Although I'm slowly getting better, I've always had difficulty when chopping out mortices in that I occasionally have the chisel skew to the long axis of the mortice. This obviously results in too much of a cut on one side and too little on the other. Do it a lot and the mortice can end up being physically very sloppy indeed.
I had an idea which I tried yesterday to counter this and the results were very good. I'm sure somebody else must have come up with the same thing but I've never seen an account of it anywhere so here goes. Once you've got the mortice marked, take the combination square and mark at the intervals at which you wish to chop - say 1/8" - at right angles to the length of the mortice and from one end to the other. You end up with it looking like a regularly spaced bar code.
What this more or less guarantees is that your first chop at each line of the bar code is dead straight i.e. not skewed. I still managed to get one or two little twists but far fewer than previously and as a result the completed mortices needed much less tidying up. The only penalty is an extra 30 secs or so in the marking of each mortice.
Does anybody else do this?
I had an idea which I tried yesterday to counter this and the results were very good. I'm sure somebody else must have come up with the same thing but I've never seen an account of it anywhere so here goes. Once you've got the mortice marked, take the combination square and mark at the intervals at which you wish to chop - say 1/8" - at right angles to the length of the mortice and from one end to the other. You end up with it looking like a regularly spaced bar code.
What this more or less guarantees is that your first chop at each line of the bar code is dead straight i.e. not skewed. I still managed to get one or two little twists but far fewer than previously and as a result the completed mortices needed much less tidying up. The only penalty is an extra 30 secs or so in the marking of each mortice.
Does anybody else do this?