- Joined
- Jan 22, 2007
- Messages
- 1,641
Ken, I understand that this is a passionate topic for you. However, I am not trying convince you or anyone else whether or not they should cope a joint. I'm simply pointing out that the reasons for coping a joint are not the reasons that are most frequently cited. Knowing and understanding the true reasons for what we do is what empowers the woodworker to properly gauge for themselves when one method should be used over another.
The concept isn't unique to the topic of coping. There are a lot of woodworking "rules" that are frequently repeated long after the "reason" for the rule is forgotten. Once that happens, we end up with these Cardinal Rules that can never be broken, until you once again think critically about the reasons behind them and rediscover when they should and should not apply. Knowledge is the sharpest tool we have in the workshop.
The concept isn't unique to the topic of coping. There are a lot of woodworking "rules" that are frequently repeated long after the "reason" for the rule is forgotten. Once that happens, we end up with these Cardinal Rules that can never be broken, until you once again think critically about the reasons behind them and rediscover when they should and should not apply. Knowledge is the sharpest tool we have in the workshop.