This is a beautiful table joint you can make!
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- čas přidán 20. 10. 2022
- I made this joint from a picture I saw a few months ago and lots of people on IG were interested in it, so here is a how-to for my methods. I did 90% of the work for this with traditional woodshop machinery.
The dado stack I used in this video is the @ridgecarbidetoolco.4849 dado stack - I have been very impressed with it and the quality of the blades.
Thanks for watching.
#woodworking
#tablesaw
#joinery
WOW...!!!...One of the first people I know of that actually made the attempt to give proper historical credit and proper naming of this type and family of joinery...!@!... WELL DONE...and yes these are found in not only Malaysia (one of my favorite timber framing styles for architecture) but throughout the Middle East and Asia at large...
My world of woodworking is very different than most modern "wood machinists;" what most have become in reality...which is fine!!!...but has little to do with actual "woodworking," as humans have practiced it for millennia...
As a traditional woodworking in both trade and practice, as well as teaching, most wood I use is "green" by the modern standard of the craft 95% of the time. From timber frame to the floors, furniture, and onward. Something most won't do and virtually all claim can't be done though there is little in our museums of the "folk classes" and styles that was not made with "green wood," and certainly not "kiln dried,"...LMAO!!!
This joint you have profiled in the video is often called a "castle joint" (???) for some odd Eurocentric reason...LOL... is one of my favorites and I am so pleased you have taken on joints like this. To do really good research, of course, you have to go to the country of origin and read in the language of the culture. That was very difficult when I started...LOL...as I was working mostly with old order Amish who I apprenticed to as a Barnwrgith when I was thirteen. Now, fortunately, with the internet, the world has gotten very small...
If ever curious, and wish to look more deeply into this family of furniture and timber frame joints, use the following "Hangul" and "Kanji" to do your Google searches. Go to images and you will get a lot more (and accurate!!!) information about them. Use translate to see in English and if you ever have questions, by all means, reach out!!!
Use the following Hangul, Kanji, and Hanzi to see the different cultural styles of this joint which is quite variable in context, nature, and application:
사괘맞춤
Korean - Sagwaemajchum - Post to cross beam connectin in furniture and “Hanok” (i.e. folk style architecture) as well as temples…
箍头榫
Chinses - Gū tóu sǔn
梁柱箍头榫 - Liáng zhù gū tóu sǔn
傳統糭角榫
Chuántǒng zòng jiǎo sǔn
So much great information in here! Thank you so much for sharing it! I’m going to look it up now!
And it sounds like you’ve led a very interesting life!
I could do that if I had all your expensive tools. Lol really good video buddy. Doing what you do best teaching, being concise and easy to follow.
😂 Thanks brother! I appreciate it
thank you , neat joint
Thank you! It’s pretty easy too!
4:07 Cutting straight … One of the best woodworking articles I ever read was one that suggested you should practice cutting with a handsaw. Don’t wait until you have a project and then get mad when you can’t cut perfectly, but when you have a few extra minutes, grab a 2 x 4 and a saw and make a bunch of cuts, and try to be accurate. Practice makes perfect. Never dawned on me until I read that.
It’s all about practice. The same reason they suggest doing dovetails everyday for a month
@@NewmanSpecialsWoodwork That seems excessive! But yeah, Roy Underhill knocks them out in his sleep.
@@johnsrabe years and years of practice right there!!!
Excellent video and tutorial on this unique joint. Well done!
Thank you! I appreciate that!
This would be a great joint for a bed frame to show off the joinery.
Definitely! I would make the pieces thicker though for a bed
Good video my friend
Thank you!! I appreciate that!!
Very cool. Are you going to show what you do for the tabletop? Curious how you’ll show off the joint and still have a strong tabletop
Honestly that is the problem for this one. This is a table for my students at the school I teach at to use as an optician table. It has a solid too unfortunately
This is exactly what I needed to know
Glad to help!!
Did you make the tenoning jig yourself or did you purchase it from somewhere?
I bought this tenoning jig but I do have one that I made
oh man you almost died when you stood on it lol
Definitely not as easy to hop up as it used to be!
Did you disassemble, and then reassemble with glue? Or maybe just shoot some 23-gauge pin nails to hold it all together?
I disassembled it and used glue to hold it together. No pins necessary!