Jacob
What goes around comes around.
Blacksmith made. 5/8" diameter. Round rod drawn out to a long thin taper and at the other end drawn out and turned into a knuckle. It has to be long so that it'll draw the pieces together slowly - too steep a taper and it could break through the tenon instead. It has to be long enough to leave room for a hammer swing so you can hit behind the knuckle and pull it out again.
A string to newel is the classic draw bore situation, pieces impossible to clamp but not so tight that you can hammer them together. A good push fit which means hammering won't close the joint as it tends to bounce open. The draw bore pin works perfectly just with hand pressure and gently closes the joint up tight. If ready to glue up then hammer it in the last bit and you can then take it out and put your pegs in. Ideally these too need to be long and gently tapered so they don't break the tenon.
A dry fit:
I was really pleased with that - I haven't used it for years. Such a simple and effective device. Better to have 2 or 3 on the job but I've only got one. The joint has to be a good fit in the first place or the draw boring can go wrong - it's only intended to nip the joint up tight, no great force involved or the tenon might break and the process be difficult to reverse.
Holes offset about 1/16" in 4" newel post with 5/8" tenons.
A string to newel is the classic draw bore situation, pieces impossible to clamp but not so tight that you can hammer them together. A good push fit which means hammering won't close the joint as it tends to bounce open. The draw bore pin works perfectly just with hand pressure and gently closes the joint up tight. If ready to glue up then hammer it in the last bit and you can then take it out and put your pegs in. Ideally these too need to be long and gently tapered so they don't break the tenon.
A dry fit:
I was really pleased with that - I haven't used it for years. Such a simple and effective device. Better to have 2 or 3 on the job but I've only got one. The joint has to be a good fit in the first place or the draw boring can go wrong - it's only intended to nip the joint up tight, no great force involved or the tenon might break and the process be difficult to reverse.
Holes offset about 1/16" in 4" newel post with 5/8" tenons.