Cottonwood
Established Member
The thing with the woodwork trade and industry/media people is they want you to get the gadgets they promote.
The thing with a tennon cutter is that the only thing it will do is cut tennons. Less is more.
Its not a versatiil tool like an axe, draw knife, a spokeshave or even a puukko knife is. Did no one ever stop to think why a knife is one of the main standard tools of scandinavian wood workers, aside from their axe's?
Just using a few classic, culturally universal, basic, time honoured tools such as axe, knife, auger you can do just about anything, split logs, rough shape legs, seats, combs, spindles, arms etc The vikings didnt use much more than that to build ocean going ships :idea: .
To get the diameter on a dried round tenon all you need do is place a brace and bit with the required round mortice diameter on the centre of the tennon, and give 2 or 3 turns, enough to scribe a circle, then whittle to that.
The thing with a tennon cutter is that the only thing it will do is cut tennons. Less is more.
Its not a versatiil tool like an axe, draw knife, a spokeshave or even a puukko knife is. Did no one ever stop to think why a knife is one of the main standard tools of scandinavian wood workers, aside from their axe's?
Just using a few classic, culturally universal, basic, time honoured tools such as axe, knife, auger you can do just about anything, split logs, rough shape legs, seats, combs, spindles, arms etc The vikings didnt use much more than that to build ocean going ships :idea: .
To get the diameter on a dried round tenon all you need do is place a brace and bit with the required round mortice diameter on the centre of the tennon, and give 2 or 3 turns, enough to scribe a circle, then whittle to that.