Hey All -
Okay, I'm still hunting for an article on tablesawn dovetail joints. The
Editor at Pop WW mag was good enough to fax me the article I was after, but
after I got it, that was only part of the story... Hoping someone here
remembers what magazine it was in...
Anyway, I built the jig for cutting DT joints on the TS and it worked pretty
darn well! The only hitch is that I remember *somewhere* that there was a
similar setup that used a series of stop block spacers for setting up the
pins/tails.
The fixture for the TS is essentially a vertical "rip" sled that on one side
holds the pin boards at X angle for cutting the waste out on either side of
the pin. The sled has a single miter runner and you simply swap it left to
right so that the angle is going the right way. The miter runner is at the
peak of a shallow delta shaped sled. To cut the tails, you swap out the
dado blade for either a regular rip blade, or one that has been ground to
your DT angle. You mark out the tails from the pins, turn the jig around
and use it just like you would hold stock against the back fence vertically
on a regular crosscut sled.
Okay, I'm wandering..... anyway, the article had some sort of set up where
you had small blocks to cut out the pins and then the tails as well. I've
looked at the online WW mag index in some detail and haven't found the
article I'm after.
I can tale/post/send pics of this setup if anyone is interested. I did a
test setup in a 10" wide scrap of pine and it fit together without any
paring of the joint - I was pretty impressed overall....
Hope this rings a bell with one of you kind souls....
Thanks!
John Moorhead
John Moorhead wrote:
> Hey All -
>
> Okay, I'm still hunting for an article on tablesawn dovetail joints. The
> Editor at Pop WW mag was good enough to fax me the article I was after, but
> after I got it, that was only part of the story... Hoping someone here
> remembers what magazine it was in...
>
> Anyway, I built the jig for cutting DT joints on the TS and it worked pretty
> darn well! The only hitch is that I remember *somewhere* that there was a
> similar setup that used a series of stop block spacers for setting up the
> pins/tails.
>
> The fixture for the TS is essentially a vertical "rip" sled that on one side
> holds the pin boards at X angle for cutting the waste out on either side of
> the pin. The sled has a single miter runner and you simply swap it left to
> right so that the angle is going the right way. The miter runner is at the
> peak of a shallow delta shaped sled. To cut the tails, you swap out the
> dado blade for either a regular rip blade, or one that has been ground to
> your DT angle. You mark out the tails from the pins, turn the jig around
> and use it just like you would hold stock against the back fence vertically
> on a regular crosscut sled.
>
> Okay, I'm wandering..... anyway, the article had some sort of set up where
> you had small blocks to cut out the pins and then the tails as well. I've
> looked at the online WW mag index in some detail and haven't found the
> article I'm after.
>
> I can tale/post/send pics of this setup if anyone is interested. I did a
> test setup in a 10" wide scrap of pine and it fit together without any
> paring of the joint - I was pretty impressed overall....
Sure, post some pics or email them to me. Thanks.
R
John Moorhead wrote:
> Hey All -
>
> Okay, I'm still hunting for an article on tablesawn dovetail joints. The
> Editor at Pop WW mag was good enough to fax me the article I was after, but
> after I got it, that was only part of the story... Hoping someone here
> remembers what magazine it was in...
>
>SNIP
> Hope this rings a bell with one of you kind souls....
>
> Thanks!
>
> John Moorhead
John,
Don't know about the magazine article but Mark Duginski goes over a
procedure for cutting dovetails on the table saw in his book "Mastering
Woodworking Machines". He uses a stopblock system for both the pins
and tails. Maybe this was the source of the article or the article was
later included in the book. Its also covered in a video of the same
title. Both are from Taunton Press.
Ed
> Anyway, I built the jig for cutting DT joints on the TS and it worked
> pretty darn well! The only hitch is that I remember *somewhere* that
> there was a similar setup that used a series of stop block spacers for
> setting up the pins/tails.
>
You may be referring to box or finger joints.
Look here http://www.sentex.net/~mwandel/workshop/fingerjoint.html
or http://www.sawdustmaking.com/Box%20Joint/boxjointjig.html
Pat -
Nope, this ain't it, but thanks for the input - I've seen the box joint jig
before - pretty cool....
Thanks!
John
"Pat" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>> Anyway, I built the jig for cutting DT joints on the TS and it worked
>> pretty darn well! The only hitch is that I remember *somewhere* that
>> there was a similar setup that used a series of stop block spacers for
>> setting up the pins/tails.
>>
>
> You may be referring to box or finger joints.
> Look here http://www.sentex.net/~mwandel/workshop/fingerjoint.html
> or http://www.sawdustmaking.com/Box%20Joint/boxjointjig.html
>
>