I have gotten a little more progress on my toolbox in the way of mortises.
Between the above four photos and the one below, there was quiet a bit that went on of getting the mortises roughed in. What was shown above was chopping straight down on one long side only. The way I proceeded with the remainder of the roughing was to angle in to the middle from both sides until I broke through then pare roughly to size. The next photo shows the mortises pared to size without the taper.
I am proceeding with the divider mortises differently than Chris in that I will fit the long side dadoes from the mortises/tenons, then use the long side dadoes to transfer to the floor.
Getting rolling - dadoes, mortises and tenons
- Chris Hall
- Site Admin
- Contact:
- Location: Greenfield, Massachusetts
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Re: Getting rolling - dadoes, mortises and tenons
More progress on the long side mortises that will be flared.
- Dan McC
- Raw Log Import
- Location: Vancouver BC
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Re: Getting rolling - dadoes, mortises and tenons
Hi Chris,
You mention that "The main partitions will attach to the floor panel using some wedged floating keys". Also that the main partitions are of Pau Amarillo and later on that the wedged floating keys are of jatoba. Can you explain how the jatoba keys are connected to the pau amarillo partitions? It appears to me that the partitions have flat bottoms.
I am continuing to work away on mine as time permits. I have the partition grooves cut now in the sides and the bottom, and am ready to make the tapered mortices for the partitions. After that I plan to put some shellac on the inside surfaces, then hopefully on to assembly.
Cheers,
Dan
You mention that "The main partitions will attach to the floor panel using some wedged floating keys". Also that the main partitions are of Pau Amarillo and later on that the wedged floating keys are of jatoba. Can you explain how the jatoba keys are connected to the pau amarillo partitions? It appears to me that the partitions have flat bottoms.
I am continuing to work away on mine as time permits. I have the partition grooves cut now in the sides and the bottom, and am ready to make the tapered mortices for the partitions. After that I plan to put some shellac on the inside surfaces, then hopefully on to assembly.
Cheers,
Dan
- Chris Hall
- Site Admin
- Contact:
- Location: Greenfield, Massachusetts
Post
Re: Getting rolling - dadoes, mortises and tenons
Dan,
check out this thread for more on the floating tenons:
http://www.thecarpentryway.com/Carpentr ... f=26&t=135
Keep up the good work
check out this thread for more on the floating tenons:
http://www.thecarpentryway.com/Carpentr ... f=26&t=135
Keep up the good work
- Dan McC
- Raw Log Import
- Location: Vancouver BC
Post
Re: Getting rolling - dadoes, mortises and tenons
Thanks Chris, that's exactly what I was looking for. Don't know how I missed that thread!
Dan
Dan
- Chris Hall
- Site Admin
- Contact:
- Location: Greenfield, Massachusetts
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Re: Getting rolling - dadoes, mortises and tenons
Glad I could point you in the right direction.
- Chris Pyle
- Deshi
- Location: St. Louis, MO
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Re: Getting rolling - dadoes, mortises and tenons
I have a very basic question: When you lay down your centerline, is it horizontal or vertical? Is it based on the symmetry or asymmetry of the joinery?
- Chris Hall
- Site Admin
- Contact:
- Location: Greenfield, Massachusetts
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You can leave the board long in this approach. An alternative would be to marks out and perhaps cut the board to a specified length and then lay off of each cut end or marked line inwards a certain amount. But, in that method, you are already working on a dimension which is established off of another dimension, and thus the chance for error is doubled over the centerline method. Of course, you can check after you have marked in from each end, and you will likely find you are slightly off the desired 20" spacing you were after, say.
Re: Getting rolling - dadoes, mortises and tenons
It can be oriented either way. It's a reference line, helpful when the joinery is marked out relative to a center line. With a box, if the internal dimensions (length and width) are important, then it is convenient to establish a centerline on the stock and mark out half the desired dimension each way. If the connecting walls are 20" apart in the inside surfaces, then you would measure out 10" each direction from the centerline.Chris Pyle wrote:I have a very basic question: When you lay down your centerline, is it horizontal or vertical? Is it based on the symmetry or asymmetry of the joinery?
You can leave the board long in this approach. An alternative would be to marks out and perhaps cut the board to a specified length and then lay off of each cut end or marked line inwards a certain amount. But, in that method, you are already working on a dimension which is established off of another dimension, and thus the chance for error is doubled over the centerline method. Of course, you can check after you have marked in from each end, and you will likely find you are slightly off the desired 20" spacing you were after, say.
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