stuckinthemud
Established Member
I am slowly building a Celtic type lap harp and find I may need to construct it using blind wedged mortice and tenons. Never actually made such a joint. Any tips?
Thank you for that, I will need to do 120 of these "joints" soon.Once you have made the tenon and are about to cut the slit for the wedge to go into, drill a 3mm hole at the spot you want the slit to stop. This will help prevent the chances of a split happening as you hit the tenon home and the wedge works its way in. Also the wedge should be around 7-10 degress and 5mm shorter than the depth of the tenon.
hth
oh and remember to have a little space for the tenon to move into in the side of the mortice
I don't subscribe to this - what difference could it make? If the wood wants to split it's going to split, surely? You may be thinking of other materials with a different structure to wood, which has a directional grain?drill a 3mm hole at the spot you want the slit to stop. This will help prevent the chances of a split happening as you hit the tenon home and the wedge works its way in
Ha! Well you can prepare strips of the root wedge section, part them off to length (crosscut on bandsaw), and hand chisel them against a stop. That'll be fun for 240 wedges! Or you can prepare material to be as long as a wedge, as thick as a wedge is wide, and of any width. Then make a small jig to get the angle, and part off wedges from your prepared blanks (ripcut on bandsaw). The bandsaw is safe for small parts where a circular saw isn't.My issue is how to make the wedge.
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