The Woodworking Life

The Woodworking Life

Spring Joints: An Edge Glue-Up's Best Friend

comments (11) April 26th, 2010 in blogs

Gary Rogowski Gary Rogowski, Contributing Editor
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Spring has sprung, and contributing author Gary Rogowski has some great tips for edge jointing boards using a technique thats a perfect fit for the season. - CLICK TO ENLARGE

Spring has sprung, and contributing author Gary Rogowski has some great tips for edge jointing boards using a technique that's a perfect fit for the season.



Cutting Spring Joints

There are several methods for cutting them. One is to joint your edges by hand and then with a jack or smoothing plane, fair in a slight curve into the edges. A bit tricky for those of you without sufficient hand skills. The jointer is the method really of choice for me. I start by edge joining my boards flat and square. If I run opposite faces to the jointer fence then square is not really much of an issue [subject of another talk sometime perhaps]. But make sure the edges are flat to begin with.

Next, I put in a hollow starting about 1/4 of the way from the beginning of the board and ending about 1/4 of the way from the end. The jointer manual suggests loosening your gib screws on the outfeed table effectively lowering the back end of the outfeed table. Supposedly this planes a curve into your board's edges. But I find this method risky at best and more liable to mess up my jointer table settings and giving me mixed results.

I prefer to make my spring joint this way. Start with a flat edge as before. Then I start my next cut 1/4 of the way in from the front end by gently lowering the board down onto the cutter head and making a cut for a while and then lifting the board off about 1/4 of the way from the end of the board.

Now this leaves two unsightly ridges in the edges so now the job is to fair those in. Get ready to make a long full pass again. This time start with normal hand pressure on the board. Start your cut and then when you hit that first 1/4 mark start to press down with some force onto the board. This effectively pushes the board into the cutterboard. Remember wood is flexible right? So push down into the cutterhead and feed along and push and feed along and push until you get to the end 1/4 mark and then lighten up your pressure and continue feeding all the way through the cut. You may need to do make this cut two or three times. You may also need to reestablish the hollow by gently dropping the board down onto the cutterhead in the middle two quarters of it.

But by establishing a straight edge first, and then a hollow and then fairing that hollow in, you will get a nice curve cut into your edges. A little bit of light, say 1/32" for two foot long boards is all you need. Just so when you place the two boards together edge to edge you feel good pressure at the ends. Another method would be to put the nice straight edge into the two boards on the jointer first. Then hand plane in a little hollow. But keep your plane cut square to the face of each board when you do this.

Checking the Joint
Check your spring joint by putting one clamp in the middle of the boards and clamping together. With good pressure at the ends and not too much of a spring joint, one clamp will be able to pull the joint together with no gaps showing along the length of the board on either side. Check be sure the joint closes up on both faces. This method is simple enough for me now that I use it for all my edge joints now. Ah Spring.

 



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posted in: blogs, joinery, tabletops, spring joint, Gary Rogowski, edge jointing


Comments (11)

sduncan000 sduncan000 writes: 1 Question - what happens when your top consists of more than 2 boards and the gentle arc created by putting 2 boards together is amplified to the overall piece by 3-4 times?

I am questioning from a vantage point of absolutely zero experience in spring joints, so take that into account and be nice in your responses! :)
Posted: 12:22 pm on April 18th

UxbridgeCarvers UxbridgeCarvers writes: I don't know why anyone would knock the spring joint?
I've made thousands of carved mahogany signs over a 38
year span; all with spring joints. 95% of these are outside
with virtually no joint failure. The vast majority are commercial signs and often quite large.
Too many people rely on the latest technology and ignore the
tried and true.

Posted: 1:47 pm on March 18th

chergui chergui writes: I still are no very proficient with hand planes being a new hobbyt and are learning to use its. I think that perhaps I will do a better job using a power jointer. I have a 6 inches Delta, but I dont know to. Glad to hear for more skill full wodworkers.
Posted: 10:06 pm on September 24th

samh samh writes: I was taught this technique years ago in junior high. senior high and in a college woodworking class. It works and is easily done with a hand plane. I have edge joints on furniture I have made that are close to 50 years old and still good. These were made well before some of the glues that are available today.
Posted: 9:22 am on May 9th

bones1 bones1 writes: Kelly Meyer has a positive comment for the "spring joint"too.
He uses the jointer. So simple and it works !
I tried this and the setting change is so minor I just leave it .
Bones 1
Posted: 3:23 am on May 6th

CTWoodWkr CTWoodWkr writes: Although I have the greatest respect for Gary Rogowski, (I own several of his books and read his articles in FWW), the idea of spring joints is a myth that has been passed on from one woodworker to the next. This was taught to me in a weekend workshop by Frank Klausz. He was adamant that an edge joint should be made completely straight and smooth so that the glue can do its job.
My procedure is to first, flatten and square the boards on the jointer, then using a shooting board and a No. 7 plane I smooth the edge to remove any machine marks left from the jointer. The boards meet perfectly straight and square.
The reason often given for a spring joint is end grain moisture loss. However, most woodworkers use kiln dried lumber with moisture content of 8-10%. The wood will not dry out any more and may gain moisture depending on climate conditions. Another reason not to make a spring joint is that at this stage of the building process most woodworkers are gluing boards with rough measurements to allow for trimming to final dimensions after glue-up. When you do cut the panel square then you have lost the compressed ends that you have so carefully built in.
The spring joint idea may be an old technique leftover from an era before lumber was commonly kiln dried. It might have made sense for those craftsmen who were working with air dried or green wood. One last point - the glues we are using today are very strong and reliable compared to the hide glue of the past. Make your edge joints straight, square, smooth, use good clamping technique, put glue on both edges so you get a small amount of squeeze-out and you will have made a strong edge joint.
Posted: 12:29 am on May 6th

geppetto425 geppetto425 writes: I couldn't find the "Charlesworth video" for making spring joints. Could someone post the link? Thanks!
Posted: 12:49 pm on May 5th

FesGaucho FesGaucho writes: Hey Gary. Great article, got a question. What happens with the tension you build on the board with this spring?
Posted: 5:38 pm on May 4th

rwyoung rwyoung writes: +1 for the handplane method. Quick and efficient. And if possible, I "fold" the two pieces together face-to-face and match plane the edges. Cancels out any angle I might accidentally introduce. :) Yay for fewer clamps in a glue-up!
Posted: 2:04 pm on April 29th

FIMWDWKR FIMWDWKR writes: All I need is 3 swipes with a plane, 1 clamp, and little glue. I love spring joints.

FR
Posted: 9:56 pm on April 27th

michael2160 michael2160 writes: I share Gary's opinion of Spring Joints, but not his method of cutting them.
Gary briefly mentioned (horrors) using a hand plane. I found the technique using a #4 1/2 smoother or #5 1/2 jack plane to be very easy. Why knock your power jointer out of alignment when you can plane a long arc in your boards in a matter of seconds/board.
Charlesworth has a nice video on his method.
Posted: 6:35 pm on April 26th

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