Timber Framing Mortise & Tenon
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- čas přidán 18. 01. 2015
- 8" x 8" Mortise & Tenon joint cut in oak, basic timber framing techniques for use in post and beam construction.
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This is not a tutorial. Please do not copy anything I do.
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Will & Michelle were AWESOME people and Will was a positive instructor hands on and an inspiration to me! As a female, and an architecture student at age 18 & 19 I spent the best part of my summers learning from these craftspeople. I will never ever forget Michelles warmth and delicious wholesome meals and feeling like this is the quintessential place to be on earth, with them in their perfect element. Made friends and memories to last a lifetime too! Denise, N.J.
I'll be doing a lot of this in the near future, to get my 250 year old german wooden-beamed house back to her former splendour. francis, thanks for posting this and your other videos :)
THIS IS Exactly WHAT I’ve been looking
For. Thanks for the awesome video. Quick and efficient.
Great instruction without saying a single word! Wonderful!
Just tried this way on a 6x6 spruce timber. Like a glove. Thanks for the video
Thanks for watching
I was looking for a video with the use of large wood. Making a table out of Jarrah sleepers. Great vid. Thank for sharing!!
+Carl Evans thanks for watching.
Very nice over view of this joinery.
Your more than welcome here anytime. Many thanks.
I love this dang video. I keep going back to it. Good lord, I’d love a chain mortiser. Or a barn beam auger seated drill press. I liked their peg hole drilling jig/platform for their power drill. I need to figure out/draw up/find some plans and make one of those. I did some sawhorses recently out of 6x6 and I couldn’t draw bore the tenon because I couldn’t drill a straight hole through both sides of the empty mortise cavity with my spade bit and it wouldn’t line up when I plunked the tenon down in it. Had to drill the hole with the tenon in.
You probably already solved this problem by now, but in case others read your post and have the same problem, you can use a longer, small diameter drill bit to drill through the entire (empty) mortice to get your alignment, then go back and drill each side with your spade bit using that first pilot hole.
Aww, he gave it a big hug.
That drill jig just won you a new subscriber. Great idea👍
I so want to learn this. great job!!!
Thanks for watching
Great bit of Joinery, love these videos. From one joiner to another keep it up. like the scarf joint one too.👍😊
many thanks
True craftsman, very neat work.
Amazing job, very hard! Great video Francis.
Many thanks
Job is perfect ! Thanks for sharing your time and talent !!
There is one secret that is shown too fast : 3mm excentration of 2 holes ( at 3:20 ). This explain why the final join is very tighly closed.
It's all about fusion, it worked out well for you.. Love the use of both modern and old fashioned tools. Wish I had the same machinery ;)
+Tjeerd van Gennep old hand tools are the best, the steel is of a better quality. Thanks for watching
wow that chain mortiser is epic! I love tools.
+MaghoxFr You'll enjoy this new video of mine then! czcams.com/video/OZRtxrfQ_f0/video.html Thanks for watching.
sangs
Thanks for your
Haw are you
The video mine then
An absolute joy to watch bro. Thankyou
You gotta love the sound of woodworking. A satisfying video.
+Cry crust you're very welcome
+Cry crust you're very welcome
Excellent work. Never saw a drill jig like that. The video work is excellent also. Thanks.
+David Kirkpatrick your welcome anytime
Wow ,great job ,men !!!!
Nice work pal , I have one of those chain morticers,I’m thinking of selling it as times are tough , I’m after changing my mind now after seeing this
That was the quietest sill saw I’ve ever heard
haha! great vid and skills bro! i'm wanting to do this in my kitchen that me and my wife are currently building! cant wait to do a vid on it! great job!
+Chet Langford thanks for watching
for sure !
Now that's a mortise and tenon joint!!!
its the biggest tenon i have ever seen. I never thought that drawboring techniques can be used on timer framing as well ...great video Francis.
Larché Jacques Clarel Many thanks, the draw bore is a very important part of timber framing , it makes a massive difference in the rigidity of the structure.
Lol i guess it requires much more strength compared to furniture especially in terms of structure and weight
Fuck yeah. This isn't the 17th century. Love it man.
+Magnus Bojaxhiu Your welcome anytime
That is brilliant mate. Some TV stand that! lol
Very good!! Bealtiful work
Excellent work!
Very well done job and educational video, one can learn alot about joiner joints, marking,scribing,measuring and how to cut a corner with this job but do not necessary have to use same power tools like you, ya I like it, thanks for sharing.
