This is an assignment sample I made for our beginning Workshop One class. I designed it to show the students different ways to connect wood at a right angle. All the joints on this example were cut using my CNC. Simpler versions of each corner joint can be done using more conventional tools in a woodworking shop. To show them what a CNC can do if they think out-of-the-box each corner has a feature that would be very difficult to do with conventional tools.
Miter. The conventional way to reinforce a miter joint would be to use a spline or biscuits to cross between the two halves. Using my CNC I've made a hidden alternating mortise and tenon row that disappears inside when the joint is closed. Much easier to glue up as this joint won't slide in any direction when clamped.
Tongue and Groove. Normally a simple tongue in a simple groove is enough to make a good corner joint. Using the CNC I've added a row of 5 small through-tenons that center the joint and add some aesthetic detail to this corner.
Box Joint. The CNC enhancement for this row of fingers was to make them each a different progressively larger width. Tough to do using any other jig or tool, but fairly easy to draw up for the CNC to cut them.
Shallow Rabbet. Conventionally we would reinforced this with screws covered by wood plugs. Using the CNC I simply cut 3 round tenons from the end grain of the short side to replace the screws and plugs. The end look is the same. The tenons align the joint.
The bottom is 1/4" (6mm) Baltic Birch plywood. Rather than install it near one edge of the box, I'11 put it 1/3 of the way up from one end. This will divide the box into two compartments with one twice as deep as the other. Flip the box to access each. The lids won't open unless they are on top. Twisting latches slide into the lid to keep it in place when it is on the bottom. A shallow perimeter rabbet on each lid aligns it to the box. When on top just twist the latches then the top can be lifted out.
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Showing posts with label original cnc joinery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label original cnc joinery. Show all posts
Wednesday, June 13, 2018
Friday, May 13, 2016
Creative CNC Joinery, and Other CNC-Cut Solutions.
Text and photos in this and every other post of this blog are copyrighted.
It is important to understand the structural properties of the materials used when trying out an original joint or cutout. Grain direction, wood expansion and contraction, dryness, natural flaws, stiffness, flexibility, and tendency to split, are just a few of the things to consider.
Some examples of the original CNC-cuts solutions I've come up with:
Three-way center interlock:
We have our advanced students design and build a 3-legged (or fewer legs) stool during the first two weeks of class. When 3 legs need to be connected with a stretcher there are only a few options. You can run stretchers from leg to leg around the perimeter. You can bring stretchers to the middle, pin wheeling them to each touch the other two. You could bring them into a center hub piece. The simplest way at first could bring them to meet at the very center, except there is only a small area of intersection you can make a 3-way joint within. A 3-layer "stack" would work, but removes 2/3 the thickness off each stretcher, and leaves the center piece needing to be cut on both sides or from the top. My 3-way interlock maximizes glue surface area, maintains through-grain structure. vertical stiffness, and still locks the three elements together within that small area. You cut the same profile on the ends of each piece from the top. This pattern can be scaled up or down to match the width of your stretchers, and is only limited in height, diameter, or by the length of the bit you'll use to cut it. One application for it:
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3 on 3, connected with a center bolt. |
Angled through-scarf-lap joint:
Often a project requires one board to appear to pass through another. If the same size they can be half-lapped. If a smaller piece is at the edge of a larger piece you can still interlock both with cuts into their edges. When a small board penetrates the center of a wider board the options are limited. Cut the through board and pass a dowel through the larger piece into these cut ends. Or half-lap the through board inside a hole cut through the wide board. You could make short tenons on each cut end and mortise them half way into the wider board.
The result from all of these options is a joint that is weaker than the original strength of the through piece. My angled through scarf lap joint maximizes side grain glue surface, maintains strength at the ends of each half, and is invisible once glued together. Sloped halves meet inside the joint. This sloped intersection wedges out as the parts are clamped in, leaving them very tight inside the hole.
