Jesse Cloud
Member
- Joined
- Jan 23, 2007
- Messages
- 1,746
Following up on the discussions of techniques for gluing dominoes, I ran a few experiments. I was concerned, as many of you are, that the tight fit of the dominoes would create either a starved joint or excessive squeeze out.
My first tests were putting glue only on the tenons. There was some squeeze out, but minimal. After clamping the joint seemed quite strong. Couldn't pull it or pry it apart. But then I sawed the joint in half across the tenon, and then sawed vertically down the tenon, leaving a quarter of the tenon imbedded in the mortise piece. My test of the joint strength, admittedly unscientific, was to try to pry the tenon out with an awl.
The results were dramatic. Most all of the joints with glue only on the tenons failed. A second test with small amounts of glue on both the tenon and the mortise produced no failures at all.
OK, I was wrong. :
Even with that tight a fit, you still need glue on both sides. So I'm following the lead of Bill-e and Jerry Work and applying a little to both the hole and the tenon. Jerry's idea of wiping off any squeezeout when you put in the first half of the tenon sounds wise, too.
As I said, the test was not scientific and was performed under my local conditions, which aren't typical, its very dry here in New Mexico and that could contribute. I was using titebond original and cypress, which is pretty soft. Other species might behave differently, but I'm not gonna take the chance.
My first tests were putting glue only on the tenons. There was some squeeze out, but minimal. After clamping the joint seemed quite strong. Couldn't pull it or pry it apart. But then I sawed the joint in half across the tenon, and then sawed vertically down the tenon, leaving a quarter of the tenon imbedded in the mortise piece. My test of the joint strength, admittedly unscientific, was to try to pry the tenon out with an awl.
The results were dramatic. Most all of the joints with glue only on the tenons failed. A second test with small amounts of glue on both the tenon and the mortise produced no failures at all.
OK, I was wrong. :

As I said, the test was not scientific and was performed under my local conditions, which aren't typical, its very dry here in New Mexico and that could contribute. I was using titebond original and cypress, which is pretty soft. Other species might behave differently, but I'm not gonna take the chance.