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"nireedmot"

19/10/2005 7:22 PM

How do you troubleshoot a M&T joint?

Hi there-

I hand-sawed and -chopped a double tenon with haunches
on a 17" wide glue-up for a bed footboard. It goes in
most of the way into the mortised leg and then stops.
Is there a trick for how to tell what the problem is?
How can you tell exactly where along the 17" of joint
the problem is when nothing's visible?

-Tom


This topic has 13 replies

Aa

"Andy"

in reply to "nireedmot" on 19/10/2005 7:22 PM

19/10/2005 8:40 PM

I haven't tried this, so someone else please correct me if it won't
work, but why not color the sides and end of your tenon with chalk or a
soft-lead pencil, try it in the mortise, and see where the chalk rubbed
off most inside the mortise? Seems to me like it should work. In the
past I've always been able to figure out which sides need more chopping
or paring by just wiggling the tenon piece and noting where it feels
like it is stuck. Does that make sense?
Good luck,
Andy

Sb

"SonomaProducts.com"

in reply to "nireedmot" on 19/10/2005 7:22 PM

19/10/2005 9:32 PM

Oooh, Andy was too fast on the gun. Yes, chalk on the tennons. To make
it easiser to find the bad spot just chalk them close to where they
start to bind.

MR

"Mike Reed"

in reply to "nireedmot" on 19/10/2005 7:22 PM

20/10/2005 6:36 AM

If you suspect tha the mortise is the problem, take a narrower (2")
piece of wood, and cut a tenon in it. Drag this through the mortise to
see where it catches. If necessary, thin the tenon slightly so you
won't be wearing the inner surfaces of the mortise.

If the tenon might be the problem, then, cut a mortise-sized dado in
maybe a 3" length of stock and drag that along the length of the tenon
to see where there's interference. If you must hand-chop, then chop a
3" mortise into a longer piece, then cut the ends off to turn it into a
dado.

...just some ideas,

-Mike

nireedmot wrote:
> Hi there-
>
> I hand-sawed and -chopped a double tenon with haunches
> on a 17" wide glue-up for a bed footboard. It goes in
> most of the way into the mortised leg and then stops.
> Is there a trick for how to tell what the problem is?
> How can you tell exactly where along the 17" of joint
> the problem is when nothing's visible?
>
> -Tom

AD

Andy Dingley

in reply to "nireedmot" on 19/10/2005 7:22 PM

20/10/2005 2:25 PM

On 19 Oct 2005 19:22:05 -0700, "nireedmot" <[email protected]> wrote:

>How can you tell exactly where along the 17" of joint
>the problem is when nothing's visible?

I have an engineer's (metal machinist's) depth gauge. It's a chunk of
thick steel with a thin wire that slides vertically through it, with a
small clamp. Excellent gadget for probing how deep mortices are clean
to.

Another useful gadget is an internal caliper with a screw thread
adjuster. Hard to use as you need to hold it square, but it will often
pick up a narrow spot that needs paring.

LJ

Larry Jaques

in reply to "nireedmot" on 19/10/2005 7:22 PM

20/10/2005 7:00 AM

On 19 Oct 2005 19:22:05 -0700, with neither quill nor qualm,
"nireedmot" <[email protected]> quickly quoth:

>Hi there-
>
>I hand-sawed and -chopped a double tenon with haunches
>on a 17" wide glue-up for a bed footboard. It goes in
>most of the way into the mortised leg and then stops.
>Is there a trick for how to tell what the problem is?
>How can you tell exactly where along the 17" of joint
>the problem is when nothing's visible?

Ah, but it IS visible if you know what to look for. As you assemble a
joint, the wood will burnish at any heavy contact point. Look for
shiny spots on the tenon and in the mortise. Pare or sand those down
and try again. Repeat until you have a snug joint which fully comes
together.

You would also be better served by several tenons rather than a single
long one. The footboard will probably crack on you as the wood in the
panel dries. If I were doing this and had already cut a long tenon,
I'd probably glue it only in the center of the mortise, about 2", then
rely on the rails to provide the majority of the strength.

G'luck!


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ma

max

in reply to "nireedmot" on 19/10/2005 7:22 PM

20/10/2005 4:57 AM

Use a set of calipers to mic the width and thickness of the tenon to see if
it is consistent. If it gets thicker toward the shoulder you can reduce the
thickness or width. If it the same all the way across the tenon the mortise
is to small at the bottom or the tenon is too long.
max

> In article <[email protected]>,
> "nireedmot" <[email protected]> writes:
>> most of the way into the mortised leg and then stops.
>> Is there a trick for how to tell what the problem is?
>> How can you tell exactly where along the 17" of joint
>> the problem is when nothing's visible?
>
> Its the part of the tenon that gets slightly squished and
> maybe shiny. You'll have to look *real* close. Is it
> bottoming out or just getting stuck? Try taking the edge
> off the edges, too.
>
> Chris

Sk

"Swingman"

in reply to "nireedmot" on 19/10/2005 7:22 PM

20/10/2005 8:20 AM


"nireedmot" wrote in message
> Hi there-
>
> I hand-sawed and -chopped a double tenon with haunches
> on a 17" wide glue-up for a bed footboard. It goes in
> most of the way into the mortised leg and then stops.
> Is there a trick for how to tell what the problem is?
> How can you tell exactly where along the 17" of joint
> the problem is when nothing's visible?