Compound angle mortise and tenons:
In chair frame design a potentially more interesting and inviting solution can be found by flaring the sides out, wider in plan view at the front than the back. A more stable footprint can be found by flaring the legs out, wider in front view at the bottom than at their tops. The challenge this creates is that now any structural connections (stretchers) between the two sides would meet the sides at a compound angle. By first cutting the extended (by the length of the tenon) end of each stretcher parallel to the face of the side it will intersect, and then clamping that stretcher on the CNC so that compound end is perpendicular to the CNC bit, we can cut a standard tenon to go 90 degrees into the angled sides, at the compound angle relative to the stretcher required.
Half blind mitered dovetailed corners:
This half blind dovetail example was a request from a student in my CNC focused furniture joinery class. He had found a photo example online, and as far as my research got it looked as though you could use a jig on the router table to cut half of this joint, but the other half would need to be hand cut. The CNC solution came to me one night and required making a jig to hold his panels under the CNC at 45 degrees, and once we had that we could cut both halves of a slight variation that looks exactly like the original example. This joint can also be cut for 72 degree (5 sides) and 60 degree (6 sides) corners. I made a 5-sided box with the dovetails laid out to spell my name in Morse code just to inspire the students.
Creative through-finger joints:
Triangular pins. Walnut centers. |
Pseudo Dovetails |
A Challenge by a Fellow Professor. |
Finger (box) and dovetail joints on other than 90 degree corners.
It is rare to see a 5-sided (or 3 or 6 or 7 sided) box in an internet search for wood boxes. Why? Most woodworking equipment is set up to work at 90 degrees. Four 90-degree corners make a 4-sided box. In furniture design a 100 degree or 105 degree angle between chair frame parts might be more interesting than 90 degrees, but traditional methods of creating joinery at those odd angles limits their use. To make fingers on a 5-sided box each end needs to be cut at 72 degrees. An angle jig (set at 18 degrees) on the CNC will let you clamp these sides under the bit so their 72 degree end is perpendicular to it. The same strategy can be used for more complicated joinery on non-90 degree corners, however some joints may need clamping ends at two different angles.
Of course, a CNC's precision can always make perfectly centered "ordinary" finger joints no matter the width of the board used.
Pin Joints. These examples are an experimental set of fairly conventional joints, with the added strength from fingers/pins cut in the end grain of one part to pierce the other part of the joint.
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Reinforced with 3 finger tenons. |
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Angle intersect... |
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A simple butt joint? |
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Not so simple. 4 x 5 end grain pin array. |
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Simple rabbet? |
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2 x 5 pin array hidden inside. |
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Shoulder Rabbet. |
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Back side: Shouldered rabbet. |
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Hidden end-grain pins. |
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Pins full depth of joint. |
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Through Pins. End grain should pop with finish. |
Hidden (blind) finger row on 45 degree board intersection. Fingers cut in end grain don't always have to be on the ends of the two boards that are being joined. When one board has to intersect the middle of another board a row of tenons into matching slots will still be a strong joint. When the boards don't meet at 90 degrees an angle clamping fixture can still help cut a working solution.
An alternative to the 45 degree joint above, with a slightly different look would be this triple tenon version:
Predetermined alignment of cutouts on bending plywood laminations. Curved parts can be made by gluing together layers of thin wood or bending plywood around a form. If the part has cutouts they can be difficult to cut after being curved. With the CNC these layers can be individually cut to include the cutouts, with each layer slightly different than the others to account for their position in the stack. One good example is this aquarium stand. Inner layers are shorter than outer layers, so we reduced each layer by a fractional amount so that the holes would only line up after being clamped around the form. Extra holes were added for pins to keep the parts aligned while the glue dried.
Tapered sliding dovetails, positive and negative halves. The angle, width, and length of most dovetail bits can be found on the packaging they come in, or etched on the bits themselves. Knowing this it is possible to lay out a single depth tool path to run that dovetail bit down a tapering path to cut the slot in a board's face and both sides of the projecting dovetail on another board's edge or end. The plunge for a dovetail bit usually starts outside of the board. Slots are best cleared out with a pocketing straight bit before the dovetail bit undercuts the sloped sides. Blind slots can be cut with the path line entering then doubling back. A small degree of taper down the length of the dovetail slot lets the joint slide in easily yet lock very tight once fully inserted.
