02-27-2019, 08:17 PM
Cooler, yes, once you get the shim thickness worked out, it will be perfect cut every time with your tenoning jig. It doesn't matter if all the pieces are not exactly the same thicknesses, the face sides will match so long as you orient them all the same direction.
I don't know if I explained it correctly, but go to here, look at their description up through photo A, when he does the first cut on the inside of right side of the slot. https://www.woodcraft.com/blog_entries/t...idle-joint I do that first cut for one side of the slot for all the pieces that will have slots. Then, leave the jig exactly where it is, put the shim on the jig, mine has a half dovetail tab at the top so that it stays on the jig, and when you line up your stock for the tenons, so long as you stock faces the same way, the cheek cut will be in exactly the right place, because it is exactly the same distance from the face of the jig, except that you have offset for the width of the kerf. ( I have to stop and think it through when I haven't done it in a while. ) Then when you finish all those cuts, you move your tenoning jig so that you will cut the other side of the cheek cut for the tenon, take the shim off the jig. When you have finished all the check cuts, you then put on the shim, and run the stock that needs the slot cut, and the outside of that slot will be in exactly the right place so that it will line up with the cheek cut, because you offset the two cuts by the width of the kerf. Then I nibble away the waste in between. I normally cut them for stretchers for painting, so the exact dimension of the tenon isn't critical, but the fit and getting the faces lined up exactly right are important. If the exact thickness of the tenon is important, you can dial that in as well when setting the tenoning jig for the second set of cuts. I spent some time getting the shim exactly the right thickness through trial and error, and don't forget if you plane it a little too thin, you can always add tape to build it back, but once you get it going, you can knock out bridle joints pretty quick, and every cut line will match exactly, so long as you mark the face of each piece of stock, and which pieces need cheek cuts, and which ones need slot cuts.
I don't know if I explained it correctly, but go to here, look at their description up through photo A, when he does the first cut on the inside of right side of the slot. https://www.woodcraft.com/blog_entries/t...idle-joint I do that first cut for one side of the slot for all the pieces that will have slots. Then, leave the jig exactly where it is, put the shim on the jig, mine has a half dovetail tab at the top so that it stays on the jig, and when you line up your stock for the tenons, so long as you stock faces the same way, the cheek cut will be in exactly the right place, because it is exactly the same distance from the face of the jig, except that you have offset for the width of the kerf. ( I have to stop and think it through when I haven't done it in a while. ) Then when you finish all those cuts, you move your tenoning jig so that you will cut the other side of the cheek cut for the tenon, take the shim off the jig. When you have finished all the check cuts, you then put on the shim, and run the stock that needs the slot cut, and the outside of that slot will be in exactly the right place so that it will line up with the cheek cut, because you offset the two cuts by the width of the kerf. Then I nibble away the waste in between. I normally cut them for stretchers for painting, so the exact dimension of the tenon isn't critical, but the fit and getting the faces lined up exactly right are important. If the exact thickness of the tenon is important, you can dial that in as well when setting the tenoning jig for the second set of cuts. I spent some time getting the shim exactly the right thickness through trial and error, and don't forget if you plane it a little too thin, you can always add tape to build it back, but once you get it going, you can knock out bridle joints pretty quick, and every cut line will match exactly, so long as you mark the face of each piece of stock, and which pieces need cheek cuts, and which ones need slot cuts.