SlowSteve
Established Member
Hi,
Quick question if I may?
I am finding that I can produce loose tenon work pretty well and I want to keep going with it and "use it in anger" so to speak. I cobbled together a bodge of a DIY slot morticer which is doing good repeatable work until my Pantarouter is finished and for some reason I am proving very bad at making good tenon shoulders.
As a general rule, should I make the loose tenons from the same material that I am joining, or something else? For example, I have a lot of pine, larch and beech to join over the next few months - should I use matching loose tenons, or would I be better using some generic "tough" wood - like oak or hard maple or iroko - for all of them.
My thinking is that if I use a really tough wood then it possible adds more strength than using something like, for example, pine for the tenons. And then I could batch out a load of it in one go and it's one less thing to think about. Whats worrying me is that I'm not sure how the gluing will work if I am gluing radically different woods - for example if I was doing oak tenons into pine where there is a major difference in strength.
Any thoughts or idea's would be very gratefully received.
Steve
Quick question if I may?
I am finding that I can produce loose tenon work pretty well and I want to keep going with it and "use it in anger" so to speak. I cobbled together a bodge of a DIY slot morticer which is doing good repeatable work until my Pantarouter is finished and for some reason I am proving very bad at making good tenon shoulders.
As a general rule, should I make the loose tenons from the same material that I am joining, or something else? For example, I have a lot of pine, larch and beech to join over the next few months - should I use matching loose tenons, or would I be better using some generic "tough" wood - like oak or hard maple or iroko - for all of them.
My thinking is that if I use a really tough wood then it possible adds more strength than using something like, for example, pine for the tenons. And then I could batch out a load of it in one go and it's one less thing to think about. Whats worrying me is that I'm not sure how the gluing will work if I am gluing radically different woods - for example if I was doing oak tenons into pine where there is a major difference in strength.
Any thoughts or idea's would be very gratefully received.
Steve