados, too. And of course, when
youre done with that project, youll have
improved your skills and have a nicelooking storage piece for your planes.
These articles rst appeared in older
issues of Popular Woodworking and Wood-

working Magazine the two publications


that combined to make Popular Woodworking Magazine (PWM). In every issue
of PWM, youll nd skill-building techniques for hand tools and power tools,
shop tricks you can put to use right away,
great-looking projects with step-by-step
instruction and more.
I invite you to visit us online to nd
out more about the magazine, read the
Editors Blog and Christopher Schwarzs
hand-tool blog, free project and technique articles and more. Youll nd us
at popularwoodworking.com.

popularwoodworking.com

Mortise & Tenon


Basics
B Y C H R I S TO P H E R S C H WA R Z

Discover a superior way to cut this superlative joint.

lot of woodworkers spend a


lot of time, effort and money to avoid
making mortise-and-tenon joints. Biscuits, dowels, commercial loose-tenon
jigs and expensive router bits are just a
few of the work-arounds developed
this century so you dont have to learn
to make a mortise and its perfectly
matched tenon.
But once you learn how straightforward and simple this joint can be, you

will use it in every project. Why? Well,


it is remarkably strong. A few years ago
we decided to pit this venerable and
traditional joint against the high-tech
super-simple biscuit. So we built two
cubes, one using biscuits and one with
mortises and tenons. Then we dropped
a 50-pound anvil on each cube. The
results were eye-opening.
Both cubes were destroyed. The biscuit cube exploded on impact. Some of

THE ANVIL TEST

the biscuits held on tightly to the wood,


but they pulled away chunks from the
mating piece as the joint failed.
The second cube survived the rst
hit with the anvil the joints held together even though the wood split at the
points of impact. A second hit with the
anvil ruined the cube entirely, though
most of the tenons stuck tenaciously
to their mortises.
The lesson here is that biscuits are
indeed tough, but when they fail, they
fail catastrophically. The mortise-andtenon joints fail, too, but they take their
time, becoming loose at rst rather than
an immediate pile of splinters.
So when youre building for future
generations and you know how to make
this stout joint with minimal fuss, you
wont say Why bother? Youll say
Why not?

Choosing the Right Tools

The anvil is about to hit the cube made


using #20 biscuits.

The cube made out of biscuits is destroyed on impact.

The mortise-and-tenon cube held together after the rst hit.

The mortise-and-tenon cube collapsed


after the second hit.

JOINERY BASICS

There are so many ways to cut this joint


that one big obstacle to mastering it is
choosing a technique. Ive tried many
ways to cut this joint backsaws, commercial table-saw tenon jigs and even
the sweet $1,000 Leigh Pro Frame Mortise and Tenon Jig.
Each technique or jig has advantages in economy, speed or accuracy.
The technique Im outlining here is the
one I keep coming back to year after
year. It uses three tools: a hollow-chisel
mortiser for the mortises, a dado stack
to cut the tenons and a shoulder plane
to ne-tune your joints. Yes, this is a
little bit of an investment, but once you
start using this technique, these tools
LEAD PHOTO BY AL PARRISH; STEP PHOTOS BY THE AUTHOR

popularwoodworking.com

will become the foundation for much


of your joint-making.
(For a simple and inexpensive jig to
cut mortises with a router, see Shopmade Mortise Jig on page 9.)
Hollow-chisel mortisers: These
machines are nothing new, but the
benchtop ones are now cheaper, more
powerful and more accurate than ever.
For about $240, youll get a good machine.
Essentially, a mortiser is a marriage
between a drill press and an arbor press
thats designed for metalworking. The
drill press part has a spinning chuck
that holds an auger bit that chews up the
waste wood. The auger bit is encased in
a hollow four-sided chisel that cleans
up the walls of your mortise, making
the augers round hole a square one.
The arbor press part of the machine
is the gear-and-lever system that pushes the tooling into your wood. This
mechanism gives you an enormous
mechanical advantage compared to
outtting your drill press with a mortising attachment an accessory I dont
recommend for all but the most occasional mortising jobs.
Shopping for the proper mortiser
is tough. I dont consider all the machines equal. Some are weak and stall
in difcult woods such as oak, ash and
maple. Many have problems holding
your work down against the machines
table. In a review of the machines on
the market in our August 2001 issue,
we preferred the fast machines (3,450
rpm) instead of the 1,750-rpm slow
machines (back issues are available by
A shoulder plane
tweaks tenons to t
perfectly. Avoid the
modern Stanley shoulder planes (not shown).
Spending a few dollars
more will get you a
much better tool.

JOINERY BASICS

Lever

Hollow-chisel mortisers excel at


boring square holes. Here you
can see the hold-down (which
is usually inadequate with other
machines), the table (which must
be squared to the chisel before
use) and the lever (which makes
the machine plow through
almost any job).

Hold-down

Table

Tape squares
table

calling 855-840-5118 or online at shop


woodworking.com). The fast machines
were almost impossible to stall. However, the marketplace seems to prefer
the slow machines. While none of the
machines is perfect, I prefer the fastspeed Bridgewood and Shop Fox and
the slow-speed Jet and Fisch machines.
Dado stack: A good dado stack will
serve you in many ways, but I use mine
mostly for cutting tenons and rabbets.
When it comes to choosing one, buy a
set with 8" blades instead of 6" blades,
unless you own a benchtop table saw.
Stay away from the bargain sets that

cost $50 or less I havent


found them to be very sharp
and the teeth arent wellground. The expensive sets
($200 and more) are nice,
but theyre probably more
than you need unless you
are making your living at
woodworking. My favorite
mid-priced set is the Freud
SD208. Its about $100 and
does a ne job.
Shoulder plane: No
matter how accurately you
set up your machines to cut
mortises and tenons, some will need a
little tuning up before assembly. And
nothing trims a tenon as well as a shoulder plane. These hand tools really are
secret weapons when it comes to joints
that t together rmly and are airtight.
Why is that? Well, shoulder planes
are designed to take a controlled shaving that can be as thin as .001". I can
tweak a tenon to a perfect t with just
a few passes. Trying to tweak a tenon
with a chisel or sandpaper is more
difcult. You are more likely to gouge
or round over the surface of your tenon and compromise its mechanical
strength.
Buying a shoulder plane gets easier
every year because there are now many
quality tools on the market. Unless you
build only small projects, you are going
to want a plane that is at least 1" wide.
Most casework tenons are 1" long, so
a 1"-wide plane is perfect for trimming
up the face cheeks and shoulders of
the tenon.
My advice is to stay away from the
newly made Stanley shoulder planes.
Ive had some sloppily made Stanleys
go though my hands (vintage Stanley
shoulder planes can be good, however).
Lie-Nielsen makes several shoulder-

trimming planes worth saving your


money for. The large version is a tool
of great mass and presence and does
the job admirably its a $250 investment. Lie-Nielsen also makes a rabbeting block plane that can be easily used
as a shoulder plane; it costs $175. Its
the tool I recommend to most people
because it does double-duty as a lowangle block plane.
Veritas, the tool line made by Lee
Valley Tools, has a smaller shoulder
plane thats almost 3 4" wide, quite comfortable to use and reasonably priced
at $189. The company also has a larger
plane thats 11 4" wide; it costs $229.
Other new and vintage brand names
worth checking out include Shepherd
Tool (made in Canada) and the Britishmade Clifton, Record, Preston, Spiers
and Norris.
Of course, youll need to sharpen
the tool. And thats why we offer a free
tutorial on sharpening on our web site
to nd it, visit popularwoodworking.
com/magazineextras and scroll down
to the April 2004 header.

Designing a Joint
Once you have the tools you need,
you can learn about the mechanics of
the joint. Study the illustration below
to learn what each part of the joint is
called.
The rst question beginners always
ask is: How thick and how long should
my tenons be? As far as thickness goes,
the rule of thumb is that they should be
one-half the thickness of your work-

These sample mortises


are useful for sizing
your tenons. I usually
make a new one every
season or two, because
they can get worn from
use.

piece. So a tenon on a piece of 3 4" material should be 3 8" thick.


As for length, that depends on your
project. Typical casework tenons that
are 1" long will be plenty strong. For
large glass doors, make them 11 4" long.
For small lightweight frames and doors,
stick with 3 4"- or 5 8"-long tenons.
What beginners often dont ask
about is the size of the edge shoulders on their tenons. This is a critical
measurement. If you make these edge
shoulders too small, say 3 16" wide or
so, you could run into huge problems
at assembly time when building frames
and doors.
Heres why: If your tenoned piece
forms one of the outside members of
a frame, your mortise wall is going to
be only 3 16" wide and its going to be
weak. The hydraulic pressure from the
glue or the smallest amount of racking
will cause the tenon to blow out this

Mortise
Edge cheek
Edge shoulder should be at least 3/8"
to avoid blowing out the mortise

Stile

Face shoulder

Rail

Face cheek
Tenon thickness
should be one-half
of your stocks
thickness

weak mortise wall, ruining everything.


It is because of this that I recommend
edge shoulders that are 3 8" wide in
most cases. Note that your edge shoulders can be too big. Once they start
getting larger than 1 2", you run the
risk of allowing the work to twist or
warp in time, ruining the alignment
of the parts.
Of course, if your tenoned piece is
not on the edge of a frame, you can
have narrow edge shoulders without
any worries.
Designing the mortise is a bit simpler. It should be the same dimensions
as your tenon with one exception:
Make the mortise 1 16" deeper than
your tenon is long. This extra depth
does two things: It gives your excess
glue a place to go and it ensures your
tenon wont bottom out in the mortise,
which would prevent you from getting
a gap-free joint.
Beware of other tune-ups that some
books and magazines suggest. One
bit of common advice is to chamfer
all the sharp edges of your tenons to
improve the t. Another bit of advice is
to chamfer the entry hole of the mortise.
These are unnecessary if you design
your joint properly.
One thing that is important, however, is to mark the outside faces on
all your parts. Its important to keep
these straight during machining and
assembly.

