0% found this document useful (0 votes)
209 views13 pages

Impossible Dovetails: Baffle Your Friends With Perplexing Joints

These impossible dovetail joints appear to wedge together in more than one plane through complex sliding and pivoting motions. They require precise cutting and fitting by hand, as there is no machine method. The joints should be glued together once fitted to prevent damage. Hollowing slight areas that won't be visible can aid assembly by reducing friction. Instructions are provided to cut each joint, including layout, sawing, and paring steps.

Uploaded by

Carlos
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
209 views13 pages

Impossible Dovetails: Baffle Your Friends With Perplexing Joints

These impossible dovetail joints appear to wedge together in more than one plane through complex sliding and pivoting motions. They require precise cutting and fitting by hand, as there is no machine method. The joints should be glued together once fitted to prevent damage. Hollowing slight areas that won't be visible can aid assembly by reducing friction. Instructions are provided to cut each joint, including layout, sawing, and paring steps.

Uploaded by

Carlos
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 13

Impossible Dovetails

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

We may receive a commission when you use our affiliate links. However, this does not
impact our recommendations.

Baffle your friends with perplexing joints


Press a dovetailed board into another board with matching sockets,
and you’ve created woodworking’s most iconic joint. The dovetails
and sockets wedge the boards together, so the joint can’t pull apart;
the only way to disassemble it is to lift the dovetailed board back out
of the sockets.

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!

Test your hand tool skills

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.

Unlike most wooden puzzles, these joints shouldn’t be constantly


assembled and disassembled. The pieces include fragile short grain
that can easily break and delicate edges that will quickly show wear.
It’s best to glue the joints together as soon as they’ve been
satisfactorily fitted.
Photo 3. Pare to the lines. Remove the excess material in several thin shavings. This
requires a razor-sharp chisel and light, controlled pressure.

You’re bound to make some mistakes, so always start by making a


practice joint. Make sure to use stock that is straight-grained on all
four sides—it’s difficult to pare against the grain’s slope. Also, it’s a
good idea to use hardwood for one piece and softwood for the other.
This method is more forgiving, because the softwood piece will
conform to the hardwood piece when you assemble the joint. Using
hardwood for both pieces requires absolute precision, because there’s
no forgiveness: If the pieces don’t fit perfectly, the short grain parts
will simply break off.
Photo 4. To pare cleanly into the angled corners, bevel the sides of your chisel.

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.

The secret to easy assembly


When all of the cheeks and shoulders of these joints are pared
absolutely flat, it’s difficult to slide the pieces together, due to friction
resulting from the joints’ large surface area. Fortunately, there’s a
work-around. The only places where the joints have to fit perfectly are
the faces that show. So, to make the pieces slide together more easily,
slightly hollow the joint surfaces that don’t show.

Make the pieces


1. Lay out the dovetails and sockets. Mark the waste.
2. Saw the dovetail cheeks in Piece A and the socket cheeks in
Piece B. Sawing these compound angles accurately is
tricky, so don’t be a hero: Cut wide of the lines, in the
waste area.
3. Remove the waste to establish the joint shoulders. Insert the
coping saw into one of the cheek cuts, turn the blade and
saw to the other cheek cut.
4. Pare to the lines. Use a wide chisel to pare the cheeks and a
narrow chisel to pare the shoulders. Beveling the sides of
the chisels makes it easier to get into the acutely angled
corners.

Ease the fit


On this joint, all four faces of both pieces show. To ease the fit,
hollow each dovetail cheek on Piece A and the shoulder of each
socket on Piece B. Always start paring 1/16″ inside the outside edge,
to create a lip. Then pare to the center. When the pieces slide together,
the 1/16″ lips at the outside faces will be the only parts of the joint that
fit flush.

Devilish Lap Joint

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.

The dovetailed tenon on Piece A tapers on the bottom, from the


shoulder to the end. On the top, its edges slope in the opposite
direction, at compound angles. The mortise in Piece B mirrors the
tenon on Piece B, sloping up on the bottom, and down and out on the
top.
To assemble this joint, insert Piece A into Piece B. The dovetailed
tenon is thin at the end, so it fits at the bottom of the mortise. As tenon
slides into the mortise, the dovetail on the face of Piece A rises until
it’s flush with the face of Piece B.

Make the pieces


Piece A

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

1. Lay out the mortise and mark the waste.


2. Saw the angled mortise shoulders, staying wide of the
layout lines.
3. Make a lengthwise cut in the center of the mortise, to divide
the waste in half. Cut deep at the butt end and shallow at
the open end, following the slope of the mortise.
4. Saw out the waste. Insert the coping saw in the lengthwise
cut, turn the blade and saw to one corner. Remove the
waste and then saw to the other corner.
5. Pare to the lines. When you pare in from the butt end, the
acute angles inside the mortise will trap the waste, so be
prepared to progress slowly.

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.

Diabolical Corner Joint


Fig C.

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.

Make the pieces


Piece B

1. Lay out the dovetails and mark the waste.


2. Saw the dovetail cheeks, following the layout lines on the
end and the outside face. This cut won’t come close to the
dovetails on the back face, because they slope more steeply.
That’s okay. Use the coping saw to remove the waste.
3. Pare to the lines. On the cheeks, work from each face to the
center—on the back face, you have to remove more
material. Because the front and back slopes differ, the
cheeks’ faces will be faceted, rather than flat (Fig. D).
Notice that the dovetails on both faces are the same width
at the bottom scribe line.
Piece A

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).

Ease the fit


The cuts on the ends and outside faces of both pieces are the ones that
show, so they must remain precise. To ease the fit, slightly widen the
socket cheeks and shoulders on the back face of A—but do not disturb
any dimensions at the end of the board. Gently ease the facet lines.
Make sure each socket shoulder in A is hollowed into a fair curve, so
the corner of B can rotate through.

You might also like

pFad - Phonifier reborn

Pfad - The Proxy pFad of © 2024 Garber Painting. All rights reserved.

Note: This service is not intended for secure transactions such as banking, social media, email, or purchasing. Use at your own risk. We assume no liability whatsoever for broken pages.


Alternative Proxies:

Alternative Proxy

pFad Proxy

pFad v3 Proxy

pFad v4 Proxy