Beau":10l23cgp said:
Never done any carful tests but often snap offcuts from butt jointed boards and the thin lines do fail easily. Dam shame as no one wants to see ugly glue lines running down tabletops so guess if you want nicely glued up tops plane them nice and smooth but put joints in to keep it strong.
My experience with PVA is the exact opposite.
Two carefully prepared boards (hand planed not machine finished), possibly with a small amount of "spring", thin coating of PVA on each surface to ensure complete wetting out, very heavy cramping, no biscuits or dowels or dominos; in my experience this all adds up to invisible glue lines and the strongest possible joint.
The devil's in the detail though, and hand planing the joint surface consistently, accurately and quickly really is a high skill challenge.
The workshop I trained at only takes fairly experienced woodworkers, and one of the early tasks was jointing up a wide surface. Their particular recipe was zero spring, but meticulous and extensive testing with a straight edge and a square of known accuracy. It was sobering to see furniture makers with quite a few years under their belts having to make multiple attempts before achieving this high standard, and by the way I was no better!
My take out is that woodworkers need to be honest with themselves, if you're genuinely good with hand tools then this is the route to the best possible joint. If you're not quite at this level but you've got excellent quality and well set up machinery with sharp tooling then you can 90% of the way there straight from the machine. However, if your skills and equipment aren't right out of the top drawer then the most reliable way to achieve "okay-ish" jointed up boards is with stopped plywood splines and/or a gap filling glue like Cascamite.