Tenons First
Some traditional woodworkers tell you
to make all your mortises rst and then
popularwoodworking.com

A 6" rule will help you


set the length of your
tenon. Once you do
this a couple of times
youll hit this measurement right away every
time.

make your tenons t that. This is good


advice if you cut the joint by hand with
a backsaw and a mortising chisel because there is more opportunity for the
mortise to be irregular in size. But you
will work much faster and with much
less measuring if you try it my way.
Before you cut your first tenon,
you should re up the hollow-chisel
mortiser and make a sample mortise
with each size of bit you use. The three
most common sizes are 1 4", 3 8" and
1 2". These mortises should have perfectly square walls and be 11 16" deep
and 2" long. Write the month and year
on each mortise and make a new set
next season.
Why make these sample mortises?
Well, because the tooling to make your
mortises will always produce the same

width mortise, you can merely size


all your tenons to one of these sample
mortises as you cut them on your table
saw. This will save you time down the
road, as youll see.
With your sample mortise in hand,
set up your table saw to cut your tenons.
Install the dado stack blades and chippers on the saws arbor. The rule here is
to install enough blades to almost cut
the length of the tenon in one pass. For
example, to cut a 1"-long tenon, set up
enough blades and chippers to make
a 3 4"-wide cut.
Next, position your saws rip fence.
Measure from the left-most tooth of
your dado stack to the fence and shoot
for the exact length of your tenon. A 1"long tenon should measure 1" from the
left-most tooth to the fence, as shown

in the photo at left.


Get your slot miter gauge out and
square the fence or head of the gauge
to the bar that travels in the table saws
slot. Attach a wooden fence to the face of
the gauge (usually this involves screws
through holes already drilled in the
gauge). This wooden fence stabilizes
your workpiece and controls tear-out
as the dado stack blades exit the cut.
Set the height of the blades to just a
little shy of the shoulder cut youre after.
You want to sneak up on the perfect
setting by raising the arbor of the saw
instead of lowering it. This does two
things: One, it produces fewer waste
pieces that result from overshooting
your mark. And two, because of the
mechanical backlash inherent in all
geared systems such as your table saw,
raising the arbor eliminates any potential for it to slip downward because of
backlash.
You are now ready to make a test
cut. First put a scrap piece up against
your miter gauge, turn on the saw and
make a cut on the end of the board. Use
rm downward pressure on the piece.
Dont let the end of the board touch the
saws rip fence. Then bring the scrap
piece and miter gauge back and make
a second pass, this time with the scrap
touching the rip fence as shown below.
Flip the scrap over and repeat the

Backing board

No wood trapped between


blades and fence
When making tenons with a dado stack in
your table saw, the rst pass should remove
the bulk of the material. Keep rm downward
pressure on your work, which will give you
more accurate cuts.

JOINERY BASICS

The second pass has the work against the


fence and denes the face shoulder. Note
there isnt any wood between the fence and
blades, so the chance of kickback is minimal.
The backing board reduces the chance of
tear-out at the shoulders.

Cut the edge shoulders the same way you cut


the face shoulders and cheeks.

cheeks on all your tenoned pieces.


When thats complete, raise the arbor
to 3 8" and use the same routine to cut
the edge shoulders on all your boards.
Your tenons are now complete.

Use Your Tenons Like a Ruler


Stile

Rail

Mortise
ends here

Mortise
begins here
To locate the mortise, put the tenon across
the edge of the stile where you want your
mortise to go. Use a sharp pencil to mark the
tenons location on the edge. Bingo. Youve
just laid out the mortises location.

process on the other face. Usually you


arent supposed to use your rip fence
and miter gauge in tandem, but this is
an exception. This cut is safe because
there isnt any waste that could get
trapped between the blades and the
fence, producing a kickback.
Check your work with your dial calipers and see if the tenon will t your
sample mortise. The tenon is likely
going to be too thick. Raise the blades
just a bit and take passes on both faces
of the scrap until the tenon ts rmly
and snugly into the sample mortise
with only hand pressure.
If you can shake the sample mortise
and the tenon falls out, youve overshot
your mark and need to lower the arbor
and try again. If the t is just a wee bit
tight, you can always tune that up with
a shoulder plane. Let your dial calipers
be your guide. Sometimes you havent
used enough downward pressure during the cut to make a consistent tenon.
If something doesnt t when you know
its supposed to, try making a second
pass over the dado stack and push down
a little harder during the cut.
Using this setup, mill all the face

One of the major pains in laying out the


mortise is guring out exactly where
you should bore your hole. You end
up adding weirdo measurements and
subtracting the measurements of edge
shoulders. If you lay out mortise locations using math only, you will make
a mistake someday.
Troy Sexton, one of our contributors, showed me this trick one day
and Ive never done it any other way
since. Say you are joining a door rail
to a stile quite a common operation.
Simply lay the tenoned rail onto the
edge of the stile and line up the edges
of both pieces so theyre ush. Take a
sharp pencil and using the tenon like
a ruler mark where the tenon begins
and ends on the stile. Thats it; youve
just marked everything you need to
know to make your mortise.
If you are placing a rail in the middle
of a stile, there is one more step. Youll
need to mark on the stile where the
edges of the rail should go. Then line
up the edge of the rail with that mark
and re away. Theres still no addition
or subtraction. With all your mortises
laid out, you can then get your hollowchisel mortiser going.

A Finicky Machine
Ive used a lot of hollow-chisel mortisers and nd them fussy to adjust. In a
nutshell, here are some of the important adjustments not covered by some
manuals:
Make sure the chisel is at a perfect
90 angle to the machines table. Ive set
up a dozen of these machines and only
one has ever been perfect. The solution
is to use masking tape to shim between
the table and the machines base.
Set the proper clearance between
the auger bit and the hollow chisel
that surrounds it. Some people use
the thickness of a dime to set the distance between the tooling. Some people
measure. Either way is ne. If the clearance is too little, the machine will jam
and the tooling can burn. Too much
distance makes a sloppy-bottomed
mortise.
Square the chisel to the fence. The
square holes made by the chisel should
line up perfectly. If the edges arent perfectly straight, your chisel isnt square
to the fence. Rotate the chisel in its
bushing and make sample cuts until
everything is perfect.
Center the chisel so its cutting in
the middle of your workpiece. There
might be a clever trick to do this, but
Ive found that the most reliable method
is to make a test cut and measure the
thickness of the mortises two walls
with a dial caliper. When theyre the
same, your mortise is centered.

Mortise is cut
slightly past
that line

By cutting over your


line slightly, you give
yourself just enough
forgiveness at assembly
time. A little wiggle can
mean a lot when you
are trying to close up
the gaps as you clamp
up your work.

Line
marked
on stile

popularwoodworking.com

Assembly

Shoulder planes are capable of extraordinarily precise work. Just try to set your table saw to
remove .001". Its not possible. For a shoulder plane, its simple.

Simplify Your Mortising


As you make your mortises, here are
a few tips for making things a whole
lot easier.
I like to cut a little wide of the
pencil lines that de ne my mortise.
Not much; just 1 32" or so. This extra
wiggle room allows you to square up
your assembly easier. It doesnt weaken
the joint much most of its strength is
in the tenons face cheeks.
As you bore your mortises, dont
make your holes simply line up one
after the other. Make a hole, skip a
distance and then make another hole
(see the photo below). Then come back
and clean up the waste between the
two holes. This will greatly reduce
the chance of your chisel bending or
breaking.
Keep your chisel and auger lubricated as they heat up. Listen to the
sounds your machine makes. As the
auger heats up, it can start to rub the
inside of the chisel wall and start to
screech. Some dry lubricant or a little
canning wax squirted or rubbed on
the tooling will keep things working
during long mortising sessions.
Finally, make all your mortises
with the outside face of the work against
the fence. This ensures your parts will
line up perfectly during assembly.

Final Tweaks
No matter how careful you have been,
some of your tenons might t a little
too tightly. This is where the shoulder
8

JOINERY BASICS

plane shines. Make a couple of passes


on both face cheeks and try tting the
joint again. Be sure to make the same
number of passes on each cheek to keep
the tenon centered on the rail. If your
parts arent in the same plane when assembled (and theyre supposed to be),
you can take passes on only one cheek
to try to make corrections.
If the joint closes up on one face but
not the other, you might have a sloppy
shoulder. The shoulder plane can trim
the fat shoulder to bring it in line with
its twin on the other side of the tenon.
If the tenon still wont seat tightly, try
chiseling out some meat at the corner
where the edge shoulder meets the face
cheek but dont trim the outside edge
of the edge shoulder itself.
Finally, get a sharp chisel and clean
out any gunk at the bottom of the mortise. Keep at it a tight joint is worth
the extra effort.

You really dont want any glue squeezeout when you assemble your mortiseand-tenon joints. The trick to this is
learning where to put the glue and how
much to use. I run a thick bead of glue
at the top of each mortise wall and then
paint the inside of the mortise wall
with glue using a little scrap piece. I
try to leave the glue a little thick at the
top of the mortise wall. Then, when
the tenon is inserted, this paints the
tenon with glue but drives the excess
to the bottom of the mortise.
When clamping any frame regardless of the joinery you used you
dont want to use too much pressure
or you will distort the frame. Tighten
the clamps until the joints close and no
more. You also want to alternate your
clamps over and under the assembly
to keep the frame at no matter how
fancy your clamps are.
Once you do this a couple of times,
I think youll nd a whole new level of
woodworking open to you. Web frames
for dressers (or Chippendale secretaries) will seem like no problem. Morris
chairs with 112 mortises will be within
your reach. And your furniture is more
likely to stand the test of time and
maybe even the occasional anvil. PWM
Christopher is a regular contributor to Popular Woodworking Magazine and the publisher at Lost Art Press
(lostartpress.com).

Scrap

A thick bead of glue


at the top of the
mortise wall makes the
joint strong without
squeezing out a lot of
glue. Use a small piece
of scrap to paint the
mortise wall before
inserting the tenon.

