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3 Steps to Long-Lasting Woodwork Attachment
Follow these steps for creating mortise-and-tenon joints
Susan Bady
March 1, 2009
Custom Builder
![]() A simple mortise-and-tenon joint can be finished in less than an hour, but more complicated ones may take up to four hours. |
Here's how the woodworkers at Sweet Timber Frames in Mount Desert, Maine, create mortise-and-tenon joints:
- The mortise is laid out and cut with a hollow chisel mortising machine. The machine removes most of the wood from the pocket. The rest is cleaned out by hand with a 2-inch framing chisel.
- The tenon is laid out and cut with a Japanese hand saw, then pared along guidelines using a hand chisel or rabbet block plane.
- Holes are drilled in both timbers for the wooden peg that will attach them. The tenon peg holes are offset or drawbored to lock the timbers together tightly.
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© 2009, Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All Rights Reserved.










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