Posts: 5,845
Threads: 0
Joined: Apr 2003
I'm about to start building a 52" long kitchen table bench with 3" turned legs. The aprons will 46" approximately. I'd love to use the domino for the joinery but I'm a bit worried the biggest 10x50 won't be deep or big enough. I thought about making the aprons/stretchers out of 1.5" hard maple and using four total of the dominos per joint. I will also be using corner blocks but there won't be a middle leg. The aprons will be about 3" wide. My gut is telling me to use a M/T joint. For the record, I'm a new Domino user but I really love it so far. I just wish the smaller one went a bit deeper with a thicker tenon. The Domino XL won't be bought anytime soon....if ever.
Posts: 12,684
Threads: 0
Joined: Jan 2010
Location: Lewiston, NY
I know very little about a Domino, other than they are really expensive, so I may be completely off based. Anyway, you don't have to use their loose tenons, of that I am sure; you can make your own. So, if the machine is capable of plunging 1-1/2" deep that's what I'd do, and make the mortise at least 2" wide for a 3" apron. Then make loose tenons to fit. Alternatively, just use the Domino to cut the mortises and then mill integral tenons on the aprons.
John
Posts: 29,152
Threads: 1
Joined: Aug 2002
It is more than adequate.
build your table....
Joe
Let us not seek the Republican Answer , or the Democratic answer. Let us not seek to fix the blame for the past. Let us accept our own responsibility for the future John F. Kennedy
Posts: 2,896
Threads: 0
Joined: Feb 2008
The joinery you described will most likely fail, after 70 or 80 years
Posts: 67
Threads: 0
Joined: Jul 2011
A 46" long (really? No overhang?) apron isn't particularly long. I would either use 2 dominos per joint, stacked, or cut a 2" long mortise using the domino machine and make my own slip tenon. 1" deep mortices aren't ideal, but certainly sufficient.