Shop-made Mortise Jig


B Y G L E N D. H U E Y

You dont need fancy tools or a special machine to create a traditional joint.

eproduction furniture is my
main focus in woodworking, so I think
one of the most important construction
joints is a mortise-and-tenon joint and
not simply the use of a stub tenon, but a
full-blown tenon that ranges between
1" and 11 4" in length depending on the
project and if theres adequate depth in
the material.
Due to the number of these joints I
make, I have a dedicated mortising machine. But if you need to create a mortise
and tenon and you dont have a dedicated machine to use, whip up this simple
jig from a few scraps of wood and use
a plunge router, a properly sized guide
bushing and an upcut-spiral router bit.
(You can use a straight router bit, but
an upcut bit lifts waste material out of
the mortise, so it makes a cleaner cut.)

Make a Guide Bushing Slot


The rst step in building this jig is to
create a slot in a piece of 1 2" plywood
to guide the bits location as you plunge
into the workpiece plywoods stability
makes it a better choice. Dont create
a slot that matches the router bit size;
you need to match the slot to the guide
bushings outside diameter.
Select a bushing with a diameter
thats larger than the router bit. For
standard 3 4" material, I use a 3 4"-outside-diameter bushing for two reasons;
this diameter is a standard drill bit size
and the slot matches the thickness of
the stock with which Im working.
When working with 3 4" material, select
a plywood scrap thats about 33 4" wide
and at least 12" long, then establish a
centerline. Chuck a 3 4" drill bit into a
drill press.
To determine the length needed
for your specic mortise when using
LEAD PHOTO BY AL PARRISH; STEP PHOTOS BY THE AUTHOR

A mortise-and-tenon joint is one of the strongest, most useful joints in woodworking. With scraps
from the waste bin, you can create a jig that does the job and is simple to use.

a 3 4"-outside-diameter bushing and a


1 4" router bit, add 1 2" to the nished
length of your required mortise. The
additional opening allows for the differences between the router bit and the
guide bushing.

Next, lay out the nal measurements


on the centerline of the plywood. Position a fence so the center point of the
drill bit aligns with the centerline on
your plywood. Drill the two end holes
rst, making sure to position the out-

12"

34"

guide bushing

14"

router bit
334"

X
X +12"

MORTISE JIG
popularwoodworking.com

side diameter of the bits cut with the


outside location of the layout.
Once the ends are established, remove the additional waste with your
drill bit while keeping the workpiece
tight to the fence. When nished, the slot
has smooth sides. (You can touch up the
sides with a rasp or le if you need to.)

Two Side Pieces


Complete the Jig
For step two, position two additional
scrap pieces on either face of the material to be mortised while holding one
end of each piece ush with the end of
the workpiece. Next, clamp the three
pieces into a bench vise. These scraps
or side pieces should be nearly as long
as the slotted top piece of the jig.
The key to building this jig straight
and centered is in the nal step. Lay out
the mortise on your workpiece; I nd
it best to do the layout work using the
overall length of the slot, keeping in
mind that my nished mortise will be
1 2" shorter. Position the plywood piece
on the three pieces in your vise, align
the slot with the layout lines at the top
and bottom, and with the edges of the
workpiece looking side to side. Once
youve got the slotted piece properly
positioned, add a couple clamps to hold
everything in place.
Attach the slotted top to the two
side pieces with #8 x 11 4" screws two
screws per side. Counterbore the holes
for the screws. This is not the time to
split or crack the side pieces. Pull the

The overall length of your mortise is determined by the slot cut into the jigs top. Make
sure to compensate for differences between
the bushing and router bit.

assembly from your vise and remove


the workpiece. The t should be snug
so it will take some muscle to remove
the workpiece from the jig.

Plunge a Mortise
Set up your router with the guide bushing and a 21 2"-long router bit. Youre
now ready to work. A bit this long allows
you to plunge a mortise just over 11 4" in
depth into the workpiece after passing
the jigs 1 2"-plywood top.
Match the jigs opening to the layout
lines on your workpiece and clamp
the two together in a vise or with other clamps. Zero out the router bit by
plunging down (with the power off
and the router unplugged) until the bit
touches the workpiece, then lock the
plunge mechanism. Use the routers
depth stop to set the plunge depth.
The base of the router sits securely
on top of the jig and the bushing, which
ts snugly in the slot, adds to the overall

stability. To create the mortise, release


the locked plunge mechanism and pull
the router setup tight to one of the ends.
With the bit standing above the workpiece, start the router and hold tightly
against the slots end as you plunge to
full depth.
Allow the router bit to retract from
the hole, slide the router to the opposite end and plunge a second hole. To
remove the material for the balance of
the mortise, repeat the plunge action,
each time positioning the router setup
over an unexcavated area.
Once most of the waste is removed
and no section remains that bridges the
two sides of your mortise, return to one
end of the slot, plunge to the bottom of
the mortise and make a pass along the
entire length to clean and straighten
the sides. Make it a point to travel the
length while holding the bushing rm
to one side, then make a return pass
holding tight to the opposite side. The
result might be slightly wider than the
1 4" router bit, but because you make the
mortise section of the joint rst then
match the tenon, this wont be an issue.
This jig is easy to build and can be
used repeatedly with consistent results.
The only decision youll need to make is
should you round your tenons to match
the mortise, square the mortise ends
to match the tenons or create tenons
with wiggle room not snug to the
mortises rounded ends. I always opt
for wiggle room. PWM
Glen is the former managing editor of Popular Woodworking Magazine; he is now the editor at American
Woodworker.

Once the parts of the jig


are positioned around
the piece to be mortised,
add screws through the
top to complete the jig.

Once the plunging cuts are completed, nish


the mortise with a pass along both faces of the
slot. This last step smooths and cleans the slot.

10

JOINERY BASICS

Better Finger Joints


B Y R O B E R T W. L A N G

The dovetails machine-age cousin is fussy to cut and assemble;


weve xed both those faults.

ost woodworking joints


can be traced back in time for centuries.
Ancient Egyptians excelled at dovetails
and the Romans relied on mortises and
tenons. Joinery was all handwork until
the Industrial Revolution mechanized
most processes in the middle of the 19th
century. Mortisers, table saws, tenoners
and dovetailing machines were all in
common use well before 1900.
In addition to new ways to make
old joints, machinery and tooling were
developed to create joints that werent
common at the time, but became popular because they could be made quickly.
The nger joint, also called a box joint,
is an example of this development.
Before the machine era, this joint
was used only to form a wooden hinge.
When first developed, and until recently, it was strictly utilitarian, used
mainly to make strong shipping boxes
and crates. With our current infatuation for visible and decorative joinery,
the nger joint has moved from utility
to visibility.
The effort to cut a nger joint entirely with hand tools is at least equal
to the effort to hand cut dovetails. In

A shop-built router jig can make large, accurate nger joints. The solution for making a better jig proved to be nding a better duct tape.

LEAD PHOTO BY AL PARRISH; STEP PHOTOS BY THE AUTHOR; ILLUSTRATION BY MATT BANTLY

popularwoodworking.com

11

A good t on a nger joint can be assembled


with hand pressure only. If you need to beat
on it or clamp it to get it to close, it is too tight.

many ways it takes more effort, and


the return for the effort is dubious. It
is a more demanding joint to make,
and it lacks the inherent mechanical
advantage and aesthetic appeal of the
dovetail. But it is signicantly easier
and faster to make nger joints by machine, if one is willing to work precisely
to set up the tools.
For example, a jig we used to build
a blanket chest (youll nd that project free online at bit.ly/1k7vvnN) was
intended to have slots and ngers 5 8"
wide. When completed, the overall
width of the jig was 1 16" bigger than
planned. That translates to an error in
each component of .0025", about half
the thickness of the average human
hair. Because the parts are all the same
size, the joints produced t together
nicely, and if I hadnt told you about
the variation, you wouldnt notice it
in the nished piece.
If youre trying to cut nger joints
with a xed-width cutter such as a dado
stack or router bit, that half-a-hair is
about the outer limit of tolerance. If
you cant set up, measure and adjust
in those teeny increments, youll be
dependent on luck alone to make a nice
nger joint. But working to that degree
isnt as hard as you might think.

A Rout of Passage
Making nger joints is a good opportunity to develop skills. Even if you
12

JOINERY BASICS

An attachment to the miter gauge shows the exact location of the cut, allowing you to make irregularly spaced joints.

Clamp the work securely to the miter gauge


and make certain the cut is within the waste
area.

Condence in cutting is the key to a successful joint, whether it is cut by eye or by jig.

abandon nger joints after one or two


tries, the exercise will expand your
woodworking vocabulary. You may
decide to move on to more attractive
joinery, or you may decide that this
is a worthy method for much of your
work. In either case, the effort will
make you a better woodworker. The
lessons learned in finger joints will
serve well in other areas.
Finger joints are very strong. The
amount of interlocking surface area
makes a corner with a large area of long-

grain to long-grain glue surface and


good mechanical strength. The only
weak area is the way the joint resembles
a hinge. A sharp impact directly on the
corner can cause the joint to unfold or
come apart. Except for that disastrous
scenario its as strong as a joint can be,
and a good choice for small boxes and
drawers.
The type of wood used will make a
difference in how forgiving the joint
is to put together. Softer woods, such
as pine or poplar, will compress when

assembled. White oak or maple arent


as cooperative, and may require more
force to assemble, and more nesse to
make the joint. This is a place where
the science of the machinist and the
art of the woodworker converge. The
tolerances are close, but the joint should
be made so that it can be assembled
without resorting to clamps or hammer persuasion.
The location of the sweet spot for
tting will also vary with the width of
the joint or the number of ngers. Its
a matter of compounding errors, and
like compounding interest, a number
that seems insignicant can grow large
enough to defeat you. A handful of nger joints for a drawer is fairly easy.
A nger joint the size of those used
on the blanket chest (especially in a
hard, unforgiving wood) is pushing
the limits, but not beyond possibility
for the careful craftsman.
Consistency and repeatability is
the key to nger joints. If you can cut
accurately (and stay on the right side
of the line) you can line up each cut
individually. Attaching an L-shaped
backer to the table saws miter gauge
shows the exact location of the cut,
and this can be used quite effectively
to make precise cuts on the table saw.
If the spacing of the ngers varies as
shown, and youre only making a few
joints, this is a faster method than making a dedicated jig.
Regularly sized and spaced ngers
shout for a jig. Its fussy work, but repetitious. The secret is to use a method that
builds consistency into the process.
If the work is small enough to safely
travel vertically over the saw blade, the
jig pictured at right is an old standby
that works well.