If you look real close you should see that the high side will generally be
shiny on both parts from the friction of the trial fit. Those are obviously
the areas to spend your time on.

Since it's a double, you also may have a situation where the mortises were
not cut parallel, which may require some shimming once you get past the
mating of the two components.

--
www.e-woodshop.net
Last update: 10/16/05

sD

[email protected] (Doug Miller)

in reply to "nireedmot" on 19/10/2005 7:22 PM

20/10/2005 3:20 AM

In article <[email protected]>, "nireedmot" <[email protected]> wrote:
>Hi there-
>
>I hand-sawed and -chopped a double tenon with haunches
>on a 17" wide glue-up for a bed footboard. It goes in
>most of the way into the mortised leg and then stops.
>Is there a trick for how to tell what the problem is?
>How can you tell exactly where along the 17" of joint
>the problem is when nothing's visible?

I'm assuming that the problem must be in the mortise, as any problem with the
tenon should be instantly obvious. I'm guessing there's a spot, somewhere,
that you didn't get chopped out deep enough.

Is there some reason you can't look into the mortise with a flashlight? That
ought to show you where the shallow spots (if any) are.

If the problem is that the tenon is being pinched (i.e. tenon too thick, or
mortise too narrow) somewhere along the way.. make a test fit, then take them
apart, and examine the tenon on both sides for signs of wear or compressed
wood fibers. That will tell you where the fit is tight.

--
Regards,
Doug Miller (alphageek at milmac dot com)

It's time to throw all their damned tea in the harbor again.

SP

"Steve Peterson"

in reply to "nireedmot" on 19/10/2005 7:22 PM

20/10/2005 3:31 PM

This sounds like a good candidate for loose tenon joints. Are you too far
along and too committed to integral tenon?

Steve

"Bruce Barnett" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> "Mike Reed" <[email protected]> writes:
>
>> If the tenon might be the problem, then, cut a mortise-sized dado in
>> maybe a 3" length of stock and drag that along the length of the tenon
>> to see where there's interference.
>
> I suppose you can glue up a scrap making sure it's the "official"
> mortise dimensions. Might be easier than cutting a dado, if you can
> wait for the glue to dry.
>
> --
> Sending unsolicited commercial e-mail to this account incurs a fee of
> $500 per message, and acknowledges the legality of this contract.

sD

[email protected] (Doug Miller)

in reply to "nireedmot" on 19/10/2005 7:22 PM

20/10/2005 12:40 PM

In article <[email protected]>, "Andy" <[email protected]> wrote:
>I haven't tried this, so someone else please correct me if it won't
>work, but why not color the sides and end of your tenon with chalk or a
>soft-lead pencil, try it in the mortise, and see where the chalk rubbed
>off most inside the mortise? Seems to me like it should work.

IMO it almost certainly would work to identify the problem area. I've never
tried it, though, because I worry that the chalk or graphite may interfere
with the glue bond. Maybe I'll try an experiment some day...

> In the
>past I've always been able to figure out which sides need more chopping
>or paring by just wiggling the tenon piece and noting where it feels
>like it is stuck. Does that make sense?

That's what works for me most of the time...

--
Regards,
Doug Miller (alphageek at milmac dot com)

It's time to throw all their damned tea in the harbor again.

cC

[email protected] (Chris Richmond - MD6-FDC ~)

in reply to "nireedmot" on 19/10/2005 7:22 PM

20/10/2005 4:32 AM

In article <[email protected]>,
"nireedmot" <[email protected]> writes:
>most of the way into the mortised leg and then stops.
>Is there a trick for how to tell what the problem is?
>How can you tell exactly where along the 17" of joint
>the problem is when nothing's visible?

Its the part of the tenon that gets slightly squished and
maybe shiny. You'll have to look *real* close. Is it
bottoming out or just getting stuck? Try taking the edge
off the edges, too.

Chris

--
Chris Richmond | I don't speak for Intel & vise versa

BB

Bruce Barnett

in reply to "nireedmot" on 19/10/2005 7:22 PM

20/10/2005 3:20 PM

"Mike Reed" <[email protected]> writes:

> If the tenon might be the problem, then, cut a mortise-sized dado in
> maybe a 3" length of stock and drag that along the length of the tenon
> to see where there's interference.

I suppose you can glue up a scrap making sure it's the "official"
mortise dimensions. Might be easier than cutting a dado, if you can
wait for the glue to dry.

--
Sending unsolicited commercial e-mail to this account incurs a fee of
$500 per message, and acknowledges the legality of this contract.

BB

Bruce Barnett

in reply to "nireedmot" on 19/10/2005 7:22 PM

20/10/2005 8:05 PM

"Steve Peterson" <[email protected]> writes:

> This sounds like a good candidate for loose tenon joints. Are you too far
> along and too committed to integral tenon?

I'm not having the problem. Mike suggested cutting a dummy mortise to
find why the real M&T wasn't fitting.

I'm just saying instead of cutting a dado, which will fit 2 sides, and
may not be deep enough, to glue up a mock motise with p`4 pieces of
plywood. A tablesaw can cut pieces squarely. You might be able to
use a rubber band just to hold the pieces together.

Personally - I would first try the "look for the shiny bits" method.
Or inside and outside calipers (if you have them).
And only use the mock-up if you can't find the problem.

--
Sending unsolicited commercial e-mail to this account incurs a fee of
$500 per message, and acknowledges the legality of this contract.


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