Plain miters are surprisingly strong, and FWIW if the panel on top and bottom are integral or have an inside frame work then the miter will be supported.
Plain miters are surprisingly strong, and FWIW if the panel on top and bottom are integral or have an inside frame work then the miter will be supported.
Bumbling forward into the unknown.
I agree w/ Mike and Brian, miters are surprisingly strong. Tested individually, as mike noted, they can be broken but require considerable force. Tested with four pieces glued up, any force you try to apply to one joint is fairly equally distributed to the others, so it takes a pretty good whack to the floor to break one.
Hi Pat
There are a couple of articles on my website about building these and demonstrating them ..
Donkey’s Ear
Rear of Donkeys Ear – dovetailed reinforcement. You can also see the rear of the connection to the man fence.
The underside has four levelling feet, similar to these ..
Fences connect via a bolt through the main fence. This provides both a solid connection plus micro-adjustability for squareness.
Article link: http://www.inthewoodshop.com/ShopMad...erfection.html
Regards from Perth
Derek
Last edited by Derek Cohen; 08-20-2015 at 11:14 AM.
Thanks Derek. I figured there should be a way to adjust it so you can get the 45 angle needed. Your method looks very well thought out.
OK guys, plain miter it is. I didn't realize that it was that strong being end grain.
As has been said, the bottom will lend strength also; I'll glue it instead of floating it just to be sure.....
Derek-all your stuff is really inspiring! Thanks for posting that.
I'll scope out Mike's ff biscuit tutorial probably later tonite or tomorrow AM
I'll post when I get done.
Thanks everyone.
David
Confidence: That feeling you get before fully understanding a situation (Anonymous)