TABLE SAW FINGER JOINTS

Jig construction for the table saw method


starts with cutting a notch in the plywood
backer that attaches to the miter gauge.

The hardwood guide block must match the


width of the slot exactly. Its right when you
can feel some resistance as you press it into
the slot by hand.

An extra piece of hardwood is used to set the


distance between the blade and the other
block. Make it long enough to be held against
the blade front and back.

One half of the joint is cut against the guide


block, forming a notch. The other half is held
away by the spacer, cutting out the corner.

Both pieces are cut at the same time. After


the rst cut, the pieces are placed with the
notches over the guide block.

As the cuts continue, each cut registers the


next cut, and if the setup is correct, the work
proceeds quickly.

Time-tested Method
This is the classic method of producing
a nger joint with a jig that attaches to
the table saw miter gauge, and it works
very well for small pieces. Its reasonable to run a drawer side vertically over
the table saw, but longer or wider work
becomes unwieldy. If youre uneasy
about holding the work on the table
saw, try the router jig on the next page.
Because the table saw jig requires the

popularwoodworking.com

13

saw to be set up with a dado head, cut


all the parts you need before changing
over to the stack dado set. You should
prepare the parts for the jig, the parts
you intend to join, and several extra
pieces of stock for making test cuts.
Youll need a piece of plywood, at
least 1 2" thick and about 6" x 12". In
addition, youll need a piece of hardwood the exact thickness of the width
of the cut and about 12" long. I rip the
hardwood a little thicker than necessary, then use a handplane to sneak up
on a good t in the slot. It doesnt hurt
to have an extra piece on hand in case
you go too far with the plane.

A NEW WAY TO ROUT FINGER JOINTS


34"-thick backing strip

512"-long ngers

234"-long spacers

Simple Concept Precise


Execution
After installing the stack dado head
(we used 1 4", but the fingers can be
any width) make certain the head of
the miter gauge is square to the blade
and adjust the height of the blade to
the thickness of the parts to be joined.
Hold the plywood vertically against the
miter gauge and make a cut near the
end. The exact location isnt critical,
but leave at least 3 4" to 1" beyond the
cut. From here on, you need to be as
precise as you can be.
Reduce the thickness of the hardwood guide block until you can press it
into the slot in the plywood. You need
only worry about the thickness, not
the width, as long as the width is less
than the height of the slot. A set of calipers will help in letting you know how
close you are. If you measure your plane
shaving, you will be able to predict the
size as you work, and you should check
the fit of the actual piece in the slot
frequently.
When the piece fits, cut a couple
inches off one end and glue it in the
slot. I use cyanoacrylate (CA) so I dont
have to wait too long for the glue to dry,
but any wood glue will work.
After letting the glue dry, place the
longer piece of hardwood against the
edge of the dado stack. Slide the miter
gauge into position, then move the plywood laterally until the two hardwood
sticks are touching along their lengths.
Dont throw the longer piece away;
youll need it again in a few minutes.
14

JOINERY BASICS

Stop
Backing board reduces tear-out

FINGER JOINT JIG


Fingers and spacers are all the same width, ensuring consistency. After the jig is assembled, the joints are cut with a
router using a top-mounted bearing bit.

hen we began to plan this


article, the emphasis on nger
joints was a given, but the specic
techniques werent. We knew we
would feature the table saw and
dado method for small parts, but we
werent comfortable milling larger
pieces that way. Our rst thought
for large case pieces was to use a
commercially made router jig. That
is indeed a workable solution, and
many well-made jigs are on the
market.
But it didnt seem right to offer no
other alternative than sending readers out to make an expensive purchase for a joint they will likely make
only on an occasional basis.
Being of frugal stock, I decided
there must be another way. The key
to nger joints is equal sizes, and I
realized that by making ngers and
spacers from stock ripped at the
same time, I should be able to put

together a jig that would perform


as well as anything available on the
market. In less than an hour I had a
working prototype of the jig we used.

Rip the Strips


We were after joints with 58"-wide
ngers and slots, so I began by ripping 12"-thick Baltic-birch plywood to
that dimension. The reason for using
the plywood was to eliminate wood
movement from the equation. I made
a couple test cuts and measured the
results with calipers to get as close as
possible to the proper size.
Ripping carefully from a wide
piece of plywood stock yielded
enough material to cut the 512"-long
ngers and the 234"-long spacers.
After cutting these parts to length, I
attached the parts to a 234"-wide, 34"thick plywood backing strip with yellow glue and 23-gauge pins. I laid a
few beads of glue on the strip, started

with a long piece, and made sure the


rst piece was squarely placed then
butted the parts against one another
one at a time and nailed them down.
A longer 234"-wide piece was added
below to stiffen the jig and provide a
place for clamping the jig to the bench.
A larger piece of plywood was
glued and screwed at a right angle to
the backing strip. I placed the screws
below the ngers so that I wouldnt
cut into them with the router later on.
This piece prevents the wood from
tearing out on the back of the cuts, and
provides a way to attach the work to
the jig. One edge of the backer piece is
aligned with the edge of the rst nger,
and a small piece of scrap is attached
to the edge to act as a stop.
Both panels of the joint are cut at
once. The edge of one piece is placed
against the stop with the show side
out. The edge of the other is aligned
with the opposite side of the rst
nger, offsetting the joint one ngers
width.
Making the ngers of the jig the
same size as the nished parts simplied construction and reduced the
chances of making an error in calculating the difference between the
diameter of a router bit and a template
guide. A 12"-diameter ush-trimming bit
with a bearing mounted above the cutter would trim the work exactly to the
edges of the jig.

Or so I thought. The pieces from


my rst test cut went together too
easily, leaving visible gaps at each
joint. My quest for perfection was
almost foiled by router and router-bit
behavior. My measurements showed
the bit and bearing to be the same
diameter, and the width of the ngers
and spacers to be equal. But the act of
making the cuts produced slots a few
thousandths of an inch wider than the
ngers.
This wasnt entirely unexpected.
To get a bit with a 12"-diameter cutter
and bearing, I had to use one with a
14"-diameter shank. Even with a pretty
good router and a quality bit, enough
runout existed to increase the width
of the slots by a few thousandths of an
inch. This error was consistent, and
rather than seek perfection where it
didnt exist, I looked for an easy way to
make an adjustment to the jig.
The ngers of the joints were
undersized, so either the long ngers
of the jig needed to be wider, or the
spacers in between narrower. Either
solution would mean taking the jig
apart and starting over. The rst step
was to see how much change was
needed, and answering that question
led to a fast and simple solution.
I put blue masking tape on the
sides of each nger. My guess was the
thickness of the tape would move the
router bit enough to obtain a good t.

My instincts were good, but the bearing on the router bit destroyed the tape
while cutting the rst test joint.
I headed down the street to the
local hardware store in search of
something thin, sticky and durable.
The solution proved to be aluminum
duct-sealing tape. This is not to be
confused with common duct tape.
Duct-sealing tape is much better.
This tape is a thin metal foil with a
very sticky back. I cut small pieces off
the roll with an X-Acto knife, peeled
off the backing paper and placed
a piece on the side of each nger. I
pressed the handle of the knife over
the tape to press it rmly in place. It
held up well during routing, and the
$9 roll of tape is likely a lifetime supply
of an excellent shim material.
Using a router bit with a smaller
diameter than the ngers is an advantage. As we experimented with different techniques, we found we achieved
the best results by pushing the spinning bit straight in between the ngers
to start each cut. This removed most of
the waste without putting pressure on
the ngers of the jig.
We then made two more passes,
holding the bearing against each nger
to make a light, clean cut. Both sides
were cut by pushing the router into
the jig instead of coming in on the left
side and out on the right. This reduces
tear-out that otherwise might occur as

Second workpiece ush


to the edge of the jig
Stop

The rst workpiece is placed with the end


tight against the bottom of the ngers, and the
left end against the stop.

The second piece is placed over the rst, with


the left side ush against the outer edge of the
rst nger on the jig.

Dial calipers will help you zero in on the exact


measurement you need.

popularwoodworking.com

15

A NEW WAY TO ROUT FINGER JOINTS (CONTINUED)


the router bit exits the work on the
right-hand side of the slot. This may
seem like extra work, but the nal
two cleanup passes take little time
and produce cleaner edges.
With the large pieces of the
blanket chest, it was easier to place
the backing piece of the jig at on
the bench, clamp the work to the
jig, then turn the jig and the work
together to a vertical position before
clamping the jig to the bench and
routing the joints.

This was far easier than trying to


hold the workpieces upright while
aligning and clamping them to the jig.
Fitting the end of the workpieces tight
against the bottom of the ngers is
critical to obtaining a good joint.
Ideally, the width of the work
should be some multiple of the nger
width. This leaves the joint with a
whole nger or whole space at either
side. The stop can be positioned to
leave a partial nger at each end, as
long as the second piece is offset by

Assembly is simply a matter of gluing and nailing the ngers and spacers to a plywood strip. After making sure the rst nger is square, butt
one piece against another and nail in place.

Clamp the plywood to the miter gauge


and secure it with a couple pan head
screws. If all went well, youll be in the
right position. If not, the at areas under the screw heads will let you move
the plywood side to side for a ne adjustment.

First Cut Testing, Testing


Both halves of a joint are cut at the
same time. One piece is held against
the hardwood protruding from the
plywood, and the other piece is offset
by the width of the slot. The extra piece
of hardwood is used as a spacer to align
the parts for the rst cut.
Clamping the two pieces together,
16

JOINERY BASICS

the width of a nger.


I considered buying some aluminum bar stock to make a permanent
version of this jig one that would
last forever and be incredibly adjustable for any size of box or nger
conguration. Luckily, I was talked
out of that notion by a co-worker
who pointed out that it was so fast
and simple to put together this jig
that it made more sense just to build
a new iteration whenever the need
RL
occurred.

