They come in all shapes and sizes, there are no rules, except where strength is required they are made more substantial, but for light loads such as drawer sides they can be very light "single kerf" cut.gjhimages":2mgoi9a0 said:I guess I will have a go at hand cutting are their any rules as to width and number of tails or 'if it looks good cut them
I've looked at a lot of old DTs - almost entirely drawers sides, and they all look to be cut pin holes first and in pairs. Never more than two at a time..woodbrains":3cc3fy5v said:Hello,
Pins first, trust me, it is best.
1, see Custard's comments above, the thicker the stock the harder it becomes, so gang cutting is just doubling the thickness of your stock, doh! The time saving is negligible anyway, it takes longer to cut through double the thickness (more strokes) cutting the waste and paring to the baseline has to be done for each dovetail just the same.......
If you can't mark through them you are obviously using the wrong kit - so yes, forget it! :lol:try getting a knife which has a blade thicker than a saw blade into a single saw kerf dovetail. Japanese sawn tails -forget it!
Jacob":lt2hqi2d said:I've looked at a lot of old DTs - almost entirely drawers sides, and they all look to be cut pin holes first and in pairs. Never more than two at a time..woodbrains":lt2hqi2d said:Hello,
Pins first, trust me, it is best.
1, see Custard's comments above, the thicker the stock the harder it becomes, so gang cutting is just doubling the thickness of your stock, doh! The time saving is negligible anyway, it takes longer to cut through double the thickness (more strokes) cutting the waste and paring to the baseline has to be done for each dovetail just the same.......
The thin single kerf ones are most common because they are easiest and quickest - only one line to mark up (or guess), not two.
If you can't mark through them you are obviously using the wrong kit - so yes, forget it! :lol:try getting a knife which has a blade thicker than a saw blade into a single saw kerf dovetail. Japanese sawn tails -forget it!
Really not a problem at all; a scribe pin is handy - I use an old dart (without the feathers), or a square ended thin craft knife if they are really fine - you stab it in chisel fashion - "cutting" a line knife fashion is more difficult.
Enter your email address to join: