GazPal
Established Member
The area you're falling down is when it boils down to accurately cutting joints without having the cut interfer with the line. Allowances and tolerances fall within the scope of both marking out and cutting and all I've done is mention means of improving your performance, with a heavy basis on my own long term experience as a cabinetmaker & luthier. Nothing more or less, but at the end of the day what you choose to do with the information provided is obviously up to you.
Working to patterns is actually far more accurate than having to re-mark the same joint/design individually on numerous pieces of work. This is by virtue of everything being laid out once on the pattern and simply traced or copied directly from the outline and/or dimensionally accurate gauging rod. You don't strictly need to re-measure every single step on multiple items if you work to a pattern.
I don't know why you seem to feel I need to see a picture of a haunched mortise & tenon joint, but please feel free. An increase in gluing surface area by your assumed 6 - 8% is far better than no increase at all. :wink: It isn't rocket science. :lol:
Tenon saws can and are set to both rip and cross-cut formats and I use both set-ups for my tenon saws. You can use either, but will find most tenon saws are supplied in cross-cut format. Reduce the set and you've something bordering on a flush-cut saw and you avoid tearing adjacent timber by adopting accurate cutting technique.
Working to patterns is actually far more accurate than having to re-mark the same joint/design individually on numerous pieces of work. This is by virtue of everything being laid out once on the pattern and simply traced or copied directly from the outline and/or dimensionally accurate gauging rod. You don't strictly need to re-measure every single step on multiple items if you work to a pattern.
I don't know why you seem to feel I need to see a picture of a haunched mortise & tenon joint, but please feel free. An increase in gluing surface area by your assumed 6 - 8% is far better than no increase at all. :wink: It isn't rocket science. :lol:
Tenon saws can and are set to both rip and cross-cut formats and I use both set-ups for my tenon saws. You can use either, but will find most tenon saws are supplied in cross-cut format. Reduce the set and you've something bordering on a flush-cut saw and you avoid tearing adjacent timber by adopting accurate cutting technique.