custard
Established Member
The question what’s the strongest, dowel or M&T, is a pointless red herring. The fact is that for domestic furniture in almost every case they’re both plenty strong enough. It’s like asking if a Porsche is faster than a Ferrari when all you need is a car for the daily commute.
A second reason why it’s a meaningless question is that there’s a massive difference between a joint’s potential strength, and it’s actual strength when executed by the average wood butcher.
Just because lab experiments reveal one joint is stronger than the other means nothing if you personally don’t have the skill to consistently execute the joint to that level.
It’s worth remembering that a piece of furniture is only as strong as it’s weakest joint. So if your dowel joints consistently have strength X, but your M&T joints vary from 0.5X to 2X (not an unrealistic scenario), then you’d still produce a stronger piece of furniture by using weaker dowel joints.
A second reason why it’s a meaningless question is that there’s a massive difference between a joint’s potential strength, and it’s actual strength when executed by the average wood butcher.
Just because lab experiments reveal one joint is stronger than the other means nothing if you personally don’t have the skill to consistently execute the joint to that level.
It’s worth remembering that a piece of furniture is only as strong as it’s weakest joint. So if your dowel joints consistently have strength X, but your M&T joints vary from 0.5X to 2X (not an unrealistic scenario), then you’d still produce a stronger piece of furniture by using weaker dowel joints.