Hello,
This is the first time I am going to cut wedged through tenons for a sawbench. They are 40 mm long, 12 mm wide and 40 mm deep + 8 mm protruding past the other end of the through mortice. I have already cut the mortices (doing my best to look neat from the outside face). I am doing them in beech with walnut wedges.
Do you have any tips how to make them right on the first time? There is a lot of conflicting advice on youtube, so I would like to know what works for you.
e.g.
- wedge angle
-offset for splay on the show face of the through mortice (is it the same as desired width of the wedge on the show face)?
- splay depth ( to the middle of the mortice, to the base?)
- relief hole location and size
- kerf distance from the edge of the tenon
-kerf width and position relative to the hole (center of the hole or inside tangent line?
- how to make wedges look equal after hammering them in (not Laurel and Hardy version)
- how to cut wedges with a hand saw
- any other pitfalls I am not aware of that can ruin the piece.
Thank you very much.
This is the first time I am going to cut wedged through tenons for a sawbench. They are 40 mm long, 12 mm wide and 40 mm deep + 8 mm protruding past the other end of the through mortice. I have already cut the mortices (doing my best to look neat from the outside face). I am doing them in beech with walnut wedges.
Do you have any tips how to make them right on the first time? There is a lot of conflicting advice on youtube, so I would like to know what works for you.
e.g.
- wedge angle
-offset for splay on the show face of the through mortice (is it the same as desired width of the wedge on the show face)?
- splay depth ( to the middle of the mortice, to the base?)
- relief hole location and size
- kerf distance from the edge of the tenon
-kerf width and position relative to the hole (center of the hole or inside tangent line?
- how to make wedges look equal after hammering them in (not Laurel and Hardy version)
- how to cut wedges with a hand saw
- any other pitfalls I am not aware of that can ruin the piece.
Thank you very much.