310 likes | 967 Views
State Practice Exam . Wood Joints. Identify the wood joint:. Lap Joint. Identify the wood joint:. Rabbet Joint. Identify the wood joint:. Mortis & Tenon Joint. Identify the wood joint:. Plough Joint. Identify the wood joint:. Edge Joint. Identify the wood joint:. Dowel Joint.
E N D
State Practice Exam Wood Joints
Identify the wood joint: Lap Joint
Identify the wood joint: Rabbet Joint
Identify the wood joint: Mortis & Tenon Joint
Identify the wood joint: Plough Joint
Identify the wood joint: Edge Joint
Identify the wood joint: Dowel Joint
Identify the wood joint: Butt Joint
Identify the wood joint: Dovetail Joint
Identify the wood joint: Miter Joint
Identify the wood joint: Biscuit Joint
Identify the wood joint: Pocket Joint
Identify the wood joint: Lock Miter Joint
Identify the wood joint: Tongue & Groove Joint
Identify the wood joint: Blind Dado Joint
Identify the wood joint: Finger Joint
Used on the corners of the best drawers. • Rabbet • Dowel • Dado • Dovetail
Used to inset a ¼” panel in the back of a cabinet. • Rabbet • Dowel • Miter • Dovetail
Used to fid a shelf into the side of a cabinet. • Spline • Dovetail • Miter • Dado
Most commonly used on the corners of picture frames. • Spline • Dovetail • Miter • Dado
Used to fit drawer bottoms into drawer sides. • Dado • Dovetail • Dowel • Plough
This joint is made with a drill or a boring machine. • Dado • Dovetail • Dowel • Plough
Hardwood flooring uses: • Dowel joints • Tongue & Groove joints • Dovetail joints • Miter joints
The biscuit joint is a form of a: • Mortis & Tenon • Dado • Dowel • Spline
Most commonly used in leg and rail construction. • Plough • Rabbet • Mortis and Tenon • Miter
Most likely joints for jointing rails to stiles in a face frame. • Dowel • Rabbet • Dado • Miter
An end-butt joint is stronger than an edge-butt joint. • True • False