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Eddy
 
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Default Joining wood

Is there ay tried and tested fast way to join two bits of wood, with out
a joiner?

Thanks

Eddy
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Swingman
 
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"Eddy" wrote in message
Is there ay tried and tested fast way to join two bits of wood, with out
a joiner?


Aye, there is a "tried and tested fast way" - hire a woodworker.

OTOH, what kind of wood and how do you want to join them? End to end, end to
face, end to edge, edge to edge, edge to face, face to face, sixty nine?

--
www.e-woodshop.net
Last update: 11/06/04


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That's a broad open-ended question. Maybe you are a candidate for
quick and dirty pocket-hole joinery.

Bob

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That's a broad open-ended question. Maybe you are a candidate for
quick and dirty pocket-hole joinery.

Bob

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Charlie Self
 
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bluemax responds:


That's a broad open-ended question. Maybe you are a candidate for
quick and dirty pocket-hole joinery.


Or even a couple 16d nails.

Charlie Self
"They want the federal government controlling Social Security like it's some
kind of federal program." George W. Bush, St. Charles, Missouri, November 2,
2000


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Slowhand
 
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"Charlie Self" wrote in message
...
bluemax responds:


That's a broad open-ended question. Maybe you are a candidate for
quick and dirty pocket-hole joinery.


Or even a couple 16d nails.


Of course that presents another set of criteria.
1. Galvanized?
2. Common or Box?
3. Finish or Sinker head?

SH


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Charlie Self
 
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Slowhand asks:


"Charlie Self" wrote in message
...
bluemax responds:


That's a broad open-ended question. Maybe you are a candidate for
quick and dirty pocket-hole joinery.


Or even a couple 16d nails.


Of course that presents another set of criteria.
1. Galvanized?
2. Common or Box?
3. Finish or Sinker head


Or scaffold.

Charlie Self
"They want the federal government controlling Social Security like it's some
kind of federal program." George W. Bush, St. Charles, Missouri, November 2,
2000
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Swingman
 
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"Charlie Self" wrote in message
Slowhand asks:


"Charlie Self" wrote in message
...
bluemax responds:


That's a broad open-ended question. Maybe you are a candidate for
quick and dirty pocket-hole joinery.

Or even a couple 16d nails.


Of course that presents another set of criteria.
1. Galvanized?
2. Common or Box?
3. Finish or Sinker head


Or scaffold.


smooth or ring shank?

--
www.e-woodshop.net
Last update: 11/06/04


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GregP
 
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On Wed, 2 Feb 2005 11:06:02 -0800, "Slowhand" I'm@work wrote:


Of course that presents another set of criteria.
1. Galvanized?
2. Common or Box?
3. Finish or Sinker head?



And then the question is do you buy a cheap hammer at
Sears or HF, or do you need a hand-crafted one forged
from uranium-depleted material with an ironwood handle ?
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foggytown
 
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GregP wrote:
On Wed, 2 Feb 2005 11:06:02 -0800, "Slowhand" I'm@work wrote:


Of course that presents another set of criteria.
1. Galvanized?
2. Common or Box?
3. Finish or Sinker head?



And then the question is do you buy a cheap hammer at
Sears or HF, or do you need a hand-crafted one forged
from uranium-depleted material with an ironwood handle ?


I got one on ebay. Overrated.

FoggyTown



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Will
 
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or Holy matrimony -- assuming they are opposite sex. (or then again --
maybe not these days)

Charlie Self wrote:
bluemax responds:


That's a broad open-ended question. Maybe you are a candidate for
quick and dirty pocket-hole joinery.



Or even a couple 16d nails.

Charlie Self
"They want the federal government controlling Social Security like it's some
kind of federal program." George W. Bush, St. Charles, Missouri, November 2,
2000


--
Will
Occasional Techno-geek
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Geoff
 
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Straighten the edges with a jointer plane. Takes some technique, but
that's the way they did it in the old days.

Start with a table saw to make sure both edges are as straight as
possible. Then clamp both boards together and plane both edges at the
same time. But they have to be STRAIGHT.

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Eddy
 
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Geoff wrote:
Straighten the edges with a jointer plane. Takes some technique, but
that's the way they did it in the old days.

Start with a table saw to make sure both edges are as straight as
possible. Then clamp both boards together and plane both edges at the
same time. But they have to be STRAIGHT.


Thanks Geoff!

And to the rest if you lot!, sorry I asked!.

Eddy
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Thomas Bunetta
 
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Or at complimentary angles (Flipping one piece end for end)... resulting in
parallel sides.
Tom
"Geoff" wrote in message
ups.com...
Straighten the edges with a jointer plane. Takes some technique, but
that's the way they did it in the old days.

Start with a table saw to make sure both edges are as straight as
possible. Then clamp both boards together and plane both edges at the
same time. But they have to be STRAIGHT.



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Dave Jackson
 
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6" pole barn spikes driven with a 27oz hammer hold very well. --dave

"Geoff" wrote in message
ups.com...
Straighten the edges with a jointer plane. Takes some technique, but
that's the way they did it in the old days.

Start with a table saw to make sure both edges are as straight as
possible. Then clamp both boards together and plane both edges at the
same time. But they have to be STRAIGHT.





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david
 
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Tried and tested - Super glue

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