Aluminum duct-sealing tape closes the gap caused by router and bit
runout, and holds up well in use.

and to the plywood attached to the


miter gauge, allows you to make the
rst cut safely. You wont have to worry
about the pieces slipping, and you can
concentrate on moving the miter gauge
smoothly forward with your hands
away from the dado stack.
After making the rst cut, set the
spacer aside. Each succeeding cut is
made by placing the notch just made
over the hardwood, as seen in the photos on the facing page. The spacer will
keep the work from slipping sideways,
so you dont need to use a clamp after
the rst cut. You can pause after the rst
few passes to see if the ngers and slots
t together, but it goes fast enough that

I prefer to cut the entire width of the


joint before making a test t.
There are three possible outcomes.
In the best case, the two parts of the
joint will come together with hand
pressure only and have no visible gaps.
If the joint wont go together at all, the
ngers are wider than the slots. To correct this, loosen the screws holding
the plywood to the miter gauge, and
move the plywood so that the hardwood guide is closer to the blade.
If the t is sloppy, the ngers are
too small, and the plywood needs to
be moved in the opposite direction.
When adjusting either way, use the
extra hardwood spacer as an aid. Its

This may look crazy, but it works. Thin cyanoacrylate glue will wick into the joint after it is
clamped together and hold as well as any other method of gluing.

easy for something to slip a little as you


hold things in position and tighten the
screws. When youre happy with the t,
making the joints goes quickly, and as
long as the parts are the same width,
there arent many things that can go
wrong. A similar jig can also be used
on a router table.

Better Way for Bigger Boxes


On larger work, a better approach is to
build a jig for moving the tool across
the work. The rst choice for this is
the router instead of the table saw.
Our solution is the shop-made jig on
the two previous pages. Equal-width
material for the ngers and spacers is
the key element to this jig. It is quick
to assemble, adaptable to any practical
width, and with a bit of tweaking is
incredibly accurate.
Though nger joints look complex,
the idea is that the cuts be made efciently. With many joints, the bulk of
your time will be in tweaking the t
after machining. The opposite is true
of nger joints; take your time getting
set up to make the cuts so they will t
nicely directly from the machine.
Make extra pieces to test your jig,
your setup and your technique. I start
with two pieces of stock, and if the rst

test isnt quite where I want it, I trim


a couple inches or so off the ends and
try again. This leaves enough to have
assembled joints to see if Im really
making progress, but doesnt waste
material unnecessarily.

A Crazy (Glue) Solution


The downside to the nger joint is that
it takes some time to apply glue during
assembly. Water-based glues will swell

the ngers and that can keep the joint


from going together. Or the glue can
begin to dry on one end before you have
nished spreading the glue.
One solution is to partially assemble the joint, and apply the glue with
a brush. If its a large assembly, use a
slow-setting glue such as liquid hide
glue or polyurethane glue, and clamp
the corners one at a time.
An alternative we found is to assemble and clamp the joint without
glue. Thin CA glue is then applied along
the outer intersections of the joint and
allowed to wick into the joints. Set one
side of the joint horizontally, apply the
glue and wait about ve minutes before
turning the work and gluing the opposite side.
With this technique the glue wont
dry instantly, but if left for a few hours it
will become as strong as a conventionally glued joint.
We tried this method with some
other glues, including thin PVAs intended for xing loose joints in chairs.
The Chair Doctor produced a strong
joint, but sealed the end grain enough
that it showed when the joint was nished. The CA glue left no visible traces
after the completed joint was trimmed
with a block plane. PWM
Robert is executive editor of Popular Woodworking
Magazine.

The nal step is to trim the surfaces of the joint ush. Close cutting will mean little trimming.

popularwoodworking.com

17

Mitered Half-lap Joinery


B Y G L E N D. H U E Y

With a router, straight bit and plywood scrap, turn a weak joint
into a superhero of strength.

ne of the strongest joints in


woodworking is a properly t mortiseand-tenon and the opposite in strength
is a simple butt joint. For years I built
base frames with mortise-and-tenon
joints at the rear and mitered corners at
the front. The miters were joined with
biscuits. The rear joints were much
stronger, so I wanted to add strength
to those mitered front corners, but how?
Not with mechanical fasteners;
screws were out. I needed something
quick to create and when assembled, I
wanted the joint to retain a mitered look.
The answer was a mitered half-lap joint.
With a half-lap, there is plenty of atgrain glue surface, and that increases
the holding power, big time.

Tools for the Task


Quick means simple in my book, so
if a bunch of tools are needed, forget
it. Goodbye, handtools. The process
I came up with works with a router, a
straight bit and a piece of plywood thats
a couple inches wider than your workpiece and long enough so its easy to add
clamps. Trim one end of the plywood
to a 45 angle to make things easier.
With this technique, the router
sit s on top of the workpiece and
kisses the fence on the nal pass. Its
best to have a straight edge on your
routers base plate, or make sure you
have accurately adjusted a round base
plate so the bit is centered. An offcenter base plate, depending on how you
hold the router each time its picked up,
allows the possibility that youll miss the
layout line as you plow out the waste.
The straight bit can be any straight
bit that you have in your arsenal. Youre
only going to use the end of the bit, so
18

JOINERY BASICS

Mitered joints are a common


woodworking joint. Most are splined
or joined with biscuits and lack real
strength. With a quick setup that
uses your router, you can master the
mitered half-lap. When assembled,
this joint rivals a tightly t mortiseand-tenon.

even a top-mount bearing-guided bit


works. A smaller-diameter bit is a bit
easier to use, but because the cut is most
often 3 8" in depth (half the thickness),
a larger diameter bit is no problem.

Keep the Players Straight


To begin, cut your pieces to their n-

ished length. For a base frame, miter


the ends of the front rail at 45 the
adjoining returns are left square.
Chuck a straight bit into the router
and set the depth of cut very shallow.
Grab a couple pieces of scrap and
position one on top of the other leaving
a few inches to the right of the top piece,
LEAD PHOTO BY AL PARRISH; STEP PHOTOS BY THE AUTHOR

The key to this technique is accuracy. Find the precise offset measurement through a sample cut to ensure youll have a perfect t.

Whether its an angled line on a square end or a square line on an


angled end, the offset line is king. Plus its where to position your fence.

If youre comfortable with your router abilities, remove waste using a


climb-cut, as well as in the traditional left-to-right manner.

With accurate layout and routing, the completed portion is perfectly


cut to accept its half-lap mate.

Its easy to allow the router to tip into the cut


portion as you work. Keep downward pressure on the base plate with one hand while
steering the router with other.

as shown above right. This makeshift


fence allows you to nd the exact offset
from the edge of your base plate to the
edge of the straight bit. Make one pass
with the base riding along the fence then
measure the distance from the fence to
the dado. This is the offset measurement. Remember it.

Layout is key. Form the half-lap on


the wrong face of the pieces and youll
lose the mitered look, so mark the faces
to remove the bottom half of the mitercut end and the upper half of the squarecut ends.
Draw an angled line (45) on the
squared ends beginning at the corner
then square a line across the mitered
ends beginning at the edge of the cut.
Draw a second line, offset by the earlier measurement (the one I told you to
remember), thats parallel to the rst
lines.
Position your plywood fence at the
second layout line with the angled end
toward the mitered end of your workpiece. Hold the fence ush with the bottom edge of the workpiece then clamp
the fence in place.
After you adjust the bit to remove
half the thickness of your workpiece,
nibble away the waste beginning at
the end of the workpiece and working
toward the plywood fence.
On your last pass, hold the router

base tight to the plywood. At the end


of the cut, the router base plate hangs
mostly off the edge of the workpiece,
so maintain pressure to keep the plate
tight on the workpiece.
To clean the bottom waste from the
miter-cut piece, align your fence with
the square offset line, hold the bottom
edge ush with the workpiece then nibble away the waste. Work slowly from
the point to the fence.
With the waste material removed
from both workpieces, your joint will
slip together with both shoulders
tight. The increased glue surface adds
strength to the joint and when viewed
from the top, the joint appears to be
mitered. This is a great technique for
base frames, picture frames or anywhere else your woodworking calls
for a mitered corner. PWM
Glen is the former managing editor of Popular Woodworking Magazine, and now the editor of American
Woodworker.

popularwoodworking.com

19

Cut Accurate &


Clean Rabbets
B Y C H R I S TO P H E R S C H WA R Z

Discover three methods: by router, by table saw and with hand tools.

hen I was taught to cut rabbets in my rst woodworking class, we


made them with two cuts on the table
saw. Youve probably seen this technique in books and magazines before.
For the rst cut, the work is at on the
table. For the second cut, you stand the
work on edge and press it against the
fence as you move the work over the
blade. The waste falls away and your
joint is complete.
Ive always struggled with this technique. It never seemed to produce a
perfect rabbet every time. The technique does have its strengths: Most
woodworkers have a table saw and a rip
blade to make the cut; when it works, it
does produce a nice smooth joint. But
after years of doing it this way, I concluded that this technique has several
serious weaknesses:
Standing the work on edge requires
a tall rip fence, perfect balance on your
part and a zero-clearance insert in your
saws throat plate.
The joint is time-consuming because it almost always requires two
saw setups and several test pieces to
get it just right.
You have to move the saws guard
out of the way for the second cut, no
matter which brand of guard you have
on your saw.
So we decided to look for a better way
to make rabbets. We found two good
methods. The rst uses two scraps and
a dado stack. The second is an improved
two-step process thats virtually foolproof. But before we get to that, a quick
20

JOINERY BASICS

LEAD PHOTO BY AL PARRISH; STEP PHOTOS BY THE AUTHOR

Depth

Accessory fence
Width
Rabbets can be cut with the grain or across it.

explanation on why other methods


arent as great.
Aluminum T-track

Rabbets by Hand Take Great


Skill
Rabbets are one of the rst joints woodworkers learn. Try building any sort of
cabinet or shelf without it and youll
know immediately how essential this
simple open trench is.
The perfect rabbet should have
square shoulders and a flat bottom.
And the cut should be smooth. You
shouldnt see marks from the tooling on
the joint except on close inspection. If
any of these elements of the joint are off,
you can be in trouble at assembly time.
If the joints shoulders arent square,
you likely are going to have an ugly
gap between the rabbeted piece and
its mate. Or worse, you will close the
joint but the case will not be square.
If the cut is rough, has burn marks
or is inconsistent, it will be difcult to
completely close the joint with clamps.
Plus, a rough rabbet isnt going to be
as good a glue joint as a smooth one.
Before power tools, woodworkers
made rabbets with hand tools, such as
a rabbeting plane. Ive done it this way,
and it works great once you master a
couple of skills. Before you can cut this
joint with a rabbeting plane, you need
to learn to tune the tool and sharpen
the iron. This is no small feat for a beginning woodworker. Then, once you
have a tool that works, there are two
settings that are paramount: the depth
stop, which limits how deep the rabbet
is, and the fence on the side, which
controls the joints width. With these
two set, you then make passes until
the tool stops cutting then your joint
is complete.

