Routing a tenon on a dowel or square or triangle, etc is a simple matter of building the right jig. See this video and take it from there. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mjTq1...feature=g-vrec I needed to do the same thing for a clock I'm building.
Routing a tenon on a dowel or square or triangle, etc is a simple matter of building the right jig. See this video and take it from there. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mjTq1...feature=g-vrec I needed to do the same thing for a clock I'm building.
Can be done by hand with some dividers, tenon saws and a safety file. Mark the center and then your 3/4 tenon on the end, divide that into an octagon for saw guide lines and mark the depth of cut with the dividers around the dowel. Rip down the 8 lines to your depth leaving the line, xcut the little bits off again leave the line, and file it all round and squared up and use a test block hole to make sure you have the desired fit. It's easier and faster than it sounds, or if you have dozens of these by all means make a jig for the table saw, router or buy a lathe.
Last edited by James Conrad; 10-11-2013 at 8:59 PM. Reason: Jeez, just saw this was and old thread... Anyway...
"The real voyage of discovery consists not in seeking new landscapes, but in having new eyes." - Proust
Couldn't this be done on a lathe?
ken
Instead of cutting the tenon. "dowel the dowel"; drill a 3/4" hole in the end of the 1" dowel and glue a 3/4" dowel in the hole. After the glue dries, cut to final length.
He got it done back in FEBRUARY 2012 folks.
Read the whole thread, instead of just the first post before replying.
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