04-13-2018, 01:26 PM
I have recently renewed my interest in dowels. For a long time I was under the impression that dowels were stronger than biscuits, but not a good as almost any other type of joint.
But recent online research revealed that the RTA (ready to assemble) manufacturers' association and the flat pack cabinet manufacturers association in Europe have commissioned studies on the strength of fasteners as relates to their industry (which is mostly assembling sheet good into some sort of rectangle).
Their tests basically have a piece of flat goods (18mm plywood, MDF or particle board) attached in a T-form and then they add weight the the "shelf" that is supported by one side only. The tests do not include glue, they are measuring the mechanical strength only.
Particle board is by far the weakest. Followed by MDF and then plywood. That did not surprise me.
Wood screws (conventional) were the weakest. Next cam Confirmat screws which were about 40% stronger than screws. Apparently they behave like steel dowels as well as screws. But the high scoring was done by the dowels. For racking strength they were easily the strongest. Surprising to me was the dado. The mechanical strength of a dado was too small to measure.
Of course glue changes everything, but dowels will almost certainly be stronger in a glued up test also.
Having said that I am not giving up dadoes, but I am going to use Confirmat screws.
But there are places where visible screws are not acceptable. Then dowels make sense.
Has anyone seen or used the Mafell dual dowel system? It is ungodly expensive but it looks very efficient.
<iframe width="854" height="480" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/VUI67MZUsCs" frameborder="0" allow="autoplay; encrypted-media" allowfullscreen></iframe>
But recent online research revealed that the RTA (ready to assemble) manufacturers' association and the flat pack cabinet manufacturers association in Europe have commissioned studies on the strength of fasteners as relates to their industry (which is mostly assembling sheet good into some sort of rectangle).
Their tests basically have a piece of flat goods (18mm plywood, MDF or particle board) attached in a T-form and then they add weight the the "shelf" that is supported by one side only. The tests do not include glue, they are measuring the mechanical strength only.
Particle board is by far the weakest. Followed by MDF and then plywood. That did not surprise me.
Wood screws (conventional) were the weakest. Next cam Confirmat screws which were about 40% stronger than screws. Apparently they behave like steel dowels as well as screws. But the high scoring was done by the dowels. For racking strength they were easily the strongest. Surprising to me was the dado. The mechanical strength of a dado was too small to measure.
Of course glue changes everything, but dowels will almost certainly be stronger in a glued up test also.
Having said that I am not giving up dadoes, but I am going to use Confirmat screws.
But there are places where visible screws are not acceptable. Then dowels make sense.
Has anyone seen or used the Mafell dual dowel system? It is ungodly expensive but it looks very efficient.
<iframe width="854" height="480" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/VUI67MZUsCs" frameborder="0" allow="autoplay; encrypted-media" allowfullscreen></iframe>
No animals were injured or killed in the production of this post.