An accessory fence on your table saws rip fence allows you to make perfect rabbets with one
machine setup and almost always in one pass. Put enough chippers on the arbor to make your
cut and add one more. So if youre making 5 8"-wide rabbets, install enough chippers to make a
3 4"-wide cut. Bury the last 18" in the accessory fence.

I consider this a technique thats best


for the hand-tool enthusiast; it does
take some skill. Most woodworkers
are going to opt for an electron-eating
solution with an easier learning curve,
such as with the router or table saw.

Routers Arent for Everything


The router table was my rst choice
for a couple of reasons: Router cuts are
exceptionally clean and maintaining
the squareness of the joints shoulders
is no problem.
But after cutting a lot of rabbets
on my router table, I concluded that
routers are not the best choice for allaround casework rabbeting. It sounds
like blasphemy, but heres what I concluded: Most routers actually are quite
underpowered for the job, so you end
up cutting your projects joints in small,
time-consuming nibbles.
A 11 2-horsepower router does not
deliver the same sustainable torque that
a 11 2-hp contractor saw does (no matter what the tools label or packaging
says). Part of the problem is marketing
hype among the router manufacturers,
and part of the problem is in the way
a universal router motor is built compared to a traditional induction motor
on a contractor saw. The bottom line
is this: Ask a typical router to hog out
a 3 4"-wide x 3 8"-deep rabbet in one

pass and it will bog down or even stall


in the cut.
A router also is noisier than a table
saw, and large cabinet pieces become
unwieldy when you try to maneuver
them on the router table. You could
cut smaller rabbets on small pieces on
the router table (drawers are about the
right scale for most router tables). But
heres how I feel about that: Learn the
rabbeting process on one machine and
then do it over and over the same way so
you become an expert at that process.
Jumping around from technique to
technique will only slow your progress
as you learn the subtleties of each.
Some people use their jointer and
its rabbeting ledge to cut this joint. The
jointer is a powerful machine, and this
technique actually works pretty well
for narrow stock such as face frames
and door parts. But try to rabbet the end
of a 30" x 20" cabinet side and youll
see why this isnt the way most people
prefer to cut rabbets.
So I went back to the table saw,
which has guts galore and a big table,
to see if I could nd a different way to
skin this wily animal.

Single Setup with Dado Stack


One nice thing about making a rabbet on the router table is that you can
(within reason) do it with a single
popularwoodworking.com

21

The height of the dado stack determines the


depth of the nished rabbet. This is 12".

tool setup. You can control the width


and depth of the joint simultaneously,
tweaking the height of the bit and the
fence (which exposes the tooling) until
the joint is just right.
To do this same thing on the table
saw you need two things: a stack dado
set and a long length of plywood you
can clamp over the working surface of
your rip fence. The wood allows you to
bury the dado stack in the fence so
it will work like the fence on a router
table.
This accessory fence should be
straight, at least 1 2" thick and as long
as the table saws rip fence. Plywood is
a logical choice of material because it
doesnt tend to warp.
The rst time you use this accessory fence, lower the dado stack below
the surface of your saws table. Next,
clamp the accessory fence to your rip
fence and then position it so that about
1 8" of it covers the blades below. Then,
turn on the saw and slowly raise the
blades into the fence until youve cut
away about 1 4".
Another necessity to ensure an accurate and safe cut is to use a featherboard
that presses the work against the table.
There are lots of commercial featherboards available, or you can certainly
make your own. As you can see from
the photo at right, I also added an aluminum T-track (in a rabbet, no less)
that allows me to quickly adjust the
22

JOINERY BASICS

the depth of cut with a


rule or dial calipers all
along the joint to make
sure your featherboard
is pressing down hard
enough to prevent the
work from rising during
the cut. If the joint is inconsistent, increase the
tension on your featherboard or push the work
a little harder against the
saws table.
Sometimes taking a
second pass will x your
problem. While thats not
ideal, its worth a try if
The distance from the top of the left tooth to the fence deteryou are stuck and out of
mines the width. This is 3 4".
options.
Remember: Any cup
featherboards position. Thats mighty
or warp in your workpiece can ruin
handy when dealing with project parts
the accuracy. And plywood is not althat are of different thicknesses.
ways as at as we would like it to be.
Now youre ready to make rabbets.
If youre having trouble getting a conUsing a 6" rule, set the height of the
sistent joint, check the work to see if
dado stack to equal the depth of the
its cupped or warped.
rabbet you want to cut. (Tip: Spend
When crosscutting rabbets across
some time nding the point where your
the grain, you have two choices: Use a
blades teeth are at their highest. When
miter gauge if the stock is narrow or,
youve found that sweet spot, mark it
for pieces wider than 8", use the rip
on your table saws throat insert; I use
fence and a backing block behind the
a scratch awl. In the future, you can
work. A backing block will stabilize
just set your ruler on that mark and
the part during the cut. You dont want
measure. Youll be amazed how much
to use a backing block to cut narrow
time this saves you.)
pieces because the work could slide
Next, set the saws rip fence to exright into the cavity in the accessory
pose enough of the dado stack to make
fence. And thats when youll nd out
the width of your rabbet. With practice,
how tough the anti-kickback ngers
you can almost always hit that measureon your featherboard are.
ment exactly on the rst try.
To rabbet the ends of large case sides
Lock the height of the arbor on your
youll denitely have to forego the miter
saw. This is especially important if you
gauge. Using a backing block here will
own a benchtop or contractor saw. In
reduce the chance that youll tear out
smaller saws, the mere force of the cut
the grain when your work exits the
can cause the arbor to creep downward.
dado stack. As with ripping operations,
If it creeps just a bit, thats the worst.
making a second pass sometimes helps
You might not nd out about the probensure your cuts are more consistent.
lem until assembly.
As a bonus, you can cut rabbets this
Turn on the saw. Follow the same
way with an overarm guard in place.
rules you do when ripping or crosscutBecause the guard obscures the blades,
ting. If its a ripping operation, you can
weve removed it for these photos, but it
simply press the work against the fence
is an important part of the setup.
and push it through the blades. The
As much as I like this technique, it
same goes for work that is square or
isnt perfect. When crosscutting against
nearly square (such as the side of a base
the grain, the cut is a bit rougher than if
cabinet). After your rst pass, check
you used a router, though I cant report

any gluing problems with the joints cut


using a dado stack. Cuts with the grain,
on the other hand, are quite smooth.
Another cause for concern is your
saws motor. Benchtop saws dont really
have the guts to make casework rabbets
(plus many dont have a mechanism to
lock the height of the arbor a major
problem). In fact, the fences of benchtop
saws usually are too inaccurate to cut
the joint using the two-step process
mentioned earlier. If you own a benchtop saw, you should consider cutting
your joints on a router table.
However, larger saws, such as contractor- and cabinet-style saws, usually
breeze through these joints in one easy
pass over the dado stack.
All things considered, I found that
maneuvering workpieces on the larger
table of the table saw is easier than cutting the same size pieces on the router
table. Plus, the power of the table saw
made the cuts easy to accomplish in

one pass without taxing the machine


or the tooling.

Fixing the Two-step Process


There also is a way to modify the twostep method on the table saw to make
it work well for beginners or people
uncomfortable with balancing pieces
on edge. The trick is a featherboard.
(The word featherboard doesnt really
do it justice. In our shop, we call it the
motherboard.)
The motherboard, shown in the
photos below, needs to press the work
against the rip fence right over the
blade, so it looks a little different than
the one used with the dado stack. This
motherboard is used only on the second pass.
The rst pass denes the width and
the depth of the rabbet. Use a saw blade
with teeth that are at on top, such as
a ripping blade. A crosscut blade has
teeth that score the work like a knife

The same rules for ripping and crosscutting apply to rabbeting. For ripping cuts with the grain, use the fence to guide your cut.

to cleanly remove the wood bers; this


will produce V-shaped channels in
your work. Other blades, such as those
with a triple-chip grind, will create
even more problems, so stick with a
rip blade.
To set the rip fence, measure from
the outside or left edge of the teeth to
the rip fence until you get the desired
width of your rabbet. Lock the fence
down. Then use your 6" rule to set the
blade height so it equals the depth of
the rabbet. Again, marking the highest
projection of your saw blades teeth on
your saws throat plate will save you
hundreds of test cuts per year.
Make a test cut with the work at on
the saws table, as shown in the photo
below left. If you like, you can use a
featherboard to hold the work at on
the table, similar to the way I did it with
the dado stack setup shown on page 10.
With your first cut complete, set
up your saw to remove the rest of the

For crosscutting across the grain, use the miter gauge for narrow pieces
or use the rip fence and a backing block (to prevent tear-out) for larger
pieces.

popularwoodworking.com

23

When making the cut in two stages, the rst


cut denes both the width and depth of your
joint. Keep your work tight against the fence.

This featherboard, which holds the work


steady and against the fence, is the key to rabbeting on the table saw in two steps.

