RobinBHM
Established Member
I've always put the radius on joinery, but what does the V achieve, please? I appreciate it probably looks neat, but presumably it serves a purpose
but a V still exposes a thin joint line (in the middle) where the paint finish will crack first and where capillary action can allow water to be drawn into the joint
Strictly speaking, both stile and rail shoulder should have a 3mm radius which forms a V when assembled.
The reason is that timber shinks almost nothing in its length but significantly acrosscits width. So the bottom rail of a door will expand and contract, fracturing the paintlne. The paint film at the joint, if you think about it as 2 separate pieces, just stops square.
With a radius, the V jount that is formed can have some flexible V joint filler in it. Then the door is painted. In service any expansion moves the filler but the paint remains intact.
Look at almost any old painted door, most will have a fracture line at the joints.