Many thanks
Świetna robota dziś już nie ma takich fachowców co by umieli takie połączenia zrobić
Nie ma szkół dlatego nie ma fachowców.W Stanach są takie szkoły ,robią kursy kilku dniowe i uczą jak budować całe domy z takimi łączeniami .W Polsce każdy fachowiec uważał ze nie ma po co uczyć sobie konkurencję a teraz nie ma już fachowców i następców .Są jeszcze jednostki pojedyńczy ludzie ale jest ich bardzo mało i większość nie ma czasu chęci lub pracują na zachodzie żeby uczyć nowe pokolenia .
Francis, you're the man. Love the drill press ;) Got a vid on how to make that one??
I'm planing a series on timber framing tools, first one will be the portable drill press. Thanks for watching.
thank you Francis , great fun , I grew up in PA lots of chestnut barns !
+Ian Carpenter you're welcome
thx .u make it look easy .im sure its not ! good to keep the old skills alive
I love how M&T joints have some flexibility to them making the entire structure stronger.
100's of years it was used and nothing is strong or last longer. Made a few of my storms windows with m&t joints!
Lots of medieval cottages have used them instead of nails.
NextLevel Gamez 🔥
great demo
+Santiago Vasquez you're welcome
Just the way the Pioneers did it LOL I just discovered a new tool I didn't know I needed
That might be the coolest thing I've ever seen
+the_culture thanks for watching
+the_culture thanks for watching
Ensina esse gabarito aí da furadeira! Ficou legal 👏🇧🇷
Great video , straight to the point ,
Many thanks.
Well shit now i have to watch all of your videos
Love the home made drill guide 💯
That chainsaw mortise jig thing! So much awesome.
good job mate!
Great demonstration Francis thank you for making it available. I was intrigued by your hand drill jig, is that something you fabricated yourself? Could you share your process perhaps.
brad Smith
brad Smith
brad Smith 👀
It looks brilliant
Wonderful and beautiful and artistic and elegant
That, was, awesome. Nice drill press :)
+Daniel Streeter I have a video if you look through - portable drill press. Thanks for watching
I like your DIY drill bench press stand
hermoso felicitaciones (beatifull , congratulation) from Santiago De Chile .
Many thanks
Chains saw press -- well I need this in my life now
This is so satisfactory to watch
I love it awesome work
Looking to jazz up a pergola project and this should do well. Please keep the "tutorials" coming.
Philip Gard Thanks for watching.
the right tols,make your work bether, love it...........
Many thanks
The right spelling... makes you more understandable..
Excellent!
Awesome work!! Thank you!:-)
The wood is so beautifull, that we can mind that it's a plastic wood. You rock man !
+Stéphane Lamarre merci boucoup
@@francisbarnett De rien, mon fils.
Breathtaking
That's really look nice... my dad was a carpenter did awesome job Everyday but I don't have his awesome talent.. I turn up to be a flight attendance and now regret.. Rip dad I miss u
+NewbieTech H thanks for you comment.
It just takes a little practice. Pick up a few second hand tools and just build small things and progress from there. You may not have your dad's exact talent but every woodworker has talents in different areas of the craft, you might be yet to find yours
I really love doing post and beam joints , there are so many and when you finish the, you can admire them , like wow I’m awesome , good job I wish I could find a video of old houses being built , so far only found one and the volume is down . The others don’t really get into too much detail
Beau travail.
This clinches it.
Building a chicken coop this week and have been planing on some framing metal and dowel joints but nope - definitely M&T on it now. Gives me an excuse to use my new chisels anyway.
very nice and strong
+Flavio Paulitti your welcome
Awesome Video! I'm curious how you size the mortise? Is there a reference that has a calculation? I saw you said 1/3 the width, but what about depth and height? Thanks again!
Eu sou seu fã meu amigo
Impressive demo! Your mortise-cutting machine was fabulous! Your vertical drill jig was instructional.
+Rich Rombalski thanks for watching
Nice skills! 👍
que belo encaixe em mais esta sua maguina é show pra bens
plain beautiful. nice video. can u make a video showing your drill jig at 3:25. it looks awesome. how does it go up?
I've been meaning to for ages, many requests already. Its on the list. Thanks for watching.
Really enjoyed the video! Look forward to more?
Nice work sir please keep it up
Muito bom o seu canal gostei muito me inscrevi
Makes me want to use bigger timber for rafter beam support ( no idea if terminology is correct ).Oh, I'm so nervous with twisted 18' x 3" x 9" timber.
amazing!!
