Impossible Dovetails: Baffle Your Friends With Perplexing Joints
Impossible Dovetails: Baffle Your Friends With Perplexing Joints
HO ME / TE CH NI QU ES / IM PO SSI BL E DO VE TA IL S
By Jock Holmen
Posted November 30, 2020
In Techniques
2
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So, what if you can’t lift out the dovetailed board? How do you
disassemble the joint? And how would you assemble this joint in the
first place? Those are the questions to ask when you show a friend the
dovetail joints shown here. These puzzling joints appear to wedge
together in more than one plane—an impossible feat for traditional
dovetails!
Photo 1. Cut the dovetail cheeks. The best strategy is to stay outside the layout lines.
The secret behind these joints, of course, is that they don’t assemble
the traditional way. The first two are elaborate sliding dovetails and
the last is a complex pivoting joint. There’s no simple method to
machine these joints; they must be cut primarily by hand. And
creating them will test your hand-dovetailing skills, because of their
compound angles and large joint surfaces.
Photo 2. Remove the waste with a coping saw.
Use the same steps you would follow to cut dovetails by hand to
create all three joints. Start with pieces that are cut perfectly square.
Lay out the dovetails and sockets on each piece. Clearly mark the
waste areas. Make sure your tools are razor sharp. Cut the cheeks
first (Photo 1). The safest method is to cut outside the lines. Next,
remove the waste (Photo 2). Finish by paring to the line (Photos 3
and 4). It’s best to scribe or knife the layout lines, so you can
precisely bed your chisel for paring; if you pencil the lines, make sure
they’re crisp and narrow.
On a typical lap joint, Piece A would simply press into Piece B. Well,
that can’t happen here. Neither can the two pieces pull apart. So what
gives? A clever version of a tapered sliding dovetail, that’s what (Fig.
B).
Fig. B.
1. Lay out the dovetail and mark the waste. Cut the 1/8″
bottom shoulder on the tablesaw.
2. Raise and tilt the blade to cut the tenon’s angled bottom
face.
3. Use a handsaw to crosscut the dovetail’s square shoulders.
4. Cut the dovetail’s compound-beveled cheeks.
5. Precisely pare the cheeks and shoulders to the layout lines.
Piece B
What to ease
Fortunately, only the top face and outside end of this joint show; the
other hidden joint surfaces can be “adjusted.” The sloped bottom face
of Piece A and its beveled dovetail cheeks are the easiest surfaces to
access. When you hollow these surfaces, however, do not disturb the
narrow wedge-shaped end of the tenon, or the edges of its dovetail-
shaped top surface.
The flared ends of the dovetail pins mean this corner joint can’t
disassemble the traditional way. And no evidence of a sliding joint
appears on the back side of the joint, so it can’t go together like the
double-dovetailed tenon in the previous joint.
Fig. D.
The secrets are dovetails that slope at three different angles and
sockets with coved shoulders (Figs. C and D). They allow the boards
to slide together in line and then rotate 90˚ to form the corner. For the
record, the slope of the dovetails on the outside face of Piece A
matches the sockets on the end of Piece B, the slope of the dovetails
on the end of A matches the sockets on the outside face of B, and the
slope of the dovetails on the inside face of A matches the sockets on
the inside face of B. The coved sockets in Piece A provide clearance
for the outside corner of Piece B as the boards pivot.
Assemble this joint in two steps. First, with both pieces oriented
outside-face out, slide Piece B into Piece A from the back. When the
pieces are flush, the dovetails on the outside faces don’t fit.
Carefully rotate the pieces to complete the joint. Bear the inside
corners of A against the shoulders of B as you rotate.
Follow the same procedure used to cut Piece B, with this exception:
Hollow out the socket shoulders, leaving tiny (1/32″ wide) flat lips at
the outside face to seat the joint (Figs. C and D).