30 minutes of RCosman's droning is more than I can stand, does he say anything interesting?
Finger joints are closer to long grain joints and it’s been pretty conclusively proved that that kind of joint, even with a humble PVA is stronger than the wood itself. Using those kind of joints will give you solid wood sheet goods. I have 2440 x 1200 panels of pine and rubber wood. They are an excellent alternative to plywood, this is an exampleIn recent years we have started to C24 structural softwood timbers with finger joints coming from Germany. Admittedly in sizes like 7 x 3 and 8 x 3in, not the biggest stuff we use, and only graded for interior use, but I think that does indicate something about modern glues used in a controlled environment
Finger joints are closer to long grain joints and it’s been pretty conclusively proved that that kind of joint, even with a humble PVA is stronger than the wood itself. Using those kind of joints will give you solid wood sheet goods. I have 2440 x 1200 panels of pine and rubber wood. They are an excellent alternative to plywood, this is an example
View attachment 118060
it happens to be pine
What is the point of the video?
There’s no myth.
You normally don’t glue endgrain to endgrain as a continuous piece of wood is better.
You do glue edge to edge as the glue is usually as strong as the wood, so you have not created a weakness.
To describe that as a myth would be like describing the myth that everyone should eat yellow snow, I’m looking forward to his test of that in the next video.
That’s not a myth, that’s a lack of understandingMyth: "widely held but false belief or idea" It's the literal definition.
The myth is that long grain glue joints must be stronger because the wood breaks before the glue. But it's the wood that's weak, not the joint that's strong.
How we use glue joints doesn't factor in to this teat. Pointing out that a continuous piece is stronger than end grain to end grain just shows you still don't really get the concept on display here.
That’s not a myth, that’s a lack of understanding
It’s not widely held!
Oh-Oh, better move this over to the 'controversial topics' it's beginning to get heated...
The glue is stronger than the wood.You do glue edge to edge as the glue is usually as strong as the wood, so you have not created a weakness.
That was exactly what I said, though phrased very slightly differently so what was the point of the reply?Yes it is very strong, but very little of the gluing surface is true end grain to end grain.
Most of the glue surfaces on finger/comb joints are cross grain to cross grain which is why it’s so strong.
Only the tips of the fingers are truly end grain to end grain.
That was exactly what I said, though phrased very slightly differently so what was the point of the reply?
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