g7g7g7g7
Established Member
I started doing tenons exactly the way that the first poster stated but not to fit from the saw we were taught to cut well clear of the tenon and pare down to size instead.
I personally haven't sawn down a tenon in a long time, much preferring to saw the shoulder line and split the sides with the biggest chisel I can find. It means I have to be more selective with timber, I can puts knots through mortices without any hassle but I keep them well away from tenons, sometimes it means a little extra waste but it's a good trade off for the speed boost of splitting.
My college tutor has noticed me doing it a couple of times and was very sceptical at first but after watching me gang cut shoulders and gang split tenons on 4 rails perfectly in the time that others in the class had barely finished their first tenon I think he has been won over. My bench buddy has attempted this but he failed to check his shoulder lines were cut square and true which led to him splitting his entire component in half.
I personally haven't sawn down a tenon in a long time, much preferring to saw the shoulder line and split the sides with the biggest chisel I can find. It means I have to be more selective with timber, I can puts knots through mortices without any hassle but I keep them well away from tenons, sometimes it means a little extra waste but it's a good trade off for the speed boost of splitting.
My college tutor has noticed me doing it a couple of times and was very sceptical at first but after watching me gang cut shoulders and gang split tenons on 4 rails perfectly in the time that others in the class had barely finished their first tenon I think he has been won over. My bench buddy has attempted this but he failed to check his shoulder lines were cut square and true which led to him splitting his entire component in half.