Using a wood router to create beautiful joinery
Creating joints to fasten two or most pieces of wood is the common way to build a wood working project. Learning how can be tricky for those who are just getting started in the workshop. There are four common joints that you can make with a router and use for most of your projects.
There are many different types of joinery that a wood worker can use to join two or more pieces of wood together.
Depending on the situation and the amount of stress a joint will be subjected to a wood worker needs to create a joint that will be able to with stand the stress.
Selecting a joint that is going to maximize strength is important. This is determined by the amount of glue surface of the joint and the direction of any stresses the joint will experience.
Housed Dado
Used when making book shelves or other frames a housed dado is the most common joint. It is simply a flat bottomed groove in a piece of stock.
Use your wood router with a straight cutting bit and a straight edge to guide the router is the simplest way to mill a housed dado. Simply clamp the straight edge to the board as a guide for the router base plate. You will have to determine the proper distance from joint that you will need to set your straight edge. Measure the radius of the router base plate and subtract the radius of the bit you are using. This will give the exact distance from the joint your straight edge will need to be clamped.
Once your straight edge is clamped in the proper position simply guide your router through the cut. Take several passes, increasing the depth of the cut with each pass. This way you are able to control the router easier and reduce the work load on the router. Continue to cut and reposition your straight edge until you have cut all the dados.
Stopped Dado
Ideal for shelves or bookcases that don't have a face frame a stopped dado hides the joint to make a project look better. Stopped dados are created the same way you would make a housed dado. Great for shelves and bookcases without face frames a stopped dado allows a woodworker to hide the joint along the front edge. This still provides the strength of the dado joint but stops just short of the front edge.
To make a stopped dado simply mark the joint about an inch from the front edge and stop the router as you get to that mark.
Rabbet Joint
A rabbet joint is simple a groove or dado that is cut along the edge of a piece of stock. The simplest way to form a rabbet joint is to use a rabetting bit in your router. This is a straight cutting bit whose depth of cut is controlled by a guide bearing. Depending on the size of the rabbet you can change the size of the guide bearing.
Rabbets are used mostly along the back edge of a piece of stock to make a recess for a plywood back. They are also ideal for making a recess in a frame for a mirror or piece of glass.
Tongue & Groove Joint
Basically a tongue on one piece of stock that fits into a groove on a mating piece of stock. There is plenty of glue surface area making a tongue and groove a very strong joint.
It is more work creating a T&G joint then it is a rabbet or dado but provides a lot of strength and is quite stable. The groove is best formed with a router, router table and straight cutting bit. You should create a groove that's width is roughly 50% of the thickness of the stock. So with 1" stock your groove should be about 1/2".
Begin by setting up your router in the router table and set the height of the straight cutting bit about 1/16" higher then the length of the tongue. Set up the fence on the router table so you can center the groove. feed the stock through and turn it end for end and feed it through again. This will center the groove on your stock.
Now measure the width of the groove and set the height of the bit to half that value. Feed the mating piece of wood through the router, making a pass on both sides to get a tongue that is perfectly centered.
The four types of joints described above will be used most often in day to day wood working. They will likely make up the majority of simple joints that you make. With all the joints above gluing and clamping the stock together will create a joint stronger the surrounding wood and make for very stable projects.
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