Angled slices through cylindrical shapes as they turn on a rotary axis. A sine wave pattern was necessary to have the router cut what appears to be a straight 30 degree slice through these cylinders.
Ramping dovetails. When two boards meet at a low angle to each other, such as the a-frame sides on this cart, you only have a few options on how to connect them using just the initial mass of each piece. You could butt-glue them edge to edge, but the standing V wants to do the splits and may still split this joint apart. Looking at how much they overlap before being mitered a single option remains for a joint that will increase glue surface area and interlock the two halves. You can cut a dovetail slot in one side and leave a dovetail tongue on the other. These will ramp together, locking the two halves when flush at the top.
Mitered corners with splines. This example needed a little cleanup with a 1/8" chisel to remove the fillets left by the round 1/8" bit. The opposing splines help when gluing this joint together as they keep the mitered faces from sliding apart under clamping pressure.
Construction Lumber Joinery. These examples show how a building (Tiny House in my case) could be put together using CNC-cut joinery rather than nails.
The joinery options shown and described here just scratch the surface of what is possible when you can clamp parts vertically or at any angle/compound angle under a 3-axis CNC.
The rig I use to clamp parts vertically or at any angle is described here.
An alternative to the 45 degree joint above, with a slightly different look would be this triple tenon version:
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Slot half was cut while clamped at 45 degrees. Tenon half was clamped vertically. |
Predetermined alignment of cutouts on bending plywood laminations. Curved parts can be made by gluing together layers of thin wood or bending plywood around a form. If the part has cutouts they can be difficult to cut after being curved. With the CNC these layers can be individually cut to include the cutouts, with each layer slightly different than the others to account for their position in the stack. One good example is this aquarium stand. Inner layers are shorter than outer layers, so we reduced each layer by a fractional amount so that the holes would only line up after being clamped around the form. Extra holes were added for pins to keep the parts aligned while the glue dried.
Tapered sliding dovetails, positive and negative halves. The angle, width, and length of most dovetail bits can be found on the packaging they come in, or etched on the bits themselves. Knowing this it is possible to lay out a single depth tool path to run that dovetail bit down a tapering path to cut the slot in a board's face and both sides of the projecting dovetail on another board's edge or end. The plunge for a dovetail bit usually starts outside of the board. Slots are best cleared out with a pocketing straight bit before the dovetail bit undercuts the sloped sides. Blind slots can be cut with the path line entering then doubling back. A small degree of taper down the length of the dovetail slot lets the joint slide in easily yet lock very tight once fully inserted.
Angled slices through cylindrical shapes as they turn on a rotary axis. A sine wave pattern was necessary to have the router cut what appears to be a straight 30 degree slice through these cylinders.
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Sine wave pattern used to cut recess for aluminum. |
Ramping dovetails. When two boards meet at a low angle to each other, such as the a-frame sides on this cart, you only have a few options on how to connect them using just the initial mass of each piece. You could butt-glue them edge to edge, but the standing V wants to do the splits and may still split this joint apart. Looking at how much they overlap before being mitered a single option remains for a joint that will increase glue surface area and interlock the two halves. You can cut a dovetail slot in one side and leave a dovetail tongue on the other. These will ramp together, locking the two halves when flush at the top.
Mitered corners with splines. This example needed a little cleanup with a 1/8" chisel to remove the fillets left by the round 1/8" bit. The opposing splines help when gluing this joint together as they keep the mitered faces from sliding apart under clamping pressure.
Construction Lumber Joinery. These examples show how a building (Tiny House in my case) could be put together using CNC-cut joinery rather than nails.
The joinery options shown and described here just scratch the surface of what is possible when you can clamp parts vertically or at any angle/compound angle under a 3-axis CNC.
The rig I use to clamp parts vertically or at any angle is described here.
Several other CNC cut joints I've document in these posts:
Comments and questions are welcomed.
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