How To Make A Half-Lap Joint - WOOD magazine
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- Опубликовано: 17 май 2019
- Learn how to make a super-strong half-lap joint, just one of the nine essential joints you should consider for your project. WOOD magazine's Craig Ruegsegger shows you not only how to make the joint, but why this joint might be the best choice for your project.
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I like the ps1 graphics on the tablesaw
Great job explaining everything thank you
Thanks for the knowledge
hi...I made a watching your video. Thank you for being an inspiration to me.
nice
Hi, Very informative, Thanks for sharing this, but can you redo this video showing how we can do this without a dado blade please.
Do everything he did but just multiple passes
Hi. Very nice. What if the wood was 5 feet long ? Would you still do it on a table saw? Please advise. Thanks
I ran into this with 10 ft fencing top plates. I'm using my router to do the cut clean and by myself. If not, I would need out feed support like 6ft from my table saw. I was going to ask the lady for help, but I decided the router would probably make a better results
I need this for school:)
The trouble is that outside the USA dado blades are prohibited due to inherent safety problems. Can you do another vid showing how to do this with either a router or traditional joinery tools? That would of more benefit to a greater number of viewers. Thanks.
Not to be "that guy" but I wouldn't say that it's inherently unsafe. From what I've read, the EU, for example, bans it because it requires removal of the riving knife.
That said, yes, I would love to see more alternative methods. I regularly run into issues with using a table saw when I'm joining large pieces.
isn't it dangerous to do cross cuts with the rip fence?
A little bit. I would try to get rid of as much material as possible and leave only about 1/16" left when the piece will be touching the fence. A stop block on the fence before the blade would be a better idea for registering things.
It’s not considered a cross cut because the blade does not cut completely through the piece
@@ghostdog662 Thank you. A stop block on the fence before the blade is also what I was imagining.
@@nscr2 Thank you. I learned something new :)
I thought dado blades automatically had flat teeth. There should not be ridges on those cuts.
Why wouldn't he put glue on both surfaces of the half-lap (the shoulder?). I know the glue when compressed squeezes to where it can go but seems odd.
Gluing two face grains to each other will be more than strong enough. Adding glue to the corner section doesn't add much strength because you are utilizing end-grain. It doesn't hurt anything though.
Lower cost dado sets do not provide a smooth finished surface and the integrity of the glue joint is compromised by poor mating surfaces. Cutting the half lap with a mortise set-up results in a stronger glue-up
*You look like Your Doubting Yourself while doing it.* 😂
Thought this was going to be using hand tools
I like most of these videos but you get a thumbsie downie for SPREADING THE GLUE WITH YOUR FINGER!! What the EFF!!?? YOU are a PRO... Sheesh.
What should he use? A brush? I'm a newbie so I was just wondering...
OMG the shame in using a finger......
I use my finger