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Thread: Question about Pocket Hole "Creep"

  1. Regarding proper screws;
    with hardwoods you must use FINE threaded screws

    softwoods ( ply,poplar etc ) use coarse threaded

  2. #17
    Join Date
    May 2005
    Location
    walnut creek, california
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    2,347
    this is one of the reasons to get a porter cable pocket cutter or steve clardy's version: a routed pocket has less creep than the kreg.

  3. #18
    Quote Originally Posted by frank shic View Post
    this is one of the reasons to get a porter cable pocket cutter or steve clardy's version: a routed pocket has less creep than the kreg.
    A properly executed pocket hole joint made with the Kreg doesn't have any creep at all. You can't get less than none. The suggestions of proper clamping technique and using the proper screws mentioned by other posters will eliminate any and all creeping of the wood.

    Regarding the predrilling of the hole in the, "Other piece", what Jim Becker said is true. You wouldn't want the drill bit to put a pilot hole in the other piece that big because the screw wouldn't bite into the wood properly. Just follow the proper clamping procedure, use good quality screws designed for pocket holes and it's easy.

    Bruce

  4. #19
    Join Date
    Mar 2003
    Location
    Monroe, MI
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    11,896
    Using the Kreg drill bit, set with the Kreg depth stop, in the Kreg jig, with Kreg screws recommended by Kreg for the material, I've seen creep with the Kreg clamp. What I've noticed is that the pieces will sometimes push apart slightly as you drive in the screws. Because of the angle, that puts the entry point in the second piece slightly closer to the front than it should be. I suspect that Todd's method makes up for this slight misalignment. I've also had luck clamping the face frame parts to prevent that type of movement, which the Kreg clamp doesn't really prevent since its faces are smooth.


  5. #20
    Join Date
    Jan 2006
    Location
    Mt. Pleasant, MI
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    2,924
    100% avoid creep with this method.

    Glue and align the two pieces. Use a clamp (kreg clamp or anything solid) to clamp both pieces down the the work bench. Use a parrellel clamp (I have K-bodies) to clamp the joint together length wise. One clamp keeps them from spreading one keeps them from lifting.

    Once you get going it doesn't add much in time. More now that I can't use the kreg clamps with the thicker table (torsion box).

    If the stock is square and milled correctly I get joints that are as close to perfect as I could ask for.

    Once they are tightened they aren't going anywhere.

    Joe
    JC Custom WoodWorks

    For best results, try not to do anything stupid.

    "So this is how liberty dies...with thunderous applause." - Padmé Amidala "Star Wars III: The Revenge of the Sith"

  6. #21
    Join Date
    Mar 2003
    Location
    Central Illinois
    Posts
    297
    Proper clamping may help, but sometimes the screw seems to have a mind of its own. I was clamping two panels together 90 degrees from each other. I was using 90 degree clamps to hold the panels together and I still had creep. I think dowels would be easier than clamping the panels at least in my application.

    Mike

  7. #22
    Join Date
    Jan 2007
    Location
    Wellsboro, PA
    Posts
    375
    In my experience, the harder the wood is the more likely it is to creep. I use alot of shag bark hickory and have found the only way to prevent creep is to use the Kreg vise grip clamp for alignment and then clamp it parallel to the screws with a bar or bessey clamp. I use Kreg fine thread screws and haven't had any break.

    Bryan

  8. #23
    With my Kreg jig, the only times that I've noticed creep is when I was using pocket screws to hold cabinet panels together. If I didn't use that special clamp that has a post for fitting into a pocket hole and just tried to hold one panel over another and then run the screw, the vertical panel would shift on the flat panel and be just the slightest bit off.

    For assembling faceframes, the double disk type clamp seems to hold the faceframe parts adequately and I have noticed no creep.

    I also have the Porter Cable Production Pocket Hole Cutter. When I was considering the Kreg electric pocket hole cutter, I did some research and found out that the PC cuts a hole very much like the Castle Pocket Hole machines. It uses two routers, one to cut a pocket with a sweeping motion and another to drill a hole. The thing about the PC and Castle machines is that there seems to be almost no angle and that when you run the screw, it is about 90 degrees to the piece that you are fastening to. The result is no noticable creep. If you do a search on this forum and others, you will find that much has been discussed about the difference in pocket hole cutters.

