Thinner tenons or wider dados?
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Thinner tenons or wider dados?
Can anyone enlighten me about how the software addresses the joint allowance parameter?
When I specify, say for a panel stock material thickness of 0.780, that the plunge depth to create a tenon is 50 percent of thickness, and that my side clearance for the joint with the mating panel is 0.020, is the slot cut to 0.390 (half of the 0.780) plus the 0.020, thus 0.410 . . .
. . . or is the slot made to 0.390, and the tenon cut down to 0.370?
And, if it is the slot width that gets the extra, which side does it go on?
The engineer-in-me makes me ask this. Sorry.
When I specify, say for a panel stock material thickness of 0.780, that the plunge depth to create a tenon is 50 percent of thickness, and that my side clearance for the joint with the mating panel is 0.020, is the slot cut to 0.390 (half of the 0.780) plus the 0.020, thus 0.410 . . .
. . . or is the slot made to 0.390, and the tenon cut down to 0.370?
And, if it is the slot width that gets the extra, which side does it go on?
The engineer-in-me makes me ask this. Sorry.
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Fit Clearance is the amount that the dado slot is larger than the nominal thickness of the component that fits into it. In general, a 0.010” to 0.020” fit results in a joint that is both strong and easy to assemble.
A factor for a Full Dado construction is that you are assuming that the material that fits into the dado slot is of the proper thickness. This is seldom true. Commercial thickness tolerances can make proper assembly difficult at times. The only way to assure exact fit every time is to actually cut every mating surface. Only then do you really know its dimension. The Blind Dado joint was designed for CNC routers and requires that every mating surface be machined to a proper fit tolerance.
Joe
A factor for a Full Dado construction is that you are assuming that the material that fits into the dado slot is of the proper thickness. This is seldom true. Commercial thickness tolerances can make proper assembly difficult at times. The only way to assure exact fit every time is to actually cut every mating surface. Only then do you really know its dimension. The Blind Dado joint was designed for CNC routers and requires that every mating surface be machined to a proper fit tolerance.
Joe
- Steve Dyches
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- Bill Rutherford
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Rick,
Yes the dado slot is always plowed in two passes. Most times by the time material thickness, and clearance settings are taken into account the dado is almost never the exact size of the bit. Add cutter comp to that so the machine has room to comp for a slighty \"off\" diameter bit and the dado is always cut with a bit smaller then the dado width, in two passes. This allows exact control over dado width
Yes the dado slot is always plowed in two passes. Most times by the time material thickness, and clearance settings are taken into account the dado is almost never the exact size of the bit. Add cutter comp to that so the machine has room to comp for a slighty \"off\" diameter bit and the dado is always cut with a bit smaller then the dado width, in two passes. This allows exact control over dado width
Bill Rutherford
North Woods Manufacturing
Full service CNC Machining
and Edge Banding
http://www.northwoodsmanufacturing.com
North Woods Manufacturing
Full service CNC Machining
and Edge Banding
http://www.northwoodsmanufacturing.com
- DanEpps
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Just like the method for assuring that a groove (as in toung & groove) is in the center of a board with a table saw...run it over the dado blade, turn it around and run it again.
Of course, these are different reasons. With the CNC, to get the dimension exact, with the table saw, to get it exactly centered.
Of course, these are different reasons. With the CNC, to get the dimension exact, with the table saw, to get it exactly centered.
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- Steve Dyches
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By using two passes the preferred cut direction (climb vs. conventional) is what each side of the dado is getting. If the dado was cut with one pass one side would be a conventional cut and the other a climb cut.
It was also recommended to us in the class to set the dado width to 60% of material thickness. This would, for example, allow the machine to use a 3/8\" tool on .710\" thick material. If set to 50% and the material was .710\" a smaller tool would be selected for the cut.
Disclaimer: I'm a newbee so if I'm wrong you pros chime in.
Steve
It was also recommended to us in the class to set the dado width to 60% of material thickness. This would, for example, allow the machine to use a 3/8\" tool on .710\" thick material. If set to 50% and the material was .710\" a smaller tool would be selected for the cut.
Disclaimer: I'm a newbee so if I'm wrong you pros chime in.

Steve