Una maravilla 10. 10
Wew, that mortiser is one big boy!
Estos videos me relajan
Hi. Awesome video. Are your cutting tools (drill bits, chisels, framing square etc) measurements (tenon & mortice dimensions) and beams in metric or imperial? Thanks
+PlantWarrior I think the beams are 8" x 8" but as I'm English we use both metric & imperial measurements.
Perfect video!! I've been to make a little drill press just like that. What hardware did you use to mount the drill to the box, if you don't mind me asking?
Adam Meredith Hi, thanks for your comment, the portable drill press is an old Black and Decker drill in a lathe attachment, the slide part is a dove tail track. You can see it from a different angle in my video czcams.com/video/RqRU8UR7yjU/video.html its a very useful tool enabling clamping to the work piece and drilling square. hope this helps.
Thank you
Now I want to do one!!!
Nice!!! What’s the machine called that you used instead of a mortise machine,any advice is greatly appreciated,thank you👍
VERY interersting ! - Thanks - a pleasure !
chip Many thanks.
And I thought Batman was a badass growing up. This is cool!
Is that white oak? Beautiful!
In my 37 years of carpentry .. Many will try to bust on another's technique , Whatever it takes !! is my motto . and as a master timber framer .. In all my years , Unless the job is a square .. It is best fitted piece to piece and well thought out .. I have seen "Packages " come out that were computer generated and milled per plan and didn't fit " No dry fit " and calculation done in a perfect world that didn;t consider the imperfections and vagaries of that timber . Sharp chisels , a planer , a skilsaw , deft measurements .. I personally like a ferocious meat eating angle grinder .. .. One of the lovely things about specialized timber framing .. You can easily make more than a Dr .. and have fun doing it
Thanks for your comment, its always good to hear from a trades man that can understand what hes looking at. I made these couple of joint example videos to show customers the process of building timber frames I never guessed they would be popular. thanks for watching.
What type of wood did you use? It is beautiful
That's so relaxing to watch. Thank you.
+Bernhard Hofmann many thanks
I have a feeling that this has to be a much stronger way of building than how most houses are built today...some pine 2x4s and a few nails here and there.
+AJohnson0325 some buildings using this type of construction have stood testament to hundreds of years use and appear they will be around for hundreds more. Thanks for watching
My house is 215 years old and still standing straight and all the joints are make like we saw in the video. The rafters in the attic are joined at the top with pegs and are numbered using Roman Numerals - easier to do as there are no curves in roman numerals.
nice job
I'm more of a no-machine guy, but your results are good man, nice.
My current hobby is woodcarving rather than the timber frame day job stuff, i understand the no power tools approach, its very rewarding and even more of a workout. Thanks for watching.
I actually grow my trees so that they have the shape and the holes already in them. No tools at all, so...
you got any pics ?
Sadly one couldn't make any money if timber was all split by hand for a Frame, side axed and whatever -it would take so much longer and be un-competitive.
Using mechanical saws/chain morticers is just as skilled as using hand tools- your marking out still has to be spot on.
It is likely that the original timber framers from yonks ago would have ''worn out'' much quicker, simply because of the arduous physical strength needed..arthritis is often found on old excavated skeletons of men in their 40's.
Show them a skillsaw or a chain morticer, and they'd have been on it like anything :)
Would have made their lives easier for sure.
leloodallasmultipass - Heheheh good one ! And the fifth element. Nice. I should be smokerichtydemon lol
Just beautiful.
+Andrew McMaster many thanks
1Mot khối go tốt lm nên một sản phẩm .TUYỆT VỜI
helo francis i have a question
why the 2 pic does not cross the wood?
for better assemblage ?
thk u
Awesome thanks for sharing.How would you do a multiple notches??? In a 2" x 4" X 30" I need a make 10 notches with 1" of separation from each other and 1.5" wide and half inch deep what will be the faster way to do it ?? any ideas ??
If the notches needed to be identical, I would probably set up a jig with the router then clean up the corners with a chisel. Thanks for watching.
+Francis Barnett
I appreciated it!!! Thanks 👉🏻👉🏻
Muy bueno
Where in the world did you get the hand drill mount/holder that you attached to the sliding piece of that drill press???
Impressed with ur home made drill press, can it be made using regular drill?.if so pls make video on that. Thks
czcams.com/video/myBBAbA4q_0/video.html
thank you very much
nice work, its very important though that the peg goes right through, a through peg of around 20mm will have a shear strength of more than 6 ton. amazing really. some of my work i do go a but peg crazy though, hehe