The motherboard keeps everything in place


during the second pass. The result is a clean
and accurate rabbet.

waste from the rabbet. The critical dimension is the distance between the
fence and the blade. In essence, this
distance is the amount of wood you
want to remain on your piece when
the joint is complete. For example: You
want to cut a rabbet thats 1 4" deep in a
3 4"-thick piece of wood. To make the
second pass, you should set your fence
so theres exactly 1 2" between the blade
and the fence. When you set the blades
height, adjust it until it trims away the
waste but no higher. Your rst cut already dened the corner of the rabbet.
Its important that the waste falls to
the outside of the blade. If the waste gets
trapped between the blade and fence
it will shoot back at you when it is cut.
This can be less than ideal, depending
on where youre standing.
The other important point here is
that you should either make or invest
in a zero-clearance throat insert for
your table saw. When you balance your
parts on edge for this second pass, you

want them to ride on as much table


surface as possible. The stock throat
insert that comes with most saws is
too wide for this job.
Set up your featherboard so it presses the work against the fence but above
the blade. It should allow the work to
pass through the blade but keep it
rmly against the fence.
With the featherboard set, the cut
is reasonably safe: The board will not
tend to tip and the blade is buried safely
in the work.

two-step method is a sound alternative.


We decided to find out which of
these techniques some beginning
woodworkers preferred sometimes
people who are new to the craft are more
intimidated by a certain technique than
veterans. After a day of cutting rabbets
both ways, the two beginning woodworkers in our workshop were able to
make amazingly accurate rabbets using
both techniques.
The only notable difference was that
the dado-stack method required a little
more upper body strength to keep the
work to the table though the beginners were enamored with the simplicity
of using just one pass. The two-step
method required a bit more nesse,
one more setup and a little math. I tend
to avoid math when possible, so my
preference was no real surprise. PWM

24

JOINERY BASICS

And the Winner is ...


Ive cut hundreds of rabbets using both
of these setups and I generally prefer
using the dado stack method because it
has one saw setup and the cut is made
in a single pass.
I also like being able to use our overarm guard during the cut, as well as
work with the parts at on the table at
all times. But if you dont have a dado
stack (good ones start at about $90), the

Christopher is a regular contributor to Popular Woodworking Magazine and the publisher at Lost Art Press
(lostartpress.com).

Dovetailed
Plane Cabinet
B Y C H R I S TO P H E R S C H WA R Z

Practice your joinery with this handsome storage piece.

popularwoodworking.com

25

n certain holidays, such as


New Years Day, craftsmen in Japan
clean their tools, put them on a shrine
and offer them gifts such as sake and
rice cakes. It is their way of thanking
the tools for the service they have provided and will provide in future days.
As my own collection of handplanes
grew from a few rusty specimens handed down from my great-grandfather
to a small arsenal of new high-quality
instruments, this Japanese tradition
began to weigh heavily on my mind.
My planes generally squatted on my
workbench when not in use, and I had to
constantly move them around to avoid
knocking them to the oor as I worked.
After some thought, I decided that
a cabinet dedicated to my planes was
the best way to protect them from dings
and to thank them for the service they
provide almost every day of the year.
This piece is designed to be used
either as a traditional tool chest that sits
on a bench or as a cabinet that hangs
on the wall on a tough French cleat.
Because planes are heavy tools, the
case is joined using through-dovetails.

26

JOINERY BASICS

The lid is a at-panel door assembled


using mortise-and-tenon construction.
And the dividers inside the cabinet are
screwed together so the conguration
can be rearranged easily as my collection (or needs) change.
As you design your own version of
this cabinet, you should measure your
planes to ensure theres enough space
for everything you own, or plan to own.
This cabinet should provide plenty of
room for all but the largest collections.

Dovetails with the Pins First


Because of all the cast iron and steel in
handplanes, the cabinets carcase needs
to be as stout as possible to resist the
stress that all this weight will put on the
corners. In my opinion, the throughdovetail is the only joint for this job.
Whether you choose to cut pins or
tails rst (or use a dovetail jig and a
router) is up to you. Usually I cut the
tails rst, but I try to keep an open mind
about different techniques. So for a
year I built as many things as I could
by cutting the pins rst this is one of
those projects.

Lay out the joints using the illustration at right, a marking gauge, a square
and a sliding bevel square set for 7. I
strike the lines with a marking knife and
color them in a bit with a mechanical
pencil. The pencil marks help me see the
line and the knife lines keep me accurate. In fact, once you get some practice
sawing, you should be able to easily
remove the pencil marks from only one
side of your knife lines. It sounds crazy,
but its actually not that hard.
There are many ways to remove the
waste from between your saws kerf
lines. Some just chop it away directly
with a chisel and a sharp blow from a
mallet. I nd that Im sharpening my
chisels less if I saw out most of the waste
and chop out the little bit thats left.
A coping saw with a ne-tooth blade
works well, as does a jewelers fret saw.
When you chop out the waste, be
sure to stand so you can see the prole
of your chisel it must be perpendicular to the work. I use a standard beveledge chisel for this operation. Just make
sure that if you do the same that your
chisel can be struck by a mallet without
splitting the handle.
Next you need to mark out the mating part of the joint by using the rst
half of the joint as a template. Heres
the main difculty youll encounter
by cutting the pins rst: You have to
balance the pin board on edge to mark
out the tail portion of the joint. With
a small case its manageable. But with
a dresser it can be tricky.
Mark the joints with a sharp knife
followed by a pencil. Then cut the tails.
For this project I tried a technique you
might want to take for a spin: As you
can see from the photo on the top right
of page 29, I skewed the tail board in
my vise so I was sawing straight down
instead of at a 7 angle. I think this is
a good trick for beginners as it makes
it easier to track your lines. However,
you have to shift the board 7 the other
way for the other half of your cuts, so
its a bit more work.
At this point you have to pay close
attention to your lines or your joint
will have a sloppy t. Saw on the waste
LEAD PHOTOS BY AL PARRISH; STEP PHOTOS BY THE AUTHOR

Mark the length of your pins


and tails. Theres a debate as
to whether you should mark
exactly how long you want
them, a little less or a little
more. I prefer to mark them
132" longer so the ends are
proud when assembled.
Then I plane them ush after
gluing.

Once the cut is started, hold the saw like you


would hold a small bird that youre trying to
prevent from ying away. Dont clench the
handle; just keep enough pressure to avoid
losing control. And never apply much downward pressure as you saw this will cause
your blade to drift.

With the pins dened, get out a coping saw with a ne-tooth blade and
remove as much waste as you can. The closer you get to the scribed
line at the bottom of the joint, the less cleanup youll have with a chisel.
But if you overshoot your line, youre cooked.

side of the line, leaving the pencil line


intact. This makes the joint just a little
tight something you can tweak by
paring with a chisel.
Use a coping saw to remove most of
the waste between the tails and chop
the rest of the waste away with a chisel.
Now youre ready for a dry run. Ease
the inside edges of the tails just a bit
with a knife. If the joint is too tight, try
shaving off a bit on the inside faces of
the pins parts that wont show in the
completed joint.

Clamp your pin board to a piece of scrap and remove the rest of the
waste using a sharp chisel and a mallet. I sneak up on the line on one
side, then on the other, then clean up any junk in the middle. Clean out
the corners of the pins using a sharp knife.

1 2"

1 4"

1 8"

1 8"

1 8"

1 8"

1 4"

1"

7 typ.

1"

1"

1"

1"

1"

71 2"

Bottom & Assembly


Cut the remainder of your dovetails
and mill the 1 4"-deep x 1 2" groove for
the plywood back/bottom. I milled
this groove using a plunge router, a

DOVETAIL LAYOUT
popularwoodworking.com

27

SLICK SOLE FOR SMOOTHING

237 8"
14

1 8"

91 4"

31 8"

21 2"
151 2"

H
H

21 2"

hen using a smoothing plane to prepare


wood for nishing, youll get better results
if the planes sole is waxed. The wax lubricates
the sole and allows the plane to skim over the
work. Youll use less effort and the end result
looks better because youre less likely to stall
during the cut. I use inexpensive canning wax
found at any grocery store that costs a few dollars
for a box. Apply the wax in the pattern shown
below (keep it off the iron; that will change how
the plane cuts). Then start working until you feel
the plane becoming harder to move. Just reapply
CS
the wax and get back to work.

L
H

3"

137 8"

91 2"

L
M

21 4"

21 8"

13 8"
103 8"

13"

ELEVATION INTERNAL DIVIDERS


263 8"

71 2"

1"
271 8"
3 8"x

1" door edging top and two sides only

PLAN DOOR REMOVED

1"

263 8"

1"

71 2"

See cleat
detail

3 8"

3"

173 8"

17"

17"

17"

11"
C
3"

3"

3 4"stiles

11"

PROFILE
DOOR REMOVED

and rails
3 8"panel

21 2"

SECTION

SUPPLIES

Q
P

Lee Valley Tools


leevalley.com or 800-871-8158
2 Forged ush rings, 112" x 2", #00L02.02, $28.30 ea.
2 Chest handles, #06W03.01, $14.50/pair

3"

2 212" non-mortise hinges, #00H51.13, $2.30 ea.

Local home-supply store


3 8"

2"

ELEVATION
28

JOINERY BASICS

223 8"

2"

2 Magnetic catches
Prices correct at time of publication

Pin board

Tail board
Put your tail board on the bench with its inside face pointing up. Position its mate on top of it and mark the locations of the tails using a knife,
followed by a mechanical pencil. Be careful not to shift either board
during this step. If you do, erase your lines and start anew.

Transfer the lines on your tail board across the end using a square.
Clamp the tail board in a vise. You can see how I skewed the board
in my vise so Im actually cutting straight down. Angle the board one
direction and make half of the tail cuts, then reverse the angle for the
other cuts. Remember to cut ever-so-slightly outside of the lines.

Outside face

Backing block

Remove the waste from the outside face of the board rst, then remove
the rest from the inside face. This will result in a neater joint if the grain
buckles while you are chopping it. Again, clean up your corners with a
knife.

Now its time for a test t. Assemble the joint using a deadblow mallet
and a backing block to distribute your blows across the entire joint.
You should be able to push the mating pieces together most of the way
using only hand pressure, plus a few taps to seat it in place.