    Bottom line is that adequate clamping will go a long way in dealing with any creep. Getting the PC does not mean that you no longer need to clamp.

    I've now started using Dominos and screws when assembling Euro cabs - no creep!
    Last edited by Roland Chung; 03-14-2008 at 1:18 AM. Reason: addit info

  9. #24
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Location
    Mpls, Minn
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    2,882
    Clamping helps greatly, but on 90 degree joints I found I'd still get a bit of creep, so I made a simple jig and use a thin shim to offset the joint, when screwed together it creeps just enough to be flush.
    Takes a couple of times to get the shim thickness, but once ya do, cut a few extra for next time.

    Same thickness shim worked for white oak and cherry, not sure about other woods though.

    Al
    Remember our vets, they need our help, just like they helped us.

  10. #25
    Similar to Bryan, I've taken to making sure the boards you are joining do not slide apart slightly while screwing in the screw.

    I made my own version of Kreg's clamping table. When making face frames, I'll put the back side of the stock I'm screwing into against the side of the table. With the board the screw starts in, I'll clamp it with two Kreg Klamps to ensure it does not slide at all. My theory is if the board begins to slide at all as the screw begins to self-tap into the 2nd piece of wood, then it will many times create slight misalignment in the face frames. I'll use this 2nd Kreg Klamp instead of a bar clamp to achieve this like Bryan does. A 3rd Klamp is obviously right over the joint in all cases.
    Jim

  11. #26
    It would seem the most important clamping direction wouldn't be to clamp the pieces down to a flat surface, but to clamp them tight (with a bar clamp, for example). If the screw pushes the two pieces apart at all before being cranked down, then the geometry is going to cause creep (the screw acts like an elevator as it pulls the other piece snug).

  12. #27
    Join Date
    Nov 2007
    Location
    Sylvania, OH
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    102
    I agree with Josiah.

    From a theoretical perspective, it seems that there is a critical point when the screw first contacts the second piece of wood. For a fraction of a screw turn, the screw tip is pushing against the second piece of wood. Once the threads of the screw bite into the wood, then the screw will pull the second piece of wood toward the first.

    The goal should be to minimize the time that the screw tip is pushing against the wood before the threads bite. It seems to me that a small eighth or quarter inch starter hole about half the diameter of the screw shaft would encourage the threads to bite more quickly while minimizing the amount of "push" that the screw tip would exert against the second piece of wood. This would help eliminate any creep.

    Just theoretical of course.

  13. #28
    Join Date
    Feb 2003
    Location
    Bellingham, WA
    Posts
    1,934
    I've done hundreds of frames with the Kreg system. The other posters have pretty much covered everything, but here are a couple of things that I didn't see mentioned.

    First, I use a big C-clamp to hold the joint firmly against the table and tightly together. The screw force is very strong. It is true that snugging the joint with a bar clamp works, but I find the C-clamp faster and easier, which is what pocket screws are all about.

    Second, in very hard woods, I use a long "aircraft" drill bit to drill a properly sized pilot hole in the stile right through the glued and clamped pocket hole. Before I started doing this, I was snapping screw heads regularly in Jatoba (often before the screw was fully tight).
    JR

  14. #29
    I sometimes use one of these in addition to the Kreg clamp.

    http://www.woodcraft.com/family.aspx?FamilyID=3793

  15. #30
    Join Date
    Mar 2006
    Location
    Kingston, Ontario
    Posts
    390
    Quote Originally Posted by Bryan Berguson View Post
    In my experience, the harder the wood is the more likely it is to creep. I use alot of shag bark hickory and have found the only way to prevent creep is to use the Kreg vise grip clamp for alignment and then clamp it parallel to the screws with a bar or bessey clamp. I use Kreg fine thread screws and haven't had any break.

    Bryan
    Bryan:

    I had never seen Shagbark Hickory until I moved to Kingston. I have about 2 acres of this stuff; I find it a royal pain when the nuts fall off in the fall. It never occurred to me that this wood could be used for woodworking. I've been cutting it up for firewood.

    What are the characteristics of this wood for furniture?

    Greg

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