I am using some coat pegs that measure 0.493". That is a pretty sloppy fit
in a 0.500" hole, but other than hoping I can find an undersized drill bit,
I am not sure what to do about it.
Presumably the glue will swell the pieces a bit; but will it be enough for a
secure installation?
The pegs are a bit too expensive to waste one on a test.
On Thu, 15 Feb 2007 20:40:05 GMT, "Toller" <[email protected]> wrote:
>I am using some coat pegs that measure 0.493". That is a pretty sloppy fit
>in a 0.500" hole, but other than hoping I can find an undersized drill bit,
>I am not sure what to do about it.
>Presumably the glue will swell the pieces a bit; but will it be enough for a
>secure installation?
>The pegs are a bit too expensive to waste one on a test.
The only time I used any coat pegs they were a tight fit, and the
tenon flared out a bit just below the flange. I glued em, but the way
I had to drive them in I think they'd have stayed in there for my
lifetime without any glue.
I think I'd try a 31/64, give the bit a little wiggle to enlarge it a
tad, ease the edges of the peg and drive the sucker in there. Will
depend on the two woods how much you can compress the fibers, and the
size of the board and location of the hole how much you risk splitting
the board.
-Leuf
On Feb 15, 12:40 pm, "Toller" <[email protected]> wrote:
> I am using some coat pegs that measure 0.493". That is a pretty sloppy fit
> in a 0.500" hole
Also, the pegs will get (just before glueing) a hit from some
sandpaper so the glue will adhere?
Two good possibilities: saw a slot in the peg, and wedge it
slightly (the wedge and slot will be hidden in use).
Or, get the right size drill. 12.5mm is .492125 inch, should
work well. 31/64 is .484375, so if you rough the
peg with some 80grit sandpaper, it'd work, too.
To get an accurate diameter hole in wood is not easy, unless
you use Forstner or (sharp) auger bits. To do it with twist drills,
first make a pilot hole with 13/32", then clean it up with the
fullsize drill. Wood is capable of grabbing and steering the
bit that removes most of the wood, but a careful hand-held
drill job that removes only the last .080 or so should work well.
> I am using some coat pegs that measure 0.493". That is a pretty sloppy fit in a 0.500" hole, but other than hoping I can find an undersized drill bit, I am not sure what to do about it. ...
Try using a "fox wedge" --- that's a concealed wedge in the tenon that
expands the tenon to jam tight in the hole. Only make sure the wedge
doesn't bottom out and prevent the tenon from seating completely.
A couple of hints: Saw a slit in the tenon across the grain for the
wedge to fit into ... Don't make the wedge from a hard, brittle wood
like cherry. Use a wood that will give and compress slightly. I find
red oak works fine.
On Feb 15, 1:40=EF=BF=BDpm, "Toller" <[email protected]> wrote:
> I am using some coat pegs that measure 0.493". =A0That is a pretty sloppy=
fit
> in a 0.500" hole, but other than hoping I can find an undersized drill bi=
t,
> I am not sure what to do about it.
> Presumably the glue will swell the pieces a bit; but will it be enough fo=
r a
> secure installation?
> The pegs are a bit too expensive to waste one on a test.
If you are able to - put a small brad in the hole such that it is
driven into the peg when you drive the peg home. With some glue in the
hole of course.
Bob AZ
Toller wrote:
> I am using some coat pegs that measure 0.493". That is a pretty sloppy fit
> in a 0.500" hole, but other than hoping I can find an undersized drill bit,
> I am not sure what to do about it.
I'd go with either epoxy or maybe the "chair doctor" glue that is
designed to swell the wood.
Chris
Lew Hodgett wrote:
>
>
>
> Toller wrote:
> > I am using some coat pegs that measure 0.493". That is a pretty sloppy
> > fit in a 0.500" hole, but other than hoping I can find an undersized
> > drill bit, I am not sure what to do about it.
>
> Don't sweat the petty stuff and don't pet the sweaty stuff.
>
> Drill 17/32" dia holes and use epoxy.
>
> Lew
I can see using the epoxy but I have to marvel at the wisdom of drilling
the holes, already slightly loose, .031 larger than they already are. Is
this to give the epoxy room to swell?
Bill
--
Make yourself an honest man, and then you may be sure that there is one
rascal less in the world.
Thomas Carlyle (1795 - 1881)
http://nmwoodworks.com
---
avast! Antivirus: Outbound message clean.
Virus Database (VPS): 000714-2, 02/16/2007
Tested on: 2/17/2007 2:24:09 AM
avast! - copyright (c) 1988-2007 ALWIL Software.
http://www.avast.com
Bill in Detroit wrote:
> I can see using the epoxy but I have to marvel at the wisdom of drilling
> the holes, already slightly loose, .031 larger than they already are. Is
> this to give the epoxy room to swell?
Not really.
I have found that stronger joint are formed when thickened epoxy is used
and joints aren't starved.
If this were my job, would probably add a little Cab-O-Sil (fumed
silica) to the epoxy to thicken it, then pour some in the hole and push
the pin in allowing the epoxy to ooze totally around the pin.
BTW, why would epoxy swell?
Lew
"whit3rd" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> On Feb 15, 12:40 pm, "Toller" <[email protected]> wrote:
>> I am using some coat pegs that measure 0.493". That is a pretty sloppy
>> fit
>> in a 0.500" hole
>
> Also, the pegs will get (just before glueing) a hit from some
> sandpaper so the glue will adhere?
>
> Two good possibilities: saw a slot in the peg, and wedge it
> slightly (the wedge and slot will be hidden in use).
> Or, get the right size drill. 12.5mm is .492125 inch, should
> work well. 31/64 is .484375, so if you rough the
> peg with some 80grit sandpaper, it'd work, too.
>
31/64 is too small. I can probably sand it down to fit as you say.
But I am tight on the depth and wanted to use a forstners bit to avoid
cutting through the backside.
Not that anyone will see it, but still...
I will try some from a different store and see if they are better.
Thanks to all for your help.
> To get an accurate diameter hole in wood is not easy, unless
> you use Forstner or (sharp) auger bits. To do it with twist drills,
> first make a pilot hole with 13/32", then clean it up with the
> fullsize drill. Wood is capable of grabbing and steering the
> bit that removes most of the wood, but a careful hand-held
> drill job that removes only the last .080 or so should work well.
>
I do not know where you are. Here we have a cold winter and hot summer.
During the winter the house heating system works a lot. Even if the pegs
measure 0.50 outside dia. they do shrink to the point that they do fall out.
To cope with this change in temperature and wood expansion and contraction I
have use a dab of gorilla glue. This glue does expand and flex when the
ambient temperature changes. Any expanding glue sold by other manufactures
should do a good job. The chair doctor glue as stated earlier on this thread
is, also, a good choice. I also keep all wooden dowels, pegs and biscuits
in air tight container stored in ambient temperature.
As for odd size pegs I make them, when needed, on the lathe and size them
accordingly with the drill bit allowing for a snug fit.
"Chris Friesen" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Toller wrote:
>> I am using some coat pegs that measure 0.493". That is a pretty sloppy
>> fit in a 0.500" hole, but other than hoping I can find an undersized
>> drill bit, I am not sure what to do about it.
>
> I'd go with either epoxy or maybe the "chair doctor" glue that is designed
> to swell the wood.
>
> Chris
"Toller" wrote in message
> I am using some coat pegs that measure 0.493". That is a pretty sloppy
fit
> in a 0.500" hole, but other than hoping I can find an undersized drill
bit,
> I am not sure what to do about it.
> Presumably the glue will swell the pieces a bit; but will it be enough for
a
> secure installation?
> The pegs are a bit too expensive to waste one on a test.
Perfect time for epoxy ... you will then be able to sleep at night and not
worry about it.
Until I snapped to epoxy, some joints that I did in years past still niggle
me a bit at the odd time.
--
www.e-woodshop.net
Last update: 2/07/07
Toller wrote:
> I am using some coat pegs that measure 0.493". That is a pretty
sloppy
> fit in a 0.500" hole, but other than hoping I can find an undersized
> drill bit, I am not sure what to do about it.
Don't sweat the petty stuff and don't pet the sweaty stuff.
Drill 17/32" dia holes and use epoxy.
Lew
If they go in a blind hole, saw a slot in the end that goes into the hole.
Insert a small wedge in the kerf such that when you tap them into the hole,
the wedge is forced in. A little glue along with it and they're there for
life.
"Toller" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> I am using some coat pegs that measure 0.493". That is a pretty sloppy
fit
> in a 0.500" hole, but other than hoping I can find an undersized drill
bit,
> I am not sure what to do about it.
> Presumably the glue will swell the pieces a bit; but will it be enough for
a
> secure installation?
> The pegs are a bit too expensive to waste one on a test.
>
>
Toller wrote:
> I am using some coat pegs that measure 0.493". That is a pretty sloppy fit
> in a 0.500" hole, but other than hoping I can find an undersized drill bit,
> I am not sure what to do about it.
> Presumably the glue will swell the pieces a bit; but will it be enough for a
> secure installation?
> The pegs are a bit too expensive to waste one on a test.
>
>
Do you have a wooden handled hammer? Look at how the handle is attached
to the head. Use the same technique. cut a slot in the end of your
pegs. Cut some wooden wedges slightly larger than the slot. When you
assemble the parts, the wedges willl spread the two halves of the
slotted peg enough to tighten them in the holes.
"Toller" <[email protected]> writes:
> I am using some coat pegs that measure 0.493". That is a pretty sloppy fit
> in a 0.500" hole, but other than hoping I can find an undersized drill bit,
> I am not sure what to do about it.
> Presumably the glue will swell the pieces a bit; but will it be enough for a
> secure installation?
You're talking about a 3-4 thou gap, I think the glue will fill this
just fine. However, don't count on the swelling - it may swell at
first, but it will shrink back again as it dries and regains
equilibrium.
If it bothers you, use epoxy instead of yellow glue. Epoxy is
structural, yellow glue isn't.