Dovetailed Plane Cabinet


NO. LET. ITEM

DIMENSIONS (INCHES)
T
W
L

MATERIAL

COMMENTS

CARCASE

straight bit and an edge guide. Make


sure you put the groove 1 2" in from the
bottom edge of the sides to make room
for the French cleat that attaches the
cabinet to the wall (if youre hanging
this cabinet on a wall).
Before you assemble the case with
glue, use a smoothing plane to prepare
all the inside surfaces of the carcase
for nishing including the bottom
piece. I sharpen a gentle camber on the
cutting edge of the blade (about .002")
and set the plane to take a very ne
shaving, about .001" thick. This creates
a surface that generally needs little or
no sanding, especially with wood that
has mild, easy-to-plane grain.
Once you glue up the case, trim the
dovetail joints ush to the outside and
use a smoothing plane to prepare the
exterior of the case for nishing.

2 A Top, bottom

34

712 2638 Cherry

Cut 116" long

2 B Sides

34

712

17

Cut 116" long

1 C Back/bottom

12

16

2538

1 D French cleat for case

12

212

2478

Maple

45 bevel on one edge

1 E French cleat for wall

12

212 2278

Maple

45 bevel on one edge

2 F Top, bottom

12

212 2378

Maple

2 G Sides

12

212 1512

Maple

3 H Horizontal dividers

12

212 2378

Maple

1 J

Horizontal divider

12

212 1038

Maple

1 K Horizontal divider

12

212

13

Maple

2 L Vertical dividers

12

212

212

Maple

1 M Vertical divider

12

212

478

Maple

2 N Rails

34

2438

Cherry

Cut long to t cabinet

2 P Stiles

34

17

Cherry

Cut long to t cabinet

Build the Door

1 Q Panel

3 8

12

In 38" x 12" groove

3 8

With the glue dry and the case complete, measure its width and length to
determine exactly how big your door

Cherry

Plywood In 14"-deep groove

DIVIDERS

DOOR

Moulding

2338 Poplar
65

Cherry

14" roundover on one edge

popularwoodworking.com

29

You can see the pencil lines on the tails and


how the ends of the pins and tails stick up
a bit on the completed joint. This makes it
easier to trim them ush, but more difcult to
clamp during glue-up.

should be. You want the door to overhang the case by 1 16" on either end and
1 16" on the front, so size your doors
rails and stiles accordingly.
As much as I enjoy handwork, I
decided to cut the mortise-and-tenon
joints for the frame-and-panel door
using my tailed apprentices (my
power tools). I begin making this classic housed joint by cutting a sample
mortise with my mortising machine.
Then I cut all the tenons using a dado
stack installed in my table saw.

Cut the groove for the 12"-thick bottom in two passes using a plunge
router outtted with a straight bit and an edge guide. On the pin boards,
you can cut the groove through the ends because it wont show.

The rule of thumb is that your tenons thickness should be one-half the
thickness of your stock. The doors are
3 4" thick, so the tenons are 3 8" thick
with 3 16" shoulders on the face cheeks.
Now install a dado stack in your
table saw. These tenons are 1" long,
so I like to put in enough chippers to
make a 5 8"-wide cut in one pass. Set the
height of the dado stack to 3 16" and set
the fence so its 1" away from the leftmost tooth of your dado stack. Make
several passes over the blade to remove

On the tail boards, you need to stop the groove in one of the tails as
shown. The dovetail layout shown in the illustration allows you to put
the groove solidly into a tail.

PLANES AT REST: ON THEIR SOLES OR ON THEIR SIDES?

ne of the big debates among


plane users is whether to place
the tools on their soles or their sides
when they are not in use. Traditional
carpenters place the tools on their
sides to protect the iron from getting dinged. Many woodworkers
have picked up this tradition and its
frequently passed on from teacher to
student (as it was to me).
But it might not be necessary.
A couple of years ago I was convinced by a fellow craftsman that
its better to place planes on their
soles when you are working at your
bench. Heres the rationale. The old
carpenters rule applied to work on
the job site, where you could never
be certain about where you were
setting your plane (this was back
when you might actually see planes
on a job site). So placing the plane
on its side protected the iron from

30

JOINERY BASICS

grit and gravel that could cover any


at surface in a newly built home.
Also, carpenters say that putting
planes on their sides prevents the
iron from being pushed back into
the planes body, which is what
could happen when a plane is rested
on its sole.
Woodworkers, however, work
on a wooden bench far away from
mortar dust and gravel. So they say
its best to place an unused plane on
its sole to prevent the iron from get-

ting dinged by another tool on the


bench. What about the iron getting
pushed up into the planes body? If
you think about this statement for
a moment, youll see how ridiculous it is. The planes iron is secured
tightly enough in the planes body to
withstand enormous pressure as the
plane is pushed through the work.
It should be childs play for the iron
to stay in one place with only the
weight of the plane pushing it down.
Other woodworkers have come
up with other solutions that work,
too, including placing the planes
sole-down over the tool well of
their bench. Or they rest the sole on
a thin wooden strip that holds the
iron slightly above the bench. But I
dont mess with that. After unlearning years of training, I now put my
planes sole-down on the bench.
CS

I dont like to clamp carcase pieces between dogs unless I have to the
clamp pressure can bow the pieces as Im working them. I prefer a stop
on my bench, as shown. After planing the case pieces, Ill hit them with
some #220-grit sandpaper to remove any ridges left by the plane.

I use simple clamping blocks to clamp the tail boards rmly against
the pin boards. These are easy to make using a hand saw or band saw.
Apply a consistent but thin layer of glue to the tails and knock the case
together with the bottom in its groove. Clamp up the case using the
clamping blocks and let it sit for at least 30 minutes.

the waste from the face cheeks, then


remove the waste from the edge cheeks
and test the t in your sample mortise.
Raise the dado stack to 3 8" and remove the remainder of the waste on the
edge cheeks. The bigger edge shoulders
ensure that you wont blow out the ends
of your mortises at glue-up.
Mark the location of your mortises
using your tenons as a guide, as shown
in the photo above right. Cut the 3 8"wide x 11 16"-deep mortises in the stiles
using a hollow-chisel mortiser.
Next cut the 3 8"-wide x 1 2"-deep
groove on the door parts that will hold
the panel. I use a rip blade in my table
saw. Dont worry about stopping the
groove in the stiles; the hole wont show
on the front because it will be covered
by moulding. On the back youll almost

never see it because that is where the


hinges go. If the hole offends you, by
all means patch it with a scrap.
Assemble the door and make sure it
ts on the case. When all is well, plane
or sand the panel for the door and glue
up the door making sure not to put
glue in the panels groove.
With the door complete, mill the
moulding that surrounds the door on
three edges. Miter, glue and nail it in
place. Then install the hardware: the
butt hinges, catches, pulls and handles.

A dado stack makes quick work of tenons for


the door. The table saws miter gauge guides
the rails over the dado blades to cut the face
and edge cheeks.

Test the t of your tenon in a test mortise.


When youre satised with the t, cut the
tenons on all the rails this way, being sure to
check the t after cutting each one.

Divide & Organize


Finally its time to make the dividers
for the planes. This is the easy part. I
fastened the dividers using screws to
make sure I could change the conguration in case my plane collection ever

changed. The rst step when building


the dividers is to screw the four outermost pieces together and plane them
down so they t snugly inside the case.
Then divide up the rest of your space
and screw everything in place. Secure
the assembled divider in the case with
a couple of 1"-long screws. As this is
shop furniture, I didnt choose a fancy
nish. A few coats of clear lacquer is
enough protection.
I hung my cabinet on the wall using
a French cleat system, shown on the
nal page. When installing the cleats,
be sure to use 3"-long screws to fasten
the cleat to the studs in the wall. This
cabinet, when full, is quite weighty.

Use the tenons to mark where the mortises


should go on the stiles. I like this method
because there is less measuring and therefore
less room for error.

popularwoodworking.com

31

hen you hang a cabinet that will be loaded with heavy objects, I
recommend a French cleat to fasten it to the wall. These cleats take
a little more work than metal cabinet hangers, but they are well worth it
because the cabinet will be more secure and it will be easy to put on the
wall and remove.
To make a French cleat, take some of the
1 2" stock left over from building the dividers
for the interior of your cabinet. Youll need
A
one piece thats 2478" long, which youll
attach to the backside of the cabinet. And
youll need a second piece thats a couple of
D
inches shorter than the rst. Set your table
saw to cut a 45 bevel and rip one long edge
of each piece at 45.
C
Glue and screw the long cleat to the top
edge of the backside of the cabinet with the
E
bevel facing in. Now screw the second cleat
to the wall where your cabinet will go with
the bevel facing the wall. Be sure to use
big screws (I used #12 x 3") and anchor the
CS
screws in the studs in your wall.
Drywall

Christopher is a regular contributor to Popular Woodworking Magazine and the publisher at Lost Art Press
(lostartpress.com).

THE GENIUS OF FRENCH CLEATS

Wall studs

With this project complete and hung


on my shop wall, I loaded the tools into
their slots and thought for a moment
about offering my planes some sake in
the Japanese tradition. But then, coming to my senses, I offered myself a cold
beer instead. PWM

Screws go through
cleat and into studs

When cutting the mortise, cut one hole, skip


a space, then cut the next one. Then come
back and clean up the area in between. If
you cut all your holes in a row, the mortisers
chisel can bend or snap because it wants to
follow the path of least resistance.

The 38" x 1" moulding creates a dust seal


around the edge of your cabinet and gives the
piece a nice nished look. I cut a 14" roundover on the inside edge of the moulding. Miter
the ends, then glue and nail the moulding to
the doors edges.

32

JOINERY BASICS

As you install the interior


dividers, its a good idea
to double-check your
initial measurements
against the real thing. I
had a rude shock when
my No. 4 plane was
wider than I had anticipated. When everything
looks good, screw all the
parts together using #8
x 1" screws. Then screw
the whole thing into the
cabinet. I ran the screws
in from the backside of
the cabinet.

Helping you obtain


a perfect t
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.

Accurate joinery is also dependent on nal trimming and tting.


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