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作品例
2
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Project for half blind
dovetail box
carcass
White beech dovetailed sides & dark brown walnut front & back.
This project can also be applied to drawer fronts.
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Illustration
14 -
Note the ends of the tail boards have been rebated.
The rebated ends are the actual length of the tails
and are approximately 3/4s the thickness
of the
pin boards. This aids in ease of marking out and
more importantly precision. Further comment later
on the reason for rebating the carcass sides.
See illustration 17. |
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Illustration
15 - Place the adjoining two boards with the rebated box sides
or tail boards seated on the ends of the pin boards.
Make sure they are square.
Now lightly mark the
“length” of the tails all along the edge of the pin boards.
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Cutting
the tails in the tailboard (or drawer sides if making drawers)
Illustration 16 &
Illustration 4 -
using a square and a sharp knife cut as deep as possible a crisp line
but only within the waste areas.
With the chisel, pare away small amounts as shown.
Proceed to chop waste cleaning up all internal corners.
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Marking
the pin board or drawer fronts
Illustration 17 -
Clamp all four boards using the rebated ends of the tail boards to form
a carcass.
Make sure the carcass is square before marking the pin boards on all
four corners.
This now becomes so much easier and precision in marking is guaranteed.
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Illustration
18 -
Disassemble the carcass and transfer the depth of the tails onto the
pin boards.
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Illustration
19 -
Clamp both pin boards butted together in the vice and check with any
straight edge that they are level and continuous on the top edges.
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Setting
up and cutting the pin boards or drawer fronts
Illustration 20 -
The pin boards are half cut with the AngleMag & saw whilst the rest
is chiseled. The saw cut is confined to the length marks and the depth
marks. Therefore, the saw needs to be angled with the handle of the saw
lower
than the workpiece. In order to avoid damage to the saw glide
from the saw teeth, packing
is sandwiched between the workpiece and AngleMag. This
effectively raises the saw glide out of harm’s way.
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Illustration
21 - Chopping the waste.
Clamp securely to the work bench and chop with chisel and mallet.
Take care when chopping out the end grain ensuring the chisel remains
within the "length" mark in order to obtain a fine crisp finish.
Clean up all internal corners before dry fitting. Dry fitting prior to
gluing.
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Illustration
22 - Use
a straight scrap piece of wood to gently tap the adjoining boards
together
making sure they go in square.
In this example, and due mainly to the micro adjustment and resultant
matching cuts on the pin boards, there was no space available for glue.
It does however have